Always You by Denise Grover Swank
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Another great book in this series.
So, the backstory - three best friends (male) realise that they have dated a series of extreme (for want of a better word) women and swear a pact to avoid all women. Of course, immediately afterwards they find their one true loves.
Matt Osborn is looking after his five year old nephew Ethan while his sister Abby is away studying medicine, as part of that he has agreed to act as soccer coach to Ethan's school team.
12 years ago Matt proposed to his college sweetheart Annaliese (Anna) Fischer, he was heartbroken when she turned him down in favour of a job in London, England. At the time she told him she never wanted to get married and have children. Imagine his surprise when Ethan's new best friend Toby turns out to be Anna's son.
Anna has returned to her small town from London to look after her father who has had a nasty fall. She has taken six weeks leave from her job in London and brought her son, despite her divorce settlement saying she can't take him out of the country. The last thing she wants is to be confronted by Matt Osborn who has every right to hate her after she left him high and dry.
Despite their best efforts to avoid each other Toby and Ethan's friendship keeps bringing them together. But can they overcome the pain of the past? And should they try to reconnect when Anna is leaving in six weeks?
This was a heartwarming second-chance romance - how could it not be with two cute five year olds and dogs and cantankerous old men?
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Friday, 29 September 2017
Wednesday, 27 September 2017
Review: Completely
Completely by Ruthie Knox
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Whew, how to describe that?
I love Ruthie Knox, her books defy description. I just wish I could remember that whenever I start a new one as they are inevitably so 'different' that I put them aside where they languish for weeks if not months. So was it with this book. I didn't even start properly reading my ARC until the release day despite downloading it back in June!
So, this book features Rosemary Chamberlain (the ex-wife of Winston from the second book in the trilogy, Madly). Rosemary left her husband and teenage daughter to 'find herself' which involved joining a group of women who intend to climb all seven of the highest mountains in the world. Rosemary is the classic British upper class blonde, the other climbers even call her princess behind her back. Then the camp is hit by an avalanche and Rosemary is rescued by the sherpa the other climbers call Doctor Doom.
Doctor Doom's real name is Kal Beckett, the son of two famous mountain climbers. When he and Rosemary eventually get off the mountain they fall into bed together and strike up an unlikely friendship the following day when Kal discovers his kit and all his money has been stolen. Both faced with the reality of their mortality Kal and Rosemary travel to New York to reconnect with family.
This third book in the New York trilogy cements the move (for me) from romance to women's fiction. Rosemary has to confront what made her so unhappy in her marriage and what she really wants from life. Her plans have gone awry and on some level that makes her happy. But will a relationship with Kal simply lead to another unhappy marriage?
Kal has his own issues. His parents had a very bad relationship, some people even speculate that his mother killed his father, he was once idealistic with plans for the welfare of Nepal but since then he has become disillusioned. He has said that only two kinds of people climb Everest: megalomaniacs and the walking wounded. Why would he want to start a relationship with either?
This was as much about a woman's place in society as it was a romance where opposites attract. Rosemary draws upon the experiences of her former mother-in-law, her daughter, her ex-husband's fiancee, her ex-husband's fiancee's parents, Kal, Kal's mother and Kal's family to see the world and her life through a different lens.
Maybe that all sounds a bit worthy, a bit depressing, a bit dull. But I promise it isn't. It's funny. It's sexy and it tackles real problems without a magic romance sticking plaster which miraculously fixes everything with three little words.
I have loved all three of these books, they are all very different but they are fun reads, this may be my favourite.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Whew, how to describe that?
I love Ruthie Knox, her books defy description. I just wish I could remember that whenever I start a new one as they are inevitably so 'different' that I put them aside where they languish for weeks if not months. So was it with this book. I didn't even start properly reading my ARC until the release day despite downloading it back in June!
So, this book features Rosemary Chamberlain (the ex-wife of Winston from the second book in the trilogy, Madly). Rosemary left her husband and teenage daughter to 'find herself' which involved joining a group of women who intend to climb all seven of the highest mountains in the world. Rosemary is the classic British upper class blonde, the other climbers even call her princess behind her back. Then the camp is hit by an avalanche and Rosemary is rescued by the sherpa the other climbers call Doctor Doom.
Doctor Doom's real name is Kal Beckett, the son of two famous mountain climbers. When he and Rosemary eventually get off the mountain they fall into bed together and strike up an unlikely friendship the following day when Kal discovers his kit and all his money has been stolen. Both faced with the reality of their mortality Kal and Rosemary travel to New York to reconnect with family.
This third book in the New York trilogy cements the move (for me) from romance to women's fiction. Rosemary has to confront what made her so unhappy in her marriage and what she really wants from life. Her plans have gone awry and on some level that makes her happy. But will a relationship with Kal simply lead to another unhappy marriage?
Kal has his own issues. His parents had a very bad relationship, some people even speculate that his mother killed his father, he was once idealistic with plans for the welfare of Nepal but since then he has become disillusioned. He has said that only two kinds of people climb Everest: megalomaniacs and the walking wounded. Why would he want to start a relationship with either?
This was as much about a woman's place in society as it was a romance where opposites attract. Rosemary draws upon the experiences of her former mother-in-law, her daughter, her ex-husband's fiancee, her ex-husband's fiancee's parents, Kal, Kal's mother and Kal's family to see the world and her life through a different lens.
Maybe that all sounds a bit worthy, a bit depressing, a bit dull. But I promise it isn't. It's funny. It's sexy and it tackles real problems without a magic romance sticking plaster which miraculously fixes everything with three little words.
I have loved all three of these books, they are all very different but they are fun reads, this may be my favourite.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, 26 September 2017
Review: Head Over Heels
Head Over Heels by Jennifer Dawson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
Sophie Kincaid's dream PR career in Chicago goes up in flames when her boss embezzles money from the firm to feed his coke habit, as a Vice-President she is tarred with the same brush and overnight her name is mud. She retreats to small town Illinois, Revival to be precise where one of her best friends has got her a job in city government assisting the town revitalisation project. Her friend has also found her a house to rent for six months. And that's where the problems begin, because the guy living next door, Ryder Moore, has bad boy written all over him and there's one thing that Sophie has learned is that bad boys are catnip for her - and it always ends badly.
Ryder moved to Revival to get away from wild and crazy girls and his new neighbour, and tenant, has wild and crazy written all over her. He knows he should stay away but there is something so very tempting about arguing with her...
Sophie is less than pleased to find out that no only is Ryder her landlord as well as her neighbour but he is also the deputy sheriff AND technically her boss on the town square grand opening project! Can't a girl catch a break?
Inevitably lust trumps logic and Sophie and Ryder enter into a no-holds barred friends-with-benefits relationship, time limited by Sophie's often expressed intention to return to Chicago after six months. Ryder is small-town through and through, there's no way he would ever want to be a big city cop.
I've see-sawed to and fro on my rating for this book. I'm a sucker for big city girl moves to small town stories and I love enemies to lovers stories but I had two issues with this book:
1) the naughty bits - it took me a while to realise what felt off about the sex - there was more fade to black than actual sex. There's lots of mentions of all the depraved and possibly illegal things that Sophie and Ryder do but not an awful lot of seeing them do those things. The only thing they seem to do is have a lot of exhibitionist alfresco sex. (view spoiler)[Sex on your front lawn? And at a small BBQ at a friend's house? Really, that's not hot that's tacky. (hide spoiler)]
2) both Sophie and Ryder were too willfully blind, I appreciate that a romance novel doesn't really work unless one or both of the characters cant see what is right in front of them but purlease!
I also, just a little bit, wished that the ending had been less predictable, it was done well but part of me wanted either the end to be ambiguous or for it to work out differently.
