Wednesday 28 November 2018

Review: Someone to Trust

Someone to Trust Someone to Trust by Mary Balogh
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Lady Elizabeth Overton is a 35 year old widow. Colin Handrich, Lord Hodges is nine years her junior. When they meet at the Westcott Christmas party the age gap is very apparent and yet there is an undeniable pull between them. Both of them are looking for a spouse but at widely different ends of the spectrum. Colin is looking amongst the eighteen year old debutantes whereas Elizabeth is looking for a sensible, dependable man, very different from her husband.

When they meet again in London during the season they rely on each other for sensible conversation and laughter and glorious waltzes but as they both move inexorably towards marriage with other people will they realise they are perfect together before it's too late?

Hoo boy did this start slowly. It was practically halfway in before I got engaged with the storyline and the characters. But when it did ... it pulled me in like a rip tide. From two faceless, characterless mannequins Colin and Elizabeth transformed into living breathing characters, full of hopes and fears and anxieties. There were plotting relatives and sinister Dukes, society balls, fake engagements, fisticuffs in the library and family secrets galore. By the end I was totally invested in Colin and Ellizabeth's May to December romance (although that is a wild exaggeration) and the way in which their love may have been instantaneous but their relationship was built on friendship and trust.

If you like historical romances, if you have liked Mary Balogh's other Westcott romances I recommend sticking with this novel, it pays in the end.

I received a free copy of this novel from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Review: Cocksure

Cocksure Cocksure by Shiloh Walker
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Who doesn't love a fake relationship with your boss romance? Sabrina has been Luke Cochran's assistant for four years and probably in love with him for all that time. Luke on the other hand, gorgeous millionaire actor that he is, doesn't have a clue. However, when his mother suffers a heart attack and tells him how much she worries about him he panics and tells her that he and Sabrina are secretly engaged.

But Luke is hiding a secret from the world, something that made him run from home at the age of eighteen and his trips back were non-existent until Sabrina pushed him to make the trip. Can a fake relationship turn real and can Luke tell the truth?

I liked the plot and the characters but I was put off by the incessant sex. Honestly, page after page after page, then there would be a snippet of plot and then page upon page of sex. I got bored and just flicked past it all wondering at times if there was any plot coming soon. Maybe I should have expected it given the title, I'm sure some people reading this are itching to go and buy the book - and good for them. It just didn't work for me.

However, I am really intrigued by Luke's large family, Devin in particular, and look forward to reading more in this series.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Monday 26 November 2018

Review: Christmas Secrets by the Sea

Christmas Secrets by the Sea Christmas Secrets by the Sea by Jane Lovering
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Tansy Merriwether has pretty much hit rock bottom, in the last year she has lost her successful cupcake business, her business partner/ lover, her home and her money. Now she's living in a decrepit caravan on a Dorset beach. When she befriends the single mother who runs an isolated cafe nearby she hears about a TV crew which is filing a series in a nearby cove who might need someone to run odd jobs. When Tansy approaches the crew she finds out that she knows the director from when she lived in London. He suggests she could help the crew enormously by scouting for locations for a new series and taking the obnoxious male star with her, he and his female co-star are impossible when working together.

Davin O'Riordan isn't the man the PR people make him out to be, he isn't the man he pretends to be, he has lots of secrets but for some reason he likes Tansy, she's the only woman who doesn't swoon at his feet and who sees more than just a former model turned actor. But can two people learn to trust each other?

If I say that this book contains a sexy Irish actor, a teenage boy with a bottomless stomach, a single mother, Christmas, a vegan actress, a beautiful whippet and a smelly stray dog, and quaint English villages would you be interested? Yes, me too. This was charming, funny and a saccharine-free holiday romance. Maybe if I was being really picky I would have preferred fewer flashbacks to Davin's past (which didn't generally seem to add much) and maybe more to Tansy's past which (to me) still remains somewhat shrouded in mystery.

Overall, if Poldark revs your engine then I think you'll like Davin, he's been described as looking like Chris Hemsworth and Aidan Turner had a baby!

