I really liked this book. There was love, action and adventure. I laughed, I cried, I woulda threw my book across the room if the warranty on my Kindle wasn’t up. It was a great read.
I read too fast. It’s one of the things I don’t like about myself. I hurry to read a book because I want to get to the end & then get mad when it’s over. I got this on a Wednesday and was finished by Saturday. It was a fast read.
From Cape Town with Love is the third book in the Tennyson Hardwick series. The first was
Casanegra
, the second,
In the Night of the Heat
, and now
From Cape Town with Love
. All are written by the husband and wife writing team of Tananarive Due and Stephen Barnes (how cool is THAT), with the addition of Blair Underwood. I don’t know where Underwood fits in the team. I saw him on Wendy Williams the other day & he said something about him adding the acting/theatrical perspective to the book. I didn’t hear the whole thing (I was still half asleep), but I can see his influence in the pages.
I don’t think it’s NECESSARY to have read the other books before reading this one, but From Cape Town refers to things that have happened in Tennyson’s past, and they’re definitely worth reading.
SO…We catch up with Ten after his last gig which is detailed in the Night of the Heat. He still has his responsibilities with this teen ward, he’s in a whatever-you-wanna-call-it relationship, his father is still his trusty sidekick, even though he’s still limited physically by age and the stroke he hasn’t fully recovered from (I just LOVE Ten’s father), and he's still trying to make it as an actor.
On a jaunt to Cape Town, South Africa to try to reunite with his girlfriend, Tennyson gets hired by one of the most popular actresses in the movie industry, Sofia Maitlan. She wants him to act as a body guard to help her on a trip to an orphanage in Cape Town where she’s going to meet with the daughter she's in the process of adopting. She and Tennyson take a liking to one another, but don’t explore their relationship any further than that of bodyguard/client. He’s struck by the orphanage and the child, Nandi, chosen by Sofia, and instantly forms a bond with her. He also takes a liking to another orphan he nicknames Oliver. You don’t know how much I wanted Tennyson to take Oliver home with him. But it didn’t happen. But I really wanted it to. I woulda helped babysit, drop him off at school, kept him a weekend a month. Alla that. But it didn’t happen.
Ten returns home where he receives a strange message from an anonymous emailer. Through clues, he soon links the message to an old high school friend, who’s just as mysterious in person as she was in the email. They begin a crazy sexual relationship, which to me, started off weird. Maybe it’s because I’ve never met a man on a rooftop handcuffed to a lounger. But that’s just me.
Moving right along, Sofia Maitlan contacts Tennyson again, this time ecstatic to celebrate her daughter Nandi’s first birthday, and she wants Ten to help again as a body guard at the party. Throughout the story, Sofia’s helped Ten get some contacts in the movie industry, so he feels somewhat obligated, and part of him really likes Sofia and Nandi, so he agrees. AND EVERYTHING GOES WRONG. Somebody snatches the poor baby, and the rest of the story pretty much tells about the kidnapping and the efforts to retrieve Nandi.
I like action, I really do, but sometimes, I get confused. Sometimes I find it hard to follow, like one minute somebody’s fighting someone in the house on the edge of a cliff & the next thing I know they’re thrashing around on the water. & I missed the part of how they got from the cliff to the water. & I’m going back tryna figure out HOW THEY GOT FROM THE CLIFF TO THE WATER?! I HAVE to know. Drives me nuts. But I didn’t have that problem in Cape Town, there aren’t too many characters (although there are a lot), and there’s just enough action that’s easy to follow. & THERE’S A TWIST!! There’s a twist that I ENTIRELY wasn’t expecting because you just have NO CLUE that should even BE a twist. Or maybe I’m just unsuspecting and trusting. And that’s probably part of it, but I talked to my brother (my fellow reader) & he wasn’t expecting it either.
I highly recommend Cape Town, and the other 2 Tennyson Hardwick books. Cape Town has been my favorite so far. I hope they keep up their tradition of doing a book a year.
Sidenote: Tananarive Due is one of my favorite authors. I love ALL of her books. Most are part of the
Living Blood 
series (the first book in the series is My Soul to Keep, but I like saying Living Blood better), and every book in the series is a must read. Whether you like the whole vampire thing or not. She was writing about vampires long before they built shows around them on the CW. But they’re not just about vampires, they’re about love and life and there aren’t enough superlatives to describe how great a writer she is.
The Good House
(a book not in the Living Blood series), is one of my all time favorite books. Scares the crap out of me every time I read it, but I HAVE to read it every now and again. DEFINITELY check her out if you haven’t.