This is, apparently, the fourth book in a series. I had no problems reading this as a stand-alone although it was clear from all the recently paired-up, disgustingly good-looking couples in the book that this was part of a series.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
Sophie Kincaid's dream PR career in Chicago goes up in flames when her boss embezzles money from the firm to feed his coke habit, as a Vice-President she is tarred with the same brush and overnight her name is mud. She retreats to small town Illinois, Revival to be precise where one of her best friends has got her a job in city government assisting the town revitalisation project. Her friend has also found her a house to rent for six months. And that's where the problems begin, because the guy living next door, Ryder Moore, has bad boy written all over him and there's one thing that Sophie has learned is that bad boys are catnip for her - and it always ends badly.
Ryder moved to Revival to get away from wild and crazy girls and his new neighbour, and tenant, has wild and crazy written all over her. He knows he should stay away but there is something so very tempting about arguing with her...
Sophie is less than pleased to find out that no only is Ryder her landlord as well as her neighbour but he is also the deputy sheriff AND technically her boss on the town square grand opening project! Can't a girl catch a break?
Inevitably lust trumps logic and Sophie and Ryder enter into a no-holds barred friends-with-benefits relationship, time limited by Sophie's often expressed intention to return to Chicago after six months. Ryder is small-town through and through, there's no way he would ever want to be a big city cop.
I've see-sawed to and fro on my rating for this book. I'm a sucker for big city girl moves to small town stories and I love enemies to lovers stories but I had two issues with this book:
1) the naughty bits - it took me a while to realise what felt off about the sex - there was more fade to black than actual sex. There's lots of mentions of all the depraved and possibly illegal things that Sophie and Ryder do but not an awful lot of seeing them do those things. The only thing they seem to do is have a lot of exhibitionist alfresco sex. (view spoiler)[Sex on your front lawn? And at a small BBQ at a friend's house? Really, that's not hot that's tacky. (hide spoiler)]
2) both Sophie and Ryder were too willfully blind, I appreciate that a romance novel doesn't really work unless one or both of the characters cant see what is right in front of them but purlease!
I also, just a little bit, wished that the ending had been less predictable, it was done well but part of me wanted either the end to be ambiguous or for it to work out differently.
This is, apparently, the fourth book in a series. I had no problems reading this as a stand-alone although it was clear from all the recently paired-up, disgustingly good-looking couples in the book that this was part of a series.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
Sunday, 24 September 2017
Review: Touch of Red
Touch of Red by Laura Griffin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars. I wanted to give this book three stars but I was comparing this to Laura's other books, compared to the genre she is still streets ahead of the others.
Brooke Porter is a crime scene investigator with the Delphi Centre, incredibly dedicated she is almost OCD in her attention to detail and commitment to catching the guilty. She is brought to a crime scene where a young woman was brutally murdered just outside her front door. Immediately Brooke senses that there is something 'off' about the scene which leads her to discover that there may have been a witness.
Sean Byrne is a homicide detective. After being shot recently he has had a 'come to Jesus' moment and realised that his life was fairly meaningless and he could have died without ever making a real connection or creating a legacy. He's attracted to Brooke, he finds her intriguing and wants to know her better.
I haven't read the previous Tracers book so I don't know the backstory with Sean and Brooke (if there is any). While I enjoyed the investigative aspects of this novel I felt that the romance overtook the plot about halfway/ two-thirds of the way through and I lost interest a bit. The Brooke, the OCD investigator decides that she will ignore protocol and the rules of evidence and just investigate on her own. Whilst describing her as TSTL might be harsh she definitely has those tendencies.
I have reviewed another series that Laura has started and commented that it felt as though she was being pushed into a direction that she wasn't comfortable with and sadly I feel as though the same is happening with Tracers. This is a series of romantic suspense/ thriller romances. There are scary psycho serial killers everywhere and geeky women who investigate. This started that way and I was L.O.V.I.N.G. it, then, as I said, just after half way through it felt like I was reading one sex scene after another and the investigation was shunted into the background. In the end, I didn't feel the murderer was all that exciting and I had serious doubts about the detective skills that identified the murderer.
If you haven't read any of the Tracers novels before you will find this enjoyable and educational (who knew that about children's fingerprints?) but IMHO lovers of Laura Griffin's novels will find this a little disappointing. Please dial back the sex/ romance and up the mystery quality in the next one Laura.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars. I wanted to give this book three stars but I was comparing this to Laura's other books, compared to the genre she is still streets ahead of the others.
Brooke Porter is a crime scene investigator with the Delphi Centre, incredibly dedicated she is almost OCD in her attention to detail and commitment to catching the guilty. She is brought to a crime scene where a young woman was brutally murdered just outside her front door. Immediately Brooke senses that there is something 'off' about the scene which leads her to discover that there may have been a witness.
Sean Byrne is a homicide detective. After being shot recently he has had a 'come to Jesus' moment and realised that his life was fairly meaningless and he could have died without ever making a real connection or creating a legacy. He's attracted to Brooke, he finds her intriguing and wants to know her better.
I haven't read the previous Tracers book so I don't know the backstory with Sean and Brooke (if there is any). While I enjoyed the investigative aspects of this novel I felt that the romance overtook the plot about halfway/ two-thirds of the way through and I lost interest a bit. The Brooke, the OCD investigator decides that she will ignore protocol and the rules of evidence and just investigate on her own. Whilst describing her as TSTL might be harsh she definitely has those tendencies.
I have reviewed another series that Laura has started and commented that it felt as though she was being pushed into a direction that she wasn't comfortable with and sadly I feel as though the same is happening with Tracers. This is a series of romantic suspense/ thriller romances. There are scary psycho serial killers everywhere and geeky women who investigate. This started that way and I was L.O.V.I.N.G. it, then, as I said, just after half way through it felt like I was reading one sex scene after another and the investigation was shunted into the background. In the end, I didn't feel the murderer was all that exciting and I had serious doubts about the detective skills that identified the murderer.
If you haven't read any of the Tracers novels before you will find this enjoyable and educational (who knew that about children's fingerprints?) but IMHO lovers of Laura Griffin's novels will find this a little disappointing. Please dial back the sex/ romance and up the mystery quality in the next one Laura.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Friday, 22 September 2017
Review: Playing With Forever
Playing With Forever by Amy Andrews
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
DNF at 63%.
I tried twice to read this book but it just didn't work for me, not even a cute dog could keep my interest and I'm not sure why. Amy's Sydney Smoke series has been a bit hit and miss for me - two I loved and two I didn't like at all, sadly this falls into the latter category.
Ryder Davis is an Australian rugby player for the Sydney Smokes. Rich, good-looking and a national hero he has no problems attracting women. When the coach's daughter calls in a favour he is stuck dog-sitting the world's largest, and worst-trained, puppy.
Juliet Morgan is temping at the Dog Centre until she can afford to fulfill her dreams of living in Italy, just like she promised her mother before she died. When a hot guy arrives looking for dog obedience classes she is happy to assist, but she won't let him derail her dreams of travelling, been there and done that before.
And honestly, that's all I've got at nearly two-thirds through the book Juliet and Ryder have progressed to a short-term friends with benefits arrangement and that's about it. My gripe would be too much sex and just not enough plot. Actually, I've just realised that this is published by Entangled Brazen - the cover made me suspicious - that makes soooo much sense because that is my general complaint about the entire imprint. So my bad for complaining about what is more a feature of the publisher.
Anyway, I couldn't see this going anywhere so I gave up. I still love Amy Andrews' writing but I will definitely check the publishing imprint before I request.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
DNF at 63%.
I tried twice to read this book but it just didn't work for me, not even a cute dog could keep my interest and I'm not sure why. Amy's Sydney Smoke series has been a bit hit and miss for me - two I loved and two I didn't like at all, sadly this falls into the latter category.
Ryder Davis is an Australian rugby player for the Sydney Smokes. Rich, good-looking and a national hero he has no problems attracting women. When the coach's daughter calls in a favour he is stuck dog-sitting the world's largest, and worst-trained, puppy.
Juliet Morgan is temping at the Dog Centre until she can afford to fulfill her dreams of living in Italy, just like she promised her mother before she died. When a hot guy arrives looking for dog obedience classes she is happy to assist, but she won't let him derail her dreams of travelling, been there and done that before.