Recommended for fans of Sue Moorcroft.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Review: The Piano Man Project

The Piano Man Project The Piano Man Project by Kat French
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Honeysuckle Jones hasn't had much luck with men so her two BFFs (as always when girls have friends in books there are two of them and they are extremely irritating) decide to try to set her up with a man, for some reason they decide that a pianist would be ideal, because he would be good with his hands, so they set her up on a series of blind dates with men who play the piano, or teach music, or something equally vaguely related to music. At the same time her boss announces that the company that owns the charity shop that she works for, and the old people's home attached to it, have decided to sell the buildings for redevelopment. Honey will be out of a job and the old people, many of whom are her friends, will be "rehomed". Nevertheless, despite all her bad luck Honey remains relentlessly optimistic.

A new man has moved into the flat that shares a hallway with Honey's, what she doesn't know is that the new neighbour is Benedict 'Hal' Hallam, former bad boy restaurateur and adrenaline junkie, Hal had a snowboard accident that left him blind and now he is hiding away from his friends and family, drinking whisky and unable to move on from the loss of everything that meant anything to him: his job; his fiancee; and his adrenaline-fuelled lifestyle.

Honey and Hal can't be more different but slowly an antagonistic relationship develops between them. Honey buys Hal whisky and food items, in return she sits at his door and talks at him, even though he rarely responds.

As Honey's plans to save the retirement home become increasingly eccentric Hal is drawn into the madness and starts to emerge from the prison he's made from himself. But when the press finds out where he's hiding, and his old life comes back to claim him, what will Hal choose.

If you are a fan of English romances featuring a cast of lovable but eccentric characters then this one is for you. The snarky banter between Hal and Honey is funny and the plot is enjoyable.

However, I'm afraid you do have to suspend a little disbelief. First that a blind wealthy celebrity would move into a block of flats that could be afforded by a woman who works for a small local charity shop. Second that the family that does know where Hal is make no attempt to check he is okay, they even send him letters! Third, Hal doesn't seem to have any issues wandering around his flat, or Honey's or various other places despite being blind.

Nevertheless, despite these minor niggles (and some issues I have with the age of the pensioners and the idea that they were adults at the time of the second world war - I'm an accountant deal with it) I really enjoyed the book and I will definitely look out for more books by Kat French.

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Friday 23 November 2018

Review: Faith is Fearless: Normal is Overrated

Faith is Fearless: Normal is Overrated Faith is Fearless: Normal is Overrated by D. Pichardo-Johansson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I was gifted this book by a different author.

Fe Hernandez is a speech therapist, specialising in children. Despite what some might view as a difficult life she is eternally optimistic. Her only rule is that she will never ever date a doctor again.

Dr Shawn McDevitt seems to have everything anyone could ever want, but seems eternally dissatisfied. After his wife was murdered his son disappeared for a year and now appears to be developmentally stunted, perhaps on the autism scale. His father never stops criticising him, and praising his rivals, his peers dislike him and he's lonely. When he accidentally ploughs his bike into a beautiful woman in the park one day he is entranced and intrigued by her sunny outlook and gorgeous looks but devastated when he finds out she will never date a doctor, even worse when he finds out they actually work at the same hospital. But fate is with him and he is referred to Fe as a therapist who might be able to help his son.

Swirling around the romance and the therapy are professional rivalries, the mystery of Shawn's wife's death and the little matter of threatening letters that he keeps receiving.

This read to me like an old 1980s romance where the man is a big important doctor and the little woman has a caring profession like nurse or nanny and is totally self-sacrificing. Shawn has no clue how to look after his son and spends all hours at the hospital whereas Fe is deeply nurturing and caring, despite wearing skin-tight clothing and skyscraper heels (which I would have thought were impractical when working with children but what do I know).

I have to admit I was very close to DNFing this book, especially when Shawn kept referring to himself as a physician and such a catch that women threw themselves at him, not just women but gold-diggers. See why I thought it was a reprint of an older book? Also, why are female friends in al these books so god-awful? Fe's friends were ghastly.

But I persevered and overall it was an enjoyable romance but I think there were maybe a few too many plots swirling around.

Also, some interesting views on the way that the medical profession is quick to label people/ children as on the autism spectrum when there may be other contributing factors to development issues. I liked that and I would love to have seem more of Fe's work and less of Shawn's political dramas at the hospital.

