Narcissistic Brutality, a Dark Hell of Burning Fire

“This is not lovemaking but narcissistic brutality, a dark hell of burning fire.”

 Book review by Gabriella Tutino

Book review graphic for Burning Desire: The Psychopath and the Girl in Black Prada Shoes featuring the novel cover, red rose, and black high heels.
The moment Mary meets Doctor Drake Lucifer Bates, she’s intrigued by him. 

What starts out as a doctor’s visit soon morphs into something more scandalous, as Mary and Drake start an affair.

Mary and Drake’s story unfolds across the globe in this captive affair, as Mary tries not to lose herself over to Drake completely and get wrapped up in his manipulative schemes. 

Written in the first person and based on real-life experiences, Stark’s narrator is engaging and self-aware. Mary is a dramatic, opinionated, and intelligent woman who can’t stop herself from falling for Drake’s sweet gestures and behaviors, even when he turns angry and aggressive towards her.

In hindsight, she clearly knows that this relationship with her doctor was a dangerous, if tantalizing, mistake, but she can’t help sharing the story with the reader, laughing at and judging her actions and desires through a lens of a now wiser person.

Stark manages to capture the protagonist’s conflicting emotions of repulsion and attraction and of feeling trapped by her situation yet thrilled at prospects. This is usually accomplished by having Mary’s various thoughts mirroring each other. Mary’s account of her relationship with Drake reads like an enormous confession, a secret shared over a bottle of wine.

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