And honestly, that's all I've got at nearly two-thirds through the book Juliet and Ryder have progressed to a short-term friends with benefits arrangement and that's about it. My gripe would be too much sex and just not enough plot. Actually, I've just realised that this is published by Entangled Brazen - the cover made me suspicious - that makes soooo much sense because that is my general complaint about the entire imprint. So my bad for complaining about what is more a feature of the publisher.
Anyway, I couldn't see this going anywhere so I gave up. I still love Amy Andrews' writing but I will definitely check the publishing imprint before I request.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Review: Before I Knew
Before I Knew by Jamie Beck
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The Cabot and the Morgans were friends and neighbours for thirty years until a stupid dare left Joe Morgan dead, shortly afterwards Colby Cabot's husband Mark killed himself over his part in the dare, devastated by his role in the death of his best friend and unable to deal with the guilt. Mark was bi-polar and Colby suffers from the knowledge that she kept his diagnosis from her family, she also worries that his illness may have been a contributing factor to the dare that led to Joe's death.
Two years later Colby has given up her job as a lawyer to open a restaurant called ACertainTea, she has visions of it being a centre for families to come to celebrate special events. The money for the restaurant has come from the family business The Cabot Tea Company and her father has insisted that Colby reports to her brother Hunter.
Alec Morgan has always stood in the shadow of his younger brother Joe, quieter and more studious by nature he was no match for Joe's athleticism and Joe was always his father's favourite. He has also always harboured a secret crush on Colby. Formerly a successful restaurateur, he has had a massive professional disaster, lost his restaurant and has been asked by his old friend Hunter Cabot to assist Colby in her new start-up. Alec too has a secret, Mark wrote him a letter begging for forgiveness and making wild threats which Alec ignored.
So, can two people who have suffered devastating losses which intimately involve their families ever put the past aside?
This book, for me, was killed by all the angst. Angst over Joe's death, over Mark's suicide, over Colby's mother, over Colby's father, over Alec's mother, over Alec's father, over Colby's brother, over Colby's step-sister, over Colby's sister-in-law. You get the picture, we were drowning in angst and Colby felt she had to fix everything, which was a joke because her brother and father, even Alec were so damned patronising I wanted to punch them in the gonads. But then Colby was so damn drippy and saintly that I wanted to throat-punch her too!
Stepping aside from my own personal feelings about the characters, I also felt that Alec's characterisation didn't really 'work'. He was a former geek, the full "jigsaw puzzle making, then take a photo and hang it on your wall" Monty who grew into a demanding chef who shouted at people. He had loved Colby all his life and talked about doing anything she wanted, just to get her to notice him, but then he refused to change HIS menu for HER restaurant to accommodate her very reasonable request that there be some simple food for the unadventurous eaters.
Someone (an author whose book I criticised) once told me that if the characters make you feel something (even incandescent rage) then the author has achieved their goal - well done Jamie Beck, back of the net goal! But seriously, I'm not a fan of all the introspective, navel-gazing, talk about our feelings (but of course don't actually tell people what's wrong) angst. If you like that sort of thing then this is for you.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The Cabot and the Morgans were friends and neighbours for thirty years until a stupid dare left Joe Morgan dead, shortly afterwards Colby Cabot's husband Mark killed himself over his part in the dare, devastated by his role in the death of his best friend and unable to deal with the guilt. Mark was bi-polar and Colby suffers from the knowledge that she kept his diagnosis from her family, she also worries that his illness may have been a contributing factor to the dare that led to Joe's death.
Two years later Colby has given up her job as a lawyer to open a restaurant called ACertainTea, she has visions of it being a centre for families to come to celebrate special events. The money for the restaurant has come from the family business The Cabot Tea Company and her father has insisted that Colby reports to her brother Hunter.
Alec Morgan has always stood in the shadow of his younger brother Joe, quieter and more studious by nature he was no match for Joe's athleticism and Joe was always his father's favourite. He has also always harboured a secret crush on Colby. Formerly a successful restaurateur, he has had a massive professional disaster, lost his restaurant and has been asked by his old friend Hunter Cabot to assist Colby in her new start-up. Alec too has a secret, Mark wrote him a letter begging for forgiveness and making wild threats which Alec ignored.
So, can two people who have suffered devastating losses which intimately involve their families ever put the past aside?
This book, for me, was killed by all the angst. Angst over Joe's death, over Mark's suicide, over Colby's mother, over Colby's father, over Alec's mother, over Alec's father, over Colby's brother, over Colby's step-sister, over Colby's sister-in-law. You get the picture, we were drowning in angst and Colby felt she had to fix everything, which was a joke because her brother and father, even Alec were so damned patronising I wanted to punch them in the gonads. But then Colby was so damn drippy and saintly that I wanted to throat-punch her too!
Stepping aside from my own personal feelings about the characters, I also felt that Alec's characterisation didn't really 'work'. He was a former geek, the full "jigsaw puzzle making, then take a photo and hang it on your wall" Monty who grew into a demanding chef who shouted at people. He had loved Colby all his life and talked about doing anything she wanted, just to get her to notice him, but then he refused to change HIS menu for HER restaurant to accommodate her very reasonable request that there be some simple food for the unadventurous eaters.
Someone (an author whose book I criticised) once told me that if the characters make you feel something (even incandescent rage) then the author has achieved their goal - well done Jamie Beck, back of the net goal! But seriously, I'm not a fan of all the introspective, navel-gazing, talk about our feelings (but of course don't actually tell people what's wrong) angst. If you like that sort of thing then this is for you.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
Review: Christmas at Butterfly Cove
Christmas at Butterfly Cove by Sarah Bennett
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
The third book in the trilogy set in the picturesque Butterfly Cove focuses on the youngest Thorpe sister Eirene (Nee) Thorpe and the younger Spenser brother Luke. Now if you haven't read the two previous books you will miss out on some valuable back-story to these two. Basically they met, had a whirlwind courtship and got married on a whim. On the morning after their wedding Nee got a once in a lifetime opportunity to study with one of the most lauded artists of the modern era, Devin Rees, in New York. But Devin wanted 100% commitment and Nee had to go immediately. Already feeling some of the 'marry in haste repent at leisure' blues, Nee convinces herself that their marriage was a whim and leaves without a word.
Now Nee is back in England, broken and discovers that Luke is her brother-in-law's step-brother - awkward!
As the three Thorpe sisters prepare to spend Christmas and New Year in Butterfly Cove can Nee and Luke move past their history and find love again?
Nee has lost her mojo and doesn't think she can ever paint again. Without her art she is just a pale shadow of her former self. Although Luke is angry that Nee left him without a word he can see that she is hurting and he knows that he still loves her. But if he takes her back can he ever really forgive her or will it fester?
Whilst I enjoyed this, it felt a little bit like a novella which had been stretched out, maybe because Christmas stories so often are novellas rather than full-length novels? Maybe the novel should have started with a flashback to when Luke and Nee first met and then go to New York with her?
Anyway, this is a Christmas like I always imagined, lots of family and friends in a big house. Tons of food and games and fancy dress. Of course there is also drama, tantrums and arguments - it wouldn't be Christmas otherwise!
A fitting end to a charming trilogy where three sisters eventually find love and happiness.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
The third book in the trilogy set in the picturesque Butterfly Cove focuses on the youngest Thorpe sister Eirene (Nee) Thorpe and the younger Spenser brother Luke. Now if you haven't read the two previous books you will miss out on some valuable back-story to these two. Basically they met, had a whirlwind courtship and got married on a whim. On the morning after their wedding Nee got a once in a lifetime opportunity to study with one of the most lauded artists of the modern era, Devin Rees, in New York. But Devin wanted 100% commitment and Nee had to go immediately. Already feeling some of the 'marry in haste repent at leisure' blues, Nee convinces herself that their marriage was a whim and leaves without a word.
Now Nee is back in England, broken and discovers that Luke is her brother-in-law's step-brother - awkward!
As the three Thorpe sisters prepare to spend Christmas and New Year in Butterfly Cove can Nee and Luke move past their history and find love again?