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Review: Through Fire

Through Fire Through Fire by Freya Barker
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Ruby is a former prostitute on the run. After spending six months in a safe house she has got a job at a bar called The Skipper and has moved into an apartment owned by one of her colleagues.

Tim is a regular at the bar and a friend of Viv's husband Ike. He barely even registers Ruby until one day she is left in charge of the kitchen (despite not being able to cook) and he comes to her rescue.

As the truth about Ruby's past and the murder she witnessed come to light it isn't only Ruby that is put in danger.

This reminded me very much of Scarlett Cole's writing, albeit with more mature (older) characters. Ruby's past is horrific and I can't even comprehend how such things can happen in real life (although I know they do), she fears for her life and has no-one to turn to. Yet the family she makes at The Skipper help her to start making a life, a life that could even include love.

Yet another winner from Freya Barker.

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Review: The Man I Fell In Love With

The Man I Fell In Love With The Man I Fell In Love With by Kate Field
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Mary Black's comfortable life is blown apart when she sees her husband (and childhood sweetheart) holding hands with another man at a Christmas Party. Suddenly her marriage to the boy next door is a sham and she finds herself not only the subject of small town gossip but separated from a man who was her best friend as well as her husband.

Juggling her 'marvellous' mother-in-law, who still lives next door, her mother, who lives in a converted garage attached to Mary's house, two teenage children, her soon-to-be ex-husband Leo, his brother Ethan, and his lover Clark, the dog Dotty, her BFF Daisy and the promotion for Leo's book on the little known Lancastrian author Alice Hornby Mary tries to please everyone all the time, after all that's what she's done practically her whole life, until Ethan points out that her life has been beige.

As the book progresses we see the secrets and lies that have pushed Mary down her life's path. The incidents that have shaped her behaviour and coloured her attitude towards others. I have to say by the end of the book the only character that I felt came out well was Ethan, everyone else appeared to behave very badly, to lie, and to keep secrets for, that terrible cliche, 'her own good'. Leo, in particular, seemed to be a cheating, selfish, egotistical, lazy waste of space - personally I would have set fire to his car. Mary on the other hand appeared to be a complete doormat, I did wonder if Mary would have been so accepting/forgiving if Leo had left her for another woman, and I did want to shake her at times and tell her to get a job.

I also thought there were too many coincidences, things tied together too neatly and everyone turned out not to be so bad after all, maybe its because Mary resolved her issues from the past.

Nevertheless, I enjoyed this novel. I liked the unravelling of past secrets, I liked the romance and I liked the Mary Hornby sleuthing.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Wednesday 21 November 2018

Review: Fireworks

Fireworks Fireworks by Sarina Bowen
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Not my favourite Sarina Bowen novel.

Skye Copeland is a TV weather presenter until an honest mistake puts her on forced holiday for two weeks. When her scatty step-sister claims she has a scoop and asks her to drive a rental car from New York to Vermont she reluctantly agrees to visit the small town she left 12 years ago. But when she arrives her step-sister gives her the slip and steals the rental car, saying she is mixed up with some dangerous men and Skye should talk to Benito Rossi.

Benito is the man she left town to forget and now she's forced into close proximity. Then Benito lets slip that her sister might be involved in a group smuggling drugs that he is investigating and he seems to want to start up again exactly where they left off as if nothing has happened.

Stepping back and looking at the reasons why I didn't enjoy this book as much as Sarina's other books, I have to say that I found Benito's attitude a bit odd. He hasn't seen or heard from Skye for 12 years and yet he is calling her "honey" right from the start. Also, we see more of Skye's POV so we feel as though Benito has behaved badly(view spoiler). It is only at the end that Benito turned it around for me.

My favourite refrain, I liked it but I didn't love it.

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Tuesday 20 November 2018

Review: Wish Upon a Duke

Wish Upon a Duke Wish Upon a Duke by Erica Ridley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Third novella in a series set in the English village of Cressmouth (Christmas).

Miss Gloria Godwin is a remarkable young woman, astronomer and mechanical engineer, she was traumatised by first her father's death at sea and then her fiance travelling to India and never returning. As a result, she has a pathological fear of water and travel. Despite this fear she loves to read about travel.

