![]() ![]() The mysterious Takashi O’Brien comes to her rescue. But she learns the hard way the Shirosama doesn’t play fair when it comes to getting what he wants when she’s kidnapped from the museum where the bowl is on display. She just knows there’s no way she’s forking over the bowl to the creepy crackpot. Summer doesn’t know his reasons, of course. While the bowl holds great sentimental value to Summer, it holds even greater meaning to the fanatical Shirosama, who plans to use it in a ceremony to spark a global apocalypse, purging evil from the world. Then her flaky mother falls under the spell of the Shirosama, head of Hollywood’s latest fad religion, the True Realization Fellowship. The nanny was killed shortly afterward, and the bowl remained in Summer’s possession, one of her most cherished belongings. When Summer Hawthorne was a child, her beloved Japanese nanny gave her a beautiful ice blue bowl to look after until she returned. ![]() It’s kind of a mess, but an agreeable one. The third in Anne Stuart’s Ice series, it’s not as good as the first book, Black Ice, but much better than the second, Cold As Ice. Oddly enough, although I thought Ice Blue suffered from a number of problems, I enjoyed it nonetheless. ![]()
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