Nee has lost her mojo and doesn't think she can ever paint again. Without her art she is just a pale shadow of her former self. Although Luke is angry that Nee left him without a word he can see that she is hurting and he knows that he still loves her. But if he takes her back can he ever really forgive her or will it fester?
Whilst I enjoyed this, it felt a little bit like a novella which had been stretched out, maybe because Christmas stories so often are novellas rather than full-length novels? Maybe the novel should have started with a flashback to when Luke and Nee first met and then go to New York with her?
Anyway, this is a Christmas like I always imagined, lots of family and friends in a big house. Tons of food and games and fancy dress. Of course there is also drama, tantrums and arguments - it wouldn't be Christmas otherwise!
A fitting end to a charming trilogy where three sisters eventually find love and happiness.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Thursday, 21 September 2017
Review: The Hygge Holiday: The warmest, funniest, cosiest romantic comedy of 2017
The Hygge Holiday: The warmest, funniest, cosiest romantic comedy of 2017 by Rosie Blake
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Reminds me a little of the film Chocolat.
Clara is a Danish girl travelling around England with her rucksack. Spending an evening in a Suffolk pub (quaint ye olde outside but depressing interior) she is entertained by one customer, Louisa, who arrives in her pyjamas and dramatically announces that she is selling her toy shop and moving abroad. Despite her initial misgivings, Clara feels she wants to spend more time in the village so she offers to house-sit Louisa's apartment and the toy shop while she is away.
The village of Yulethorpe is suffering, the shops are closing and people are moving away. Louisa's toy shop and the pub and Roz's post office shop are practically the only places still open. Clara feels a deep need to bring the Danish concept of Hygge to the village. If you don't know what Hygge is, its a feeling a warmth and comfort - that feeling when you are all toasty warm in front of the fire with a fluffy blanket on your lap and a dog sitting on your feet, sipping hot chocolate and reading a good book.
Louisa's son Joe is horrified to find that his mother has just dashed off and left a perfect stranger living in her home and running her business. Joe works in the City in M&A, he is Very Busy and surgically attached to his iPhone. Clara thinks Joe is more in need of Hygge than any other person she has ever met.
So far this book has made me want to clean my house, buy some rugs, start drinking hot chocolate and move to Suffolk! This is such a lovely book to read, the characters are warm and inviting, well apart from Roz who is a bit tetchy, I love the idea that one person could stimulate life back into a village and create such a sense of community.
It's funny and honest, loved this bit:
If you are looking for a sweet romance set in the country (and don't mind foul-mouthed parrots with a weakness for screeching famous lines from movies, accompanied by an ad-libbed obscenity) then I can't recommend this highly enough. Beware, though I was outright blubbing at one point.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Reminds me a little of the film Chocolat.
Clara is a Danish girl travelling around England with her rucksack. Spending an evening in a Suffolk pub (quaint ye olde outside but depressing interior) she is entertained by one customer, Louisa, who arrives in her pyjamas and dramatically announces that she is selling her toy shop and moving abroad. Despite her initial misgivings, Clara feels she wants to spend more time in the village so she offers to house-sit Louisa's apartment and the toy shop while she is away.
The village of Yulethorpe is suffering, the shops are closing and people are moving away. Louisa's toy shop and the pub and Roz's post office shop are practically the only places still open. Clara feels a deep need to bring the Danish concept of Hygge to the village. If you don't know what Hygge is, its a feeling a warmth and comfort - that feeling when you are all toasty warm in front of the fire with a fluffy blanket on your lap and a dog sitting on your feet, sipping hot chocolate and reading a good book.
Louisa's son Joe is horrified to find that his mother has just dashed off and left a perfect stranger living in her home and running her business. Joe works in the City in M&A, he is Very Busy and surgically attached to his iPhone. Clara thinks Joe is more in need of Hygge than any other person she has ever met.
So far this book has made me want to clean my house, buy some rugs, start drinking hot chocolate and move to Suffolk! This is such a lovely book to read, the characters are warm and inviting, well apart from Roz who is a bit tetchy, I love the idea that one person could stimulate life back into a village and create such a sense of community.
It's funny and honest, loved this bit:
I read Mansfield Park for nothing; that Fanny Price must be the most boring woman in literature, I genuinely thought I might die before reaching the end of it ...I couldn't agree more I thought it was the most tedious book, full of religious piety until the last 100 pages when all hell broke loose.
If you are looking for a sweet romance set in the country (and don't mind foul-mouthed parrots with a weakness for screeching famous lines from movies, accompanied by an ad-libbed obscenity) then I can't recommend this highly enough. Beware, though I was outright blubbing at one point.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
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Review: Bayou Born
Bayou Born by Hailey Edwards
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Four and a half stars.
I'm a critical fan of Hailey Edwards' writing, sometimes I think she knocks it out of the park and other times I truly struggle to finish her books. Yet her writing is so fresh, interesting and different that I keep requesting her books. As I hadn't read the last couple of books in the Lorimar Pack series I wasn't sure whether this new series was a spin off or something totally different.
Lucy Boudreau is an enigma. She was found in the swamps of the Mississippi bayou as a young girl fifteen years ago. Her arms and shoulders are marked with metal bands, which resist all attempts at surgical removal. She heals unnaturally fast, she has lightening fast reflexes and she doesn't recognise the face in the mirror - ever! Lucy was adopted by the police officer who found her in the swamps and as a tribute to him she joined the police.
She and her partner are working a missing person case so when a female matching the description is found in the swamp, much like Luce herself was found, they rush to the scene. The young Jane Doe they find is still alive but being guarded by the most enormous alligator who clearly sees Jane as his dinner. Just when Luce and her 'uncle' Harold are running out of options to rescue Jane Doe a group of private security men from White Horse Security arrive on an airboat, they have been hired by the missing girl, Angel Claremont's family to track her down.
I spent a good deal of this book wondering what Luce and the people from White Horse Security and Jane Doe really are (and let me tell you it's a doozy). Clearly they are all 'other' but precisely what does not become clear for quite some time. This is most definitely a mystery wrapped up in a mystery as the reader discovers Lucy's history at the same time as Lucy and the White Horse Security team find out Jane Doe's identity and who has been kidnapping young women. Unfortunately because I think the revelations are SOOOO good, I can't tell you anything else.
Just, this is a totally new series that just blew me away, loved it!
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Four and a half stars.
I'm a critical fan of Hailey Edwards' writing, sometimes I think she knocks it out of the park and other times I truly struggle to finish her books. Yet her writing is so fresh, interesting and different that I keep requesting her books. As I hadn't read the last couple of books in the Lorimar Pack series I wasn't sure whether this new series was a spin off or something totally different.
Lucy Boudreau is an enigma. She was found in the swamps of the Mississippi bayou as a young girl fifteen years ago. Her arms and shoulders are marked with metal bands, which resist all attempts at surgical removal. She heals unnaturally fast, she has lightening fast reflexes and she doesn't recognise the face in the mirror - ever! Lucy was adopted by the police officer who found her in the swamps and as a tribute to him she joined the police.
She and her partner are working a missing person case so when a female matching the description is found in the swamp, much like Luce herself was found, they rush to the scene. The young Jane Doe they find is still alive but being guarded by the most enormous alligator who clearly sees Jane as his dinner. Just when Luce and her 'uncle' Harold are running out of options to rescue Jane Doe a group of private security men from White Horse Security arrive on an airboat, they have been hired by the missing girl, Angel Claremont's family to track her down.
I spent a good deal of this book wondering what Luce and the people from White Horse Security and Jane Doe really are (and let me tell you it's a doozy). Clearly they are all 'other' but precisely what does not become clear for quite some time. This is most definitely a mystery wrapped up in a mystery as the reader discovers Lucy's history at the same time as Lucy and the White Horse Security team find out Jane Doe's identity and who has been kidnapping young women. Unfortunately because I think the revelations are SOOOO good, I can't tell you anything else.
Just, this is a totally new series that just blew me away, loved it!