The Right Honourable Mr Christopher Pringle, previously the quiet overlooked Pringle brother, is getting a taste of what it feels like to be the most eligible bachelor in the village, he is swamped by eager single women desperate for his hand in marriage. Christopher loves to travel, he makes a point to never stay more than one month in one place, but he would like to share that life with someone so he engages a matchmaker to find him a wife.

Christopher's soon-to-be sister in law recommends Gloria as a matchmaker, and she does indeed find women who exactly meet Christopher's requirements, the only trouble is the infuriating matchmaker appears more and more attractive every day. It's a pity that their interests are so different.

This was a charming Christmas novella, Gloria takes delight in teasing Christopher and indulging her imagination, Christopher helps her overcome her fears.

I received a free copy of this book from the author via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Sunday 18 November 2018

Review: A Nordic King

A Nordic King A Nordic King by Karina Halle
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Suckered in by the cover.

Australian nanny to the rich and famous gets the opportunity to be a nanny to the KIng of Denmark's two little girls. In a palace and kingdom mourning the Queen's death in a tragic car accident, Aurora's youth, short skirts, and irreverent humour are a big hit with the two princesses, not so much with the disagreeable (but very hot) King Aksel. Of course both Aksel and Aurora have secrets that they keep from each other, of course it blow up in their faces. I was a bit disappointed that the middle of the book appeared just to consist of Aurora and Aksel having sex in closets and corridors and sneaking in and out of each other's rooms. It all felt a bit rinse and repeat and there was a lot of hair pulling and drenching. Overall, I felt that the emphasis on sex led to the 'plot' being shunted to the very end of the novel and there was so little angst generated by the big secret that it was fairly irrelevant.

Of course, I'm not a big fan of royal romances so that may colour my views.

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Saturday 17 November 2018

Review: Remedial Rocket Science

Remedial Rocket Science Remedial Rocket Science by Susannah Nix
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I had no pre-expectations of this book and it was one of the first books I have actually managed to finish this week.

Melody Gage, super intelligent, IT geek has spent her time at MIT working hard to be the best in her class, the only anomaly - a one night stand with a super hotty visiting from LA. Three years later she lands an entry level job with an LA aerospace company and calls up her one night stand to meet for a coffee and ask advice about places to live. Said hotty, Jeremy, turns out to work for the same company, also in an entry level job, but as the CEO's son his life is a little different.

This is nice twist on the billionaire bad boy meets poor geeky girl friends to lovers romance. Jeremy has a girlfriend, they break up, Melody becomes friends with his ex-girlfriend, Jeremy pretends to be Melody's boyfriend when her mom comes to stay, Melody returns the favour when Jeremy's ex-girlfriend gets engaged to his best friend and throw a lavish party.

What stood out most for me, and raised it from a 3/3.5 to a 4 rating, was Melody's inner critic, her ability to critique the BS spouted by the guys she meets (eg Jeremy's best friend's new film idea which sounds like every cookie-cutter action film ever made) made me laugh out loud. I will definitely be looking out for more books by Susannah Nix.

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Tuesday 13 November 2018

Review: The Bastard Billionaire

The Bastard Billionaire The Bastard Billionaire by Jessica Lemmon
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Introducing Elijah Crane, middle son, former Marine who has been invalided out after losing a leg to a roadside bomb. His father and brothers are pushing him to join the family business Crane Hotels as COO but he is resisting.

Eli has run off 10 personal assistants from Isabella Sawyer's personal assistant company and she is worried that Eli's older brother Reese will fire the company if they can't get a PA to stick, so rather than try to find someone tough enough to withstand Eli's rudeness Isabella decides to take the role herself, incognito.

This started off great, brooding, damaged, billionaire bad boy and a feisty, strong-willed woman who won't put up with his nonsense? Sign me right up. Unfortunately somewhere around midway through the book I thought it ran out of steam plot wise and reverted to rinse-and-repeat sex scenes and unnecessary descriptions of Isa's clothing. It's funny because we get too many descriptions of Isa's clothing (even down to the three dresses she tries on and discards, the jeans and ruffled top combo she wears, and then eventually rejects in favour of a little black dress) but I couldn't tell whether Isa was supposed to be Marilyn Monroe style curvy or verging on the plus side.

And then, the horrors, Isa gives Eli an ultimatum(view spoiler).

Good start, degenerated into predictable angst midway, had several uninteresting minor plots that needed to be stronger or ditched. You might guess that I have had very little sleep, it's just gone 4 am and I'm kind of grouchy but I hate it when a book starts well and doesn't deliver.

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Sunday 11 November 2018

Review: Warrior of the World

Warrior of the World Warrior of the World by Jeffe Kennedy
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Spoilers ahead for the first two books

...

Imperial Princess Jenna of Dasnaria was raised to be obedient and to pleasure the man her father and brothers chose for her. In Dasnaria women have nothing and no power, they are kept sequestered in a seraglio. When Jenna is married she finds her husband is a sadist and enjoys taking out his hatred of her father on her body. Eventually her brother helps her to escape and she travels to new lands, trains as a Priestess of Danu and takes vows of chastity and silence. At the end of the second book Jenna, who now calls herself Ivariel had made a new life with a family in Nyambura where she tends to the elephants and teaches the children to dance the warrior's dance, until her abusive husband tracks her down and she kills him and his men in a beserker fit of rage, although it almost kills her too - until Ochieng and his family rescue her with all their elephants.

In this third, and I believe final, book in the trilogy Ivariel is still recovering from the beating and rape by her now deceased husband but the family face further threats from a neighbouring city after the rainy season extends longer than ever before. The people are starving and so they come to pillage and steal from the peaceful Nyamurans. Ivariel is struggling to deal with her violent impulses, fearful that when the rage descends she could kill one of her friends, but maybe that's just what the Nyamurans need to protect them from the outside.

I still haven't read the first book, even though I bought it when it was on sale, I'm a bit scared about how horrific Jenna's life with her abusive husband will be ...

What can I say? A fitting end to the trilogy. I think you could read this as a stand-alone novel, although the backstory would all be told not shown. Jeffe Kennedy writes such beautiful prose, such engaging characters and such evocative landscapes. I felt like I was tending the elephants with Ivariel, singing the songs with the family, the torrential rain we had last night also felt very much like the rainy season in Nyamura, water everywhere and your clothes are vaguel damp all the time!

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Saturday 10 November 2018

Review: Nightchaser

Nightchaser Nightchaser by Amanda Bouchet
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I know I read a snippet of this book some months ago, just can't recall how or where.

In a significant change from Amanda Bouchet's Kingmaker Chronicles this new series is set in
the future in a world of interplanetary travel. A universe ruled by an Overseer who values conformity and blandness above all. Enter our heroine Tess Bailey, a cross between Captain Mal Reynolds from Firefly, Han Solo, Robin Hood, Katniss Everdeen and, in some ways, Catalisa Fisa from the Kingmaker Chronicles, the captain of a rebel spaceship which steals from the rich to redistribute food and medicine to poorer sectors generally and an orphanage in Sector 8 specifically.

Tess has a secret, a BIG secret. She is travelling under a false name, everyone in the galaxy thinks she died with her mother following an illness, revealing her identity could get her killed or hauled off for medical experimentation in one of the Overseer's secret laboratories. When she is cornered by the Overseer's right hand man, low on power and running out of options she reveals her identity in a delaying tactic then jumps her ship straight into the Black Widow - a do or die manoeuvre.

The Black Widow spits the ship out into a completely different sector where Tess and her crew can repair their ship and uncover precisely what is so important about the latest batch of vaccines they have stolen.

Fascinating right? Space opera, battles, evil overlords, an oppressive military/ police force called the Dark Watch, secret identities, etc. And then nearly all of the book is set in dry dock while Tess develops a relationship with Shade Ganavan, the owner of Ganavan's Products and Parts, who agrees to sell parts to repair the ship and offers to help with the repairs. Shade has a secret (of course he does), he's also a government sanctioned bounty hunter and shortly after meeting Tess he discovers that there is a massive bounty on her head. Shade needs the bounty to buy back his birthright which he was foolish enough to lose after his parents died, but can he know and like a person, maybe even more than like, and sell her out for money?

There is a whole load of backstory, Tess' childhood and mother's death, her time in prison, her relationship with the overseer and his right hand man, etc that we don't know about each of her crew has a mysterious past, even Shade has a mysterious past all of which frankly seem more interesting than the book we get. I would normally call this a world-building book, but it doesn't even create a world in any great depth, it just talks about really exciting stuff that happened outside the book. It says something that despite the opening space fight, a walk in space and various shoot-outs that my overwhelming memory about this book is of the ship sitting in the docks being repaired while Tess reads books and tries to seduce Shade.