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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Tuesday, 19 September 2017
Review: Damien's Christmas
Damien's Christmas by M.L. Buchman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Wow, it's taken me nearly a year to get around to reading this! Free in November 2016 Ides of Matt I believe.
I do love Matt's White House stories, they remind me of that wonderful world of The West Wing when the President and his staff were fighting the good fight and always had the best intentions.
Cornelia Day was the Vice President's Assistant, but now he's the President Elect she is moving up in the world as his nominated Chief of Staff. In her first day in the Situation Room she meets Marine Corps Situation Room Duty Officer Damien Feinman. Damien is an anomaly, a Marine who has served 10 years in a job that should be rotated every two years. Damien is just as fascinated by the unusual woman before him and the puzzle she poses.
This is most definitely a meeting of minds. Two highly intellectual, driven individuals at the peak of their careers, analytical and thoughtful they see far more than others around them. TBH, that would be enough for me but, because it's Christmas Matt gave us more. A mysterious meeting with an old enemy in an infamous New York deli provides clues to a potential terrorist attack. But where? And when?
This was deeply satisfying both as a Night Stalkers White House novella, a romance, a mystery AND a holiday story. Loved it.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Wow, it's taken me nearly a year to get around to reading this! Free in November 2016 Ides of Matt I believe.
I do love Matt's White House stories, they remind me of that wonderful world of The West Wing when the President and his staff were fighting the good fight and always had the best intentions.
Cornelia Day was the Vice President's Assistant, but now he's the President Elect she is moving up in the world as his nominated Chief of Staff. In her first day in the Situation Room she meets Marine Corps Situation Room Duty Officer Damien Feinman. Damien is an anomaly, a Marine who has served 10 years in a job that should be rotated every two years. Damien is just as fascinated by the unusual woman before him and the puzzle she poses.
This is most definitely a meeting of minds. Two highly intellectual, driven individuals at the peak of their careers, analytical and thoughtful they see far more than others around them. TBH, that would be enough for me but, because it's Christmas Matt gave us more. A mysterious meeting with an old enemy in an infamous New York deli provides clues to a potential terrorist attack. But where? And when?
This was deeply satisfying both as a Night Stalkers White House novella, a romance, a mystery AND a holiday story. Loved it.
View all my reviews
Review: Royal Pain
Royal Pain by Tracy Wolff
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
DNF at 37%.
It's my bad, why did I request this book? Prince Kian of Wildemar is the younger twin, the playboy, the dilettante, until his twin, the heir apparent is kidnapped. Of course when your twin is kidnapped, presumed dead, you immediately try to start up something with one of the waitresses at a royal party - doesn't everyone?
If you enjoy the OTT TV series The Royal starring Elizabeth Hurley then you'll enjoy this. It has an evil uncle who's plotting to wrest the throne from his brother, stoic bodyguards, evil terrorists - I think you get the picture.
I think if I had found Kian more likable I would have enjoyed this but I found him so self-centred and obnoxious (and plain stupid) that I couldn't read any more, sorry.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review,
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My rating: 1 of 5 stars
DNF at 37%.
It's my bad, why did I request this book? Prince Kian of Wildemar is the younger twin, the playboy, the dilettante, until his twin, the heir apparent is kidnapped. Of course when your twin is kidnapped, presumed dead, you immediately try to start up something with one of the waitresses at a royal party - doesn't everyone?
If you enjoy the OTT TV series The Royal starring Elizabeth Hurley then you'll enjoy this. It has an evil uncle who's plotting to wrest the throne from his brother, stoic bodyguards, evil terrorists - I think you get the picture.
I think if I had found Kian more likable I would have enjoyed this but I found him so self-centred and obnoxious (and plain stupid) that I couldn't read any more, sorry.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review,
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Review: Burn for You
Burn for You by J.T. Geissinger
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
JT Geissinger is an author whose name I recognise and yet, apparently, this is the first book of hers I have read.
Bianca Hardwick is a chef with her own restaurant in the heart of New Orleans. Her mother's restaurant was wiped out by Hurricane Catrina and they are struggling to make ends meet. One night Jackson “The Beast” Boudreaux storms into the restaurant threatening law suits and untold punishments because Bianca's new menu showcases Boudreaux bourbon. Jackson terrorises the staff, is obnoxious, rude and snarly and Bianca lets him know it. Shortly after eating every single dish on the menu Jackson returns to offer (well actually demand) Bianca the job of chef to a banquet he is throwing in two weeks for 300 people at his house. Ordinarily Bianca would tell him where to shove his offer but her mother is ill and she desperately needs the money. Can I just pause at this point and say how glad I am to be British? It is inconceivable to me that someone in a first world country could die just because they can't afford medical care. That a hospital would refuse to give life-saving treatment if you can't pay. Mind-boggling. Sorry, I digress.
Bianca comes to suspect that under the bushy beard and the scowl Jackson is actually not that bad (he has his reasons), so when his father gives him the ultimatum of getting married, joining the family business or losing his trust fund she agrees to marry him - but only to fund her mother's medical treatment.
This book hit so many of my favourite tropes it was unreal. A variation of Beauty and the Beast, marriage of convenience, grumpy hero, estranged family. But it's also funny. Bianca has a lexicon all of her own, her outbursts when irritated are hysterical. I am always wary about books set in New Orleans but there was none of the Cajun drawl (thank goodness). The chapters are also interspersed with Bianca's recipes for those who like that sort of thing.
Overall, this was a quirky retelling of Beauty and the Beast which made me laugh. I'll look out for more books by JT Geissinger in the future.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
JT Geissinger is an author whose name I recognise and yet, apparently, this is the first book of hers I have read.
Bianca Hardwick is a chef with her own restaurant in the heart of New Orleans. Her mother's restaurant was wiped out by Hurricane Catrina and they are struggling to make ends meet. One night Jackson “The Beast” Boudreaux storms into the restaurant threatening law suits and untold punishments because Bianca's new menu showcases Boudreaux bourbon. Jackson terrorises the staff, is obnoxious, rude and snarly and Bianca lets him know it. Shortly after eating every single dish on the menu Jackson returns to offer (well actually demand) Bianca the job of chef to a banquet he is throwing in two weeks for 300 people at his house. Ordinarily Bianca would tell him where to shove his offer but her mother is ill and she desperately needs the money. Can I just pause at this point and say how glad I am to be British? It is inconceivable to me that someone in a first world country could die just because they can't afford medical care. That a hospital would refuse to give life-saving treatment if you can't pay. Mind-boggling. Sorry, I digress.
Bianca comes to suspect that under the bushy beard and the scowl Jackson is actually not that bad (he has his reasons), so when his father gives him the ultimatum of getting married, joining the family business or losing his trust fund she agrees to marry him - but only to fund her mother's medical treatment.
This book hit so many of my favourite tropes it was unreal. A variation of Beauty and the Beast, marriage of convenience, grumpy hero, estranged family. But it's also funny. Bianca has a lexicon all of her own, her outbursts when irritated are hysterical. I am always wary about books set in New Orleans but there was none of the Cajun drawl (thank goodness). The chapters are also interspersed with Bianca's recipes for those who like that sort of thing.
Overall, this was a quirky retelling of Beauty and the Beast which made me laugh. I'll look out for more books by JT Geissinger in the future.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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Saturday, 16 September 2017
Review: Approximately Yours
Approximately Yours by Julie Hammerle
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Danny lives in a town called North Pole. Unsurprisingly the town is an homage to all things Christmas, everything is Christmas themed and the town takes the annual gingerbread competition very seriously.
Danny had high hopes of playing professional basketball until showing off in front of a reporter he fell and broke his ankle. Now his big chance may have gone forever, his girlfriend has dumped him for the waterboy and he realises that he has no clue what he wants from life.
Holly's grandmother lived next door to Danny's family. Growing up Holly and her cousins used to visit North Pole every year at Christmas and Holly would enter the gingerbread competition, mainly because even back then she was in love with Danny. In those days Danny was less athletic and more nerdy.