Once again I feel that Amanda Bouchet has skewed her novel too far towards the romance/sexy times and too far away from character building and a gradual plot build up. I felt the start was a high adrenalin, space version of Robin Hood as was the end but the overwhelming majority of the middle of the book was romance, perky boobs and 'does the cute boy like me?' teenage angst. I can't even get a grip on how old Tess is supposed to be - I think its mid to late 20s but I wouldn't be surprised if she were only 18, she certainly acts like it at times.

Overall, I liked the premise enormously and definitely want to read the series but I feel this first book was more like part one, nothing but the romance gets resolved and frankly you could probably read chapter one and the epilogue without losing much of the story arc.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Thursday 8 November 2018

Review: The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband

The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband The Girl with the Make-Believe Husband by Julia Quinn
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Cecilia Harcourt has received word that her brother Thomas has been injured in the American revolutionary war and has travelled from her home in Derbyshire to New York to search for him after the sudden death of their father leaves her at the not-so tender mercies of their cousin Horace.

Unfortunately, when she arrives none of the army officers seem willing to help her and Thomas is nowhere to be found, she is about to give up in despair when she hears that Thomas' best friend, Edward Rokesby is unconscious in the hospital, Cecilia feels she knows Edward through her correspondence with Thomas over the months in which Edward would often add little anecdotes and postscripts. Cecilia is refused entry to see him, family only, until she blurts out that she is his wife! Cecilia nurses him back to health, but when he finally awakens he has forgotten the last three months due to a blow to the head, and is not in a position to refute Cecilia's claim.

Together Cecilia and Edward search for Thomas whilst Edward desperately tries to regain his memory. But living as husband and wife when one party knows it is a lie and the other has no recollection is fraught with perils, especially since they were already half in love with each other through their letters.

This was an enjoyable historical romance, although I felt that the reveal about how Edward lost his memory was a bit of an afterthought. The first book is still the best for me.

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Review: A Cotswold Christmas

A Cotswold Christmas A Cotswold Christmas by Kate Hewitt
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Anna is an American, she has come to the Cotswolds to spend Christmas alone in a bed and breakfast, only to find that there has been a flood and her room is uninhabitable - on 22 December! Her hapless landlady offers alternate accommodation staying at some cottages which are being renovated by her cousin Colin. Of course Colin turns out to be a gorgeous strapping man, just the antidote to all the bad things that have happened to Anna over the last three months.

I guess this is just what you expect from the cover and title, a sweet holiday romance set in an idyllic country village with interfering family, midnight mass at the local church, long walks with dogs etc.

It was okay, pleasant but didn't light me on fire.

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Tuesday 6 November 2018

Review: Muffin Top

Muffin Top Muffin Top by Avery Flynn
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Lucy Kavanagh is a kick-ass PR fixer, its her job to smooth over whatever disaster her mega-successful clients have created and that's what earns her the big bucks. In her job she's loud and fearless but although she talks a big talk, in private she makes jokes about her weight before others can make nasty comments.

Frankie Hartigan is a fireman, forced to take two weeks leave by his fire chief he is drowning his sorrows with his brother Ford when he sees a guy hassling his brother's girlfriend's BFF Lucy so he steps in to rescue her. The two of them spend the evening chatting about everything and nothing. Frankie is starting to feel left out, everyone he knows is getting loved up and he's never had that sort of feeling for a woman, he's starting to feel left out. Lucy is nothing like the sort of girl he normally goes for, she's far too clever and quick-witted for him, he tends to go for the girls who know the score and aren't looking for more than one night. Lucy is the kind of woman that wants forever.

When Lucy confesses that she doesn't want to attend her high school reunion alone Frankie offers to go with her, after all he has two weeks to kill and nothing to fill the time and the two of them are just friends ... right?

I liked the premise for this but I thought having Lucy being so insecure was just a bit of a cliche, can't a plus size woman be happy and confident inside and out? Also, although she and Frankie soon segue into a relationship while at the high school reunion nothing Frankie (or her father) says will convince her that Frankie genuinely likes her and wants to keep seeing her after the reunion is over. It got tiring quickly and soon I just felt like smashing her face into a brick wall and shouting 'do you believe him now?' over and over and over again.

And without giving away the ending, this is yet another series where the friends and siblings possess miraculous insight into the hero/ heroine's emotions and motivation but are emotionally deaf when it comes to their own.

Having said that, I desperately want to read the next book.

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Review: Diamond Fire

Diamond Fire Diamond Fire by Ilona Andrews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Four and a half stars.

A bridging novel between Nevada's series and Catalina's series.

Nevada Baylor and Connor 'Mad Dog' Rogan are getting married, her sisters are arranging the wedding after Nevada fired two wedding planners. A precious family heirloom goes missing and someone wants to stop the wedding in the worst way possible.

This is a glorious (160 page) novella, family intrigue, Catalina's special gifts, and two mysteries. I just can't wait until 2019 for the first novella in Catalina's new series.

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Review: City of the Lost

City of the Lost City of the Lost by Kelley Armstrong
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I received an ARC of the fourth book in this series and was so enthralled I went back to read the first three.

This is a fabulous concept. A secret town, hidden in the Yukon, which acts as both a refuge for those fleeing potential death (eg spousal abuse or revenge killings) and for those fleeing the law. The life is hard with few amenities and inhabitants must stay for five years.

Casey Duncan is a cop, when she was 18 years old she killed her boyfriend and made it look like a revenge killing by rival drug dealers. Now her history is back to haunt her so she and her BFF Diana, who is fleeing her abusive ex-husband, make plans to flee to this mythical Rockton.

However, as might be expected in a small isolated town populated by victims and criminals, there have been a series of suspicious deaths/ murders and the local police chief (of a team of two) is in over his head - Casey as a fully-fledged police detective is an ideal new inhabitant to help him solve the mystery.

Imagine a small isolated community, surrounded by forest, in a territory with less than half a million people, no way in or out unless escorted by the police chief. No internet, no TV, so far north that there is permafrost, chemical toilets, a basic economy of credits. Everyone gets a fresh start when they come to Rockton so the inhabitants have no idea whether people are fleeing persecution or justice. A town where men significantly outnumber women, where booze is rationed and there is a police-sanctioned brothel. A missing young woman, grisly murders, half-feral people gone native living in the woods, no back-up. The perfect set up for a thriller.

I gave up reading thrillers/ romantic suspense a few years ago because the murders were becoming ever more disturbing and most of the heroines fell into the TSTL bucket. But Kelley Armstrong write brilliant heroines, Nadia Stafford is one of my all-time favourites, and although I was slow to come to the party I am now all in.

As always, Kelley Armstrong writes strong, clever heroines and flawed but lovable heroes. Her plots are dense, yet believable and with a town full of criminals everyone is a suspect and the red herrings flow thick and fast.

Loved it!

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Sunday 4 November 2018

Review: Dearest Rogue

Dearest Rogue Dearest Rogue by Elizabeth Hoyt
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This one didn't really do it for me.

Lady Phoebe Batten, sister of the Duke of Wakefield is almost totally blind. Her brother has hired the former dragoon Captain James Trevillion to guard her and keep her from harm. Then several attempts are made to kidnap Phoebe and James decides the only way to keep her safe is to spirit her away to a secret location.

It has taken me quite a long time to read this book, mainly because I found it less than enthralling. Now I've reached the end I can barely remember the beginning but I found the reasons for the kidnapping to be beyond comprehension.

There was nothing wrong with Phoebe and James as a couple, the book just seemed slow and like a series of repetitions.

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Saturday 3 November 2018

Review: The Other Miss Bridgerton

The Other Miss Bridgerton The Other Miss Bridgerton by Julia Quinn
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Poppy Bridgerton is spending a few weeks with her (very pregnant) friend Elizabeth in Somerset, every afternoon she explores the coastline looking for caves, until one day she stumbles across a privateers' cave and is kidnapped.

Andrew James Rokesby is a former naval captain turned privateer on behalf of His Majesty, couriering letters and documents between the UK, France, Spain and Portugal under the name Captain Andrew James. He is on deadline to deliver some letters to Portugal and has no alternative but to take with him the young woman his men discover hiding among the brandy kegs. However, once they are at sea and he discovers that she is a Bridgerton, cousin to the family that lives next door to his family in Kent, he realises that there is a very real possibility that he will have to marry her to preserve her reputation.