After Holly's grandmother died the family have returned to North Pole one last time to pack up her house before putting it on the market. When Holly and her cousin Esmerelda (Elda for short) go into Santabucks for coffee they see Danny serving behind the counter. Holly is sad that her childhood crush doesn't even recognise and, just like every other guy she's ever met, he only seems to have eyes for her beautiful cousin. Whilst Elda might be every guy's wet dream, she is also a bit weird, fascinated by plumbing, and has difficulty talking to guys she likes. So a plot is born, Holly will help Elda when she goes on a date with Danny by telling her what to say (and what not to say). In Danny's defence, he is trying to avoid going out with another girl just like his ex, he is attracted to Holly but she seems to turn her nose up at him so he tries to do something different by dating Elda.
Just like in Cyrano de Bergerac, Elda and Danny are totally incompatible but Holly and Danny text each other constantly. Danny can't understand why the woman he chats to for hours at night about architecture and films and the gingerbread competition suddenly starts talking about plumbing and roadkill when they meet in person.
This was a sweet YA romance, the trouble is when you add the sweetness of Christmas in a Christmas-themed town it becomes almost too sweet. For those who know the plot of Cyrano there were few surprises and very little tension. Danny and Holly were so 'nice' that they didn't really have much character. I was more interested in Elda's obsession with plumbing.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Danny lives in a town called North Pole. Unsurprisingly the town is an homage to all things Christmas, everything is Christmas themed and the town takes the annual gingerbread competition very seriously.
Danny had high hopes of playing professional basketball until showing off in front of a reporter he fell and broke his ankle. Now his big chance may have gone forever, his girlfriend has dumped him for the waterboy and he realises that he has no clue what he wants from life.
Holly's grandmother lived next door to Danny's family. Growing up Holly and her cousins used to visit North Pole every year at Christmas and Holly would enter the gingerbread competition, mainly because even back then she was in love with Danny. In those days Danny was less athletic and more nerdy.
After Holly's grandmother died the family have returned to North Pole one last time to pack up her house before putting it on the market. When Holly and her cousin Esmerelda (Elda for short) go into Santabucks for coffee they see Danny serving behind the counter. Holly is sad that her childhood crush doesn't even recognise and, just like every other guy she's ever met, he only seems to have eyes for her beautiful cousin. Whilst Elda might be every guy's wet dream, she is also a bit weird, fascinated by plumbing, and has difficulty talking to guys she likes. So a plot is born, Holly will help Elda when she goes on a date with Danny by telling her what to say (and what not to say). In Danny's defence, he is trying to avoid going out with another girl just like his ex, he is attracted to Holly but she seems to turn her nose up at him so he tries to do something different by dating Elda.
Just like in Cyrano de Bergerac, Elda and Danny are totally incompatible but Holly and Danny text each other constantly. Danny can't understand why the woman he chats to for hours at night about architecture and films and the gingerbread competition suddenly starts talking about plumbing and roadkill when they meet in person.
This was a sweet YA romance, the trouble is when you add the sweetness of Christmas in a Christmas-themed town it becomes almost too sweet. For those who know the plot of Cyrano there were few surprises and very little tension. Danny and Holly were so 'nice' that they didn't really have much character. I was more interested in Elda's obsession with plumbing.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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Friday, 15 September 2017
Review: Hated
Hated by Christine Manzari
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Frankie DiGorgio was the tomboy sister with three older brothers. Brought up by her mother and then by her nan whilst her ne'er do well father spent most of her life in prison for one con after another she was the original girl from the wrong side of the tracks. Her great passions were dirt bike riding and Austin Stone.
Growing up, Frankie's BFF was Austin the boy next door, a nerdy cello-playing musical prodigy who, with his twin brother Dallas went on to win a talent show and took their duelling cellos act to a sell out Vegas show. Austin and Dallas' mother was your typical pushy mom and she hated Frankie. Over the years their opposites attract friendship turned into first love, but something happened on the night of the premiere of Austin's show in Vegas which changed everything.
Four years later Frankie returns to her nana's home in Texas for the first time since Vegas, nana is in a nursing home and the family has made the decision to sell her house to pay for the best treatment they can. Beset by the memories of the past, Frankie is surprised to find that Austin has moved back into his family's home. Tortured by the secrets she has kept Frankie can't help but be attracted to the man her first love has become. But Austin is bitter and angry, lashing out at her. Does she have the courgae to tell him the truth about that night four years ago?
Told in a mixture of present day and out of sequence flashbacks from both Frankie and Austin's POV this was a surprisingly enjoyable NA second-chance romance. I say surprisingly because at first Frankie came across as too brash, she also indulged in just a leetle bit of slut shaming (or at least calling total strangers sluts just because they were flirting with Austin). Also Frankie became a little self-righteous and claimed that Austin didn't deserve to know the sacrifice she had made for him whereas even at that early stage in the book I suspected his attitude was a direct result of what she had done. There was also a cringe-worthy moment for me when Austin described himself thus
As a devotee of romance I didn't think that Frankie's big sacrifice/ secret was all that much of a surprise, maybe it wasn't meant to be, although then why tell the story through flashbacks?
What I did love about this book which elevated above the rest of the run-of-the-mill NA genre was the pranking. As a chid Frankie would get even with people who slighted her by pulling a monumental prank. Now, faced with packing up a family home full of memories with a hostile former lover next door she resorts to pranking Austin. as the tit-for-tat pranking escalates Austin and Frankie start to unravel their issues from the past.
This is the third book in a series, I haven't read any of the others and I felt this was easy to read as a stand alone.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Frankie DiGorgio was the tomboy sister with three older brothers. Brought up by her mother and then by her nan whilst her ne'er do well father spent most of her life in prison for one con after another she was the original girl from the wrong side of the tracks. Her great passions were dirt bike riding and Austin Stone.
Growing up, Frankie's BFF was Austin the boy next door, a nerdy cello-playing musical prodigy who, with his twin brother Dallas went on to win a talent show and took their duelling cellos act to a sell out Vegas show. Austin and Dallas' mother was your typical pushy mom and she hated Frankie. Over the years their opposites attract friendship turned into first love, but something happened on the night of the premiere of Austin's show in Vegas which changed everything.
Four years later Frankie returns to her nana's home in Texas for the first time since Vegas, nana is in a nursing home and the family has made the decision to sell her house to pay for the best treatment they can. Beset by the memories of the past, Frankie is surprised to find that Austin has moved back into his family's home. Tortured by the secrets she has kept Frankie can't help but be attracted to the man her first love has become. But Austin is bitter and angry, lashing out at her. Does she have the courgae to tell him the truth about that night four years ago?
Told in a mixture of present day and out of sequence flashbacks from both Frankie and Austin's POV this was a surprisingly enjoyable NA second-chance romance. I say surprisingly because at first Frankie came across as too brash, she also indulged in just a leetle bit of slut shaming (or at least calling total strangers sluts just because they were flirting with Austin). Also Frankie became a little self-righteous and claimed that Austin didn't deserve to know the sacrifice she had made for him whereas even at that early stage in the book I suspected his attitude was a direct result of what she had done. There was also a cringe-worthy moment for me when Austin described himself thus
"Need some help?" I asked, my voice a low growl of amusement.I mean really who EVER describes their own voice like that? But these were minor niggles. Luckily, as with many other NA books, Frankie's 'attitude' toned down a bit as the book went on and it became much more enjoyable as a result.
As a devotee of romance I didn't think that Frankie's big sacrifice/ secret was all that much of a surprise, maybe it wasn't meant to be, although then why tell the story through flashbacks?
What I did love about this book which elevated above the rest of the run-of-the-mill NA genre was the pranking. As a chid Frankie would get even with people who slighted her by pulling a monumental prank. Now, faced with packing up a family home full of memories with a hostile former lover next door she resorts to pranking Austin. as the tit-for-tat pranking escalates Austin and Frankie start to unravel their issues from the past.