Poppy and Andrew have a great sparky relationship full of innuendo and sarcasm and I really enjoyed reading their exchanges while she was imprisoned on board the ship. I love Julia Quinn's writing and it had an added interest since I spent a long weekend in Lisbon this summer. Unfortunately, I am less enthused about shipboard romances and my enjoyment of the novel overall was tempered by the feeling that I just wanted them to get off the ship which unfortunately doesn't happen for a long time.

I am also surprised to see that I somehow missed the second book in this series (love, love, loved the first book, Because of Miss Bridgerton) so I am off to rectify that omission tout suite.

I received a fre copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Friday 2 November 2018

Review: Watcher in the Woods

Watcher in the Woods Watcher in the Woods by Kelley Armstrong
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Imagine a secret village deep in the Yukons where people are sent to disappear. Released murderers who need to escape from the media, people who need witness protection, criminals who can afford to buy their way into a new life. All they need to do is agree to stay five years in a remote community with no internet, no TV, barely any electricity and a shed load of rules.

Casey Duncan was one of those people, in a previous life she was also a homicide detective and now she has become part of the local police force (of three) of Rockton.

However, when a US Marshall suddenly arrives in Rockton, despite its location and very existence being top secret, looking for a dangerous killer Casey is faced with mystery piled on mystery. Is the marshall who he says he is? How did he find out about Rickton? Who is he looking for and why? Then someone kills the marshall, is the person he was looking for, or one of the other inhabitants? In a town where most of the inhabitants are criminals of some description the whole town is suspect, including Casey's estranged older sister April who was just a little too eager to come to Rockton to consult on an injured man.

This is the fourth book in the series but the first one I have read, although there are references to things that happened in the previous books and there are repercussions from what happened I found it fairly easy to follow and understand what was happening. Like all the best thrillers there is a massive amount of misdirection, in a town of criminals everyone has a motive.

Casey reminded me very much of one of Kelley's other heroines, Nadia Stafford, another woman with a chequered past and a nose for detecting.

I am absolutely hooked and you can expect to read my reviews of the first three books very soon!

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Thursday 1 November 2018

Review: Demon's Mercy

Demon's Mercy Demon's Mercy by Rebecca Zanetti
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Okay, so I was going to say that this novel/novella is the ninth in a series and you have to have read a few of them to be able to distinguish the various characters. But then I looked and actually I have only read one previous book in this series - I have however read several of the spin-off Realm Enforcers series.

If you like your paranormal heroes built like tanks, with super-human powers, a bossy nature and an affinity to motorbikes and guns then this series is for you!

Logan Kyllwood is a vampire-demon hybrid. He is about to perform a mysterious and allegedly highly dangerous ritual to become one of the Seven, a secret group of hybrids sworn to protect the world from an evil imprisoned in a different dimension. He has tracked down a young woman who is one of three mysterious 'Keys' and struck up a conversation with her in a bar. What he doesn't know is that he is the victim of a sting operation. The young woman is actually a fairy (they prefer to be called fae), a species previously thought to be a myth, and she is determined to stop Logan from becoming one of the Seven by kidnapping him.

This has literally everything. Demons, hybrids, fae, oracles, transporting, dimension travel, ancient prophecies, mating rituals, BDSM games, dark rituals, vikings, scotsmen, cute moppets, the list goes on.

I said recently that I think novellas is the way to go with paranormal, short enough to maintain the interest but long enough to encompass plotting, double crosses, fights, mating and important meetings! Honestly this had so many things that I normally loathe about the paranormal, the bossiness, the way the women capitulate and agree that they will obey the men all the time, the way the men ride rough shod over the women, the way they threaten (and often do) to smack their butts. And yet I enjoyed every second of this novella. My only gripe is that the end kind of fizzled out with lots yet to be resolved - not quite a cliff-hanger but most definitely a to-be-continued. Nevertheless, I am eagerly looking forwards to the next books.

I received a free copy of this novel from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Review: Love in Provence

Love in Provence by Jo Thomas My rating: 4 of 5 stars If you ever wondered what happened to Del and Fabi...