This is the third book in a series, I haven't read any of the others and I felt this was easy to read as a stand alone.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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Review: Beg, Borrow or Steal
Beg, Borrow or Steal by Susie Tate
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I love Susie Tate's Broken Heart novels and couldn't believe my luck when I saw this one available on NetGalley - a rabid dog couldn't have lunged harder than I did for that request button! Susie writes humorous romances set against the backdrop of British hospitals, as a General Practitioner she knows her stuff and her novels are full of medical terms and puns - but please don't let that put you off because she can also be knicker-wettingly funny.
Jamie Grantham is a young successful anaesthetist and Medical Education Director at a London Hospital. He is pretty proud of himself for being a fun, engaged kind of guy so he is beyond irritated to see that one of the students in the back row of the lecture hall is asleep during his lecture. When he wakes her (in a rather sarcastic and unkind way) he is shocked that this young girl, dressed like a bag-lady, is the most arrestingly beautiful woman he has ever seen.
Libby Penny is struggling to keep her head above water. A single mother with an enchanting but ferociously precocious four year old daughter she is trying to balance training to be a doctor with caring for her daughter and earning a living the only way she can. At first Dr Grantham is openly dismissive of her, particularly scathing about her repeatedly falling asleep whilst he is teaching but when he comes face to face (well small foot to shin) with Libby's daughter Rosie all the pieces start to fall into place. Gradually Jamie tries to insert himself into Libby's life but having been brought up in a wealthy family he really doesn't understand the issues Libby faces or the choices she has to make.
Love, love, loved it. Jamie is well-meaning but his own childhood has made him aspire to be Peter Perfect in every way and Libby's choices don't always gel with that conditioning. Libby is such a contradiction, a stunningly beautiful woman who is also a sci-fi nerd and has no interest in clothes or make-up, a devoted mother, former athlete and brilliant student. Even the ancillary cast are great. I am so thrilled at the very quick sneak peak at Millie and Pav's story as they were both strong ancillary characters that I wanted to know more about.
If you've read the Broken Heart quartet I would say this is slightly less 'quirky', although there are still some brilliantly funny lines, but if you loved those books then I'm sure you will love this too. Heck, I stayed up until 3:30 am to finish reading this when I have a really busy day at work today!
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I love Susie Tate's Broken Heart novels and couldn't believe my luck when I saw this one available on NetGalley - a rabid dog couldn't have lunged harder than I did for that request button! Susie writes humorous romances set against the backdrop of British hospitals, as a General Practitioner she knows her stuff and her novels are full of medical terms and puns - but please don't let that put you off because she can also be knicker-wettingly funny.
Jamie Grantham is a young successful anaesthetist and Medical Education Director at a London Hospital. He is pretty proud of himself for being a fun, engaged kind of guy so he is beyond irritated to see that one of the students in the back row of the lecture hall is asleep during his lecture. When he wakes her (in a rather sarcastic and unkind way) he is shocked that this young girl, dressed like a bag-lady, is the most arrestingly beautiful woman he has ever seen.
Libby Penny is struggling to keep her head above water. A single mother with an enchanting but ferociously precocious four year old daughter she is trying to balance training to be a doctor with caring for her daughter and earning a living the only way she can. At first Dr Grantham is openly dismissive of her, particularly scathing about her repeatedly falling asleep whilst he is teaching but when he comes face to face (well small foot to shin) with Libby's daughter Rosie all the pieces start to fall into place. Gradually Jamie tries to insert himself into Libby's life but having been brought up in a wealthy family he really doesn't understand the issues Libby faces or the choices she has to make.
Love, love, loved it. Jamie is well-meaning but his own childhood has made him aspire to be Peter Perfect in every way and Libby's choices don't always gel with that conditioning. Libby is such a contradiction, a stunningly beautiful woman who is also a sci-fi nerd and has no interest in clothes or make-up, a devoted mother, former athlete and brilliant student. Even the ancillary cast are great. I am so thrilled at the very quick sneak peak at Millie and Pav's story as they were both strong ancillary characters that I wanted to know more about.
If you've read the Broken Heart quartet I would say this is slightly less 'quirky', although there are still some brilliantly funny lines, but if you loved those books then I'm sure you will love this too. Heck, I stayed up until 3:30 am to finish reading this when I have a really busy day at work today!
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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Review: Mend Your Heart
Mend Your Heart by Tracey Alvarez
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Five years ago Isaac Ngata had the world at his feet, a player for the New Zealand All Blacks rugby team, he and his best friend Jackson Fisher together with the team had just beaten England and were celebrating in London when a terrible accident resulted in Jackson's death and ended Isaac's career. Isaac returned to Bounty Bay and set up a business with his brother Sam.
Natalie Fisher has never forgiven Isaac for his part in Jackson's death. To this day she avoids him whenever possible, something which has become increasingly difficult as their two sets of friends have started to intersect. But when Natalie's daughter Olivia finds out that the girl's rugby team might not play this year because they don't have a coach, who could be a better choice than a former All Black?
Isaac never wanted to set foot on a rugby pitch ever again, but when the girl he thought of as a member of his family tells him he owes her for getting her dad killed he knows he can't refuse. And maybe making Olivia happy might go some way to thawing Natalie's heart. Isaac has loved his best friend's wife for as long as he can remember, but with his guilt about the events of the night that Jackson died can he ever move on?
I loved Isaac, I love a grumpy tortured hero (especially with tattoos) and Isaac was all of that. Oh, and he makes a mean cup of coffee - but only the good stuff. His favourite refrain in the morning is "I don't want to adult today" and I know how he feels. Watching him trying to teach a group of teenage girls the finer points of rugby as they (and their mums) lust over his ripped body is hysterical and his solution is nothing short of genius.
To assuage the headmistress' concerns about a man of Isaac's reputation and notoriety teaching a group of impressionable young girls, Natalie is forced to act as a chaperone, but Isaac insists anyone who attends the training has to participate. Much to her dismay, as a woman allergic to exercise, Natalie finds herself dragged out of bed at a ridiculously early hour, before she is fully caffeinated, to run and play tag rugby with a group of teenagers. But as Isaac and Natalie are thrust together for the first time in five years Natalie discovers that there's a fine line between hate and love.
I can never decide whether I love the Stewart Island or the Bounty Bay series more - maybe its whichever I'm reading right now. All I can say is that these books are pure catnip to me. I love the characters and their down-to-earth lives, the Maori traditions and the weekly family Sunday dinners. The sulky teens and the hero-worshipping of rugby players. I also love that rugby players who are worshipped in their own country would NEVER pay another man to paint their houses - its a reason to revoke their man cards!
If you love American sports romances and want to try something a bit different I thoroughly recommend this book.
I requested a free ARC copy of this book and I’m writing an honest review of it. I was not compensated for my review, and I was not required to write a positive review. The opinion expressed here is my own.
Bumped for release.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Five years ago Isaac Ngata had the world at his feet, a player for the New Zealand All Blacks rugby team, he and his best friend Jackson Fisher together with the team had just beaten England and were celebrating in London when a terrible accident resulted in Jackson's death and ended Isaac's career. Isaac returned to Bounty Bay and set up a business with his brother Sam.
Natalie Fisher has never forgiven Isaac for his part in Jackson's death. To this day she avoids him whenever possible, something which has become increasingly difficult as their two sets of friends have started to intersect. But when Natalie's daughter Olivia finds out that the girl's rugby team might not play this year because they don't have a coach, who could be a better choice than a former All Black?
Isaac never wanted to set foot on a rugby pitch ever again, but when the girl he thought of as a member of his family tells him he owes her for getting her dad killed he knows he can't refuse. And maybe making Olivia happy might go some way to thawing Natalie's heart. Isaac has loved his best friend's wife for as long as he can remember, but with his guilt about the events of the night that Jackson died can he ever move on?
I loved Isaac, I love a grumpy tortured hero (especially with tattoos) and Isaac was all of that. Oh, and he makes a mean cup of coffee - but only the good stuff. His favourite refrain in the morning is "I don't want to adult today" and I know how he feels. Watching him trying to teach a group of teenage girls the finer points of rugby as they (and their mums) lust over his ripped body is hysterical and his solution is nothing short of genius.
To assuage the headmistress' concerns about a man of Isaac's reputation and notoriety teaching a group of impressionable young girls, Natalie is forced to act as a chaperone, but Isaac insists anyone who attends the training has to participate. Much to her dismay, as a woman allergic to exercise, Natalie finds herself dragged out of bed at a ridiculously early hour, before she is fully caffeinated, to run and play tag rugby with a group of teenagers. But as Isaac and Natalie are thrust together for the first time in five years Natalie discovers that there's a fine line between hate and love.
I can never decide whether I love the Stewart Island or the Bounty Bay series more - maybe its whichever I'm reading right now. All I can say is that these books are pure catnip to me. I love the characters and their down-to-earth lives, the Maori traditions and the weekly family Sunday dinners. The sulky teens and the hero-worshipping of rugby players. I also love that rugby players who are worshipped in their own country would NEVER pay another man to paint their houses - its a reason to revoke their man cards!
If you love American sports romances and want to try something a bit different I thoroughly recommend this book.
I requested a free ARC copy of this book and I’m writing an honest review of it. I was not compensated for my review, and I was not required to write a positive review. The opinion expressed here is my own.
Bumped for release.
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Review: In Time for Christmas
In Time for Christmas by Monique Martin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A short Christmas novella in which Elizabeth and Simon have to go back in time to save Christmas by persuading a disenchanted Charles Dickens to write A Christmas Carol.
I liked this but my enjoment was slightly hampered by the fact that I loathe A Christmas Carol in all its shapes and forms. It's too schmaltzy and sickly sweet and unfortunately as Elizabeth and Simon show Dickens Christmases past and future in an attempt to Scrooge him they followed the same path.
So my rating of three stars is more indicative of the fact that this is an imaginative retelling of a story I dislike than of anything intrinsically wrong with the novella. It's all just a bit too Hallmark Christmas for me.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A short Christmas novella in which Elizabeth and Simon have to go back in time to save Christmas by persuading a disenchanted Charles Dickens to write A Christmas Carol.
I liked this but my enjoment was slightly hampered by the fact that I loathe A Christmas Carol in all its shapes and forms. It's too schmaltzy and sickly sweet and unfortunately as Elizabeth and Simon show Dickens Christmases past and future in an attempt to Scrooge him they followed the same path.
So my rating of three stars is more indicative of the fact that this is an imaginative retelling of a story I dislike than of anything intrinsically wrong with the novella. It's all just a bit too Hallmark Christmas for me.
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Review: Hated
Hated by Christine Manzari
My rating: 0 of 5 stars
Frankie DiGorgio was the tomboy sister with three older brothers. Brought up by her mother and then by her nan whilst her ne'er do well father spent most of her life in prison for one con after another she was the original girl from the wrong side of the tracks. Her great passions were dirt bike riding and Austin Stone.
Growing up, Frankie's BFF was Austin the boy next door, a nerdy cello-playing musical prodigy who, with his twin brother Dallas went on to win a talent show and took their duelling cellos act to a sell out Vegas show. Austin and Dallas' mother was your typical pushy mom and she hated Frankie. Over the years their opposites attract friendship turned into first love, but something happened on the night of the premiere of Austin's show in Vegas which changed everything.
Four years later Frankie returns to her nana's home in Texas for the first time since Vegas, nana is in a nursing home and the family has made the decision to sell her house to pay for the best treatment they can. Beset by the memories of the past, Frankie is surprised to find that Austin has moved back into his family's home. Tortured by the secrets she has kept Frankie can't help but be attracted to the man her first love has become. But Austin is bitter and angry, lashing out at her. Does she have the courgae to tell him the truth about that night four years ago?
Told in a mixture of present day and out of sequence flashbacks from both Frankie and Austin's POV this was a surprisingly enjoyable NA second-chance romance. I say surprisingly because at first Frankie came across as too brash, she also indulged in just a leetle bit of slut shaming (or at least calling total strangers sluts just because they were flirting with Austin). Also Frankie became a little self-righteous and claimed that Austin didn't deserve to know the sacrifice she had made for him whereas even at that early stage in the book I suspected his attitude was a direct result of what she had done. There was also a cringe-worthy moment for me when Austin described himself thus
As a devotee of romance I didn't think that Frankie's big sacrifice/ secret was all that much of a surprise, maybe it wasn't meant to be, although then why tell the story through flashbacks?
What I did love about this book which elevated above the rest of the run-of-the-mill NA genre was the pranking. As a chid Frankie would get even with people who slighted her by pulling a monumental prank. Now, faced with packing up a family home full of memories with a hostile former lover next door she resorts to pranking Austin. as the tit-for-tat pranking escalates Austin and Frankie start to unravel their issues from the past.
This is the third book in a series, I haven't read any of the others and I felt this was easy to read as a stand alone.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 0 of 5 stars
Frankie DiGorgio was the tomboy sister with three older brothers. Brought up by her mother and then by her nan whilst her ne'er do well father spent most of her life in prison for one con after another she was the original girl from the wrong side of the tracks. Her great passions were dirt bike riding and Austin Stone.
Growing up, Frankie's BFF was Austin the boy next door, a nerdy cello-playing musical prodigy who, with his twin brother Dallas went on to win a talent show and took their duelling cellos act to a sell out Vegas show. Austin and Dallas' mother was your typical pushy mom and she hated Frankie. Over the years their opposites attract friendship turned into first love, but something happened on the night of the premiere of Austin's show in Vegas which changed everything.
Four years later Frankie returns to her nana's home in Texas for the first time since Vegas, nana is in a nursing home and the family has made the decision to sell her house to pay for the best treatment they can. Beset by the memories of the past, Frankie is surprised to find that Austin has moved back into his family's home. Tortured by the secrets she has kept Frankie can't help but be attracted to the man her first love has become. But Austin is bitter and angry, lashing out at her. Does she have the courgae to tell him the truth about that night four years ago?
Told in a mixture of present day and out of sequence flashbacks from both Frankie and Austin's POV this was a surprisingly enjoyable NA second-chance romance. I say surprisingly because at first Frankie came across as too brash, she also indulged in just a leetle bit of slut shaming (or at least calling total strangers sluts just because they were flirting with Austin). Also Frankie became a little self-righteous and claimed that Austin didn't deserve to know the sacrifice she had made for him whereas even at that early stage in the book I suspected his attitude was a direct result of what she had done. There was also a cringe-worthy moment for me when Austin described himself thus
"Need some help?" I asked, my voice a low growl of amusement.I mean really who EVER describes their own voice like that? But these were minor niggles. Luckily, as with many other NA books, Frankie's 'attitude' toned down a bit as the book went on and it became much more enjoyable as a result.
As a devotee of romance I didn't think that Frankie's big sacrifice/ secret was all that much of a surprise, maybe it wasn't meant to be, although then why tell the story through flashbacks?
What I did love about this book which elevated above the rest of the run-of-the-mill NA genre was the pranking. As a chid Frankie would get even with people who slighted her by pulling a monumental prank. Now, faced with packing up a family home full of memories with a hostile former lover next door she resorts to pranking Austin. as the tit-for-tat pranking escalates Austin and Frankie start to unravel their issues from the past.
This is the third book in a series, I haven't read any of the others and I felt this was easy to read as a stand alone.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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Wednesday, 13 September 2017
Review: Temporary
Temporary by Sarina Bowen
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Sarina Bowen does it again (and Sarah Mayberry of course).
Reminded me a little of Talk British to Me, I was relieved to find that it was by a totally different author.
Grace Kerrington is a young woman who has given up on her dreams of art and fashion to study marketing and business in order to look after her 15 year old sister Olivia whilst their mother is off getting high with her latest squeeze. In order to get Olivia into a good school they have to live in a really bad apartment.
Grace has recently stopped working as a bartender and is temping for the Walker Group with a hope of getting a permanent position when she gets called into her boss' office. The head honcho of the Walker Group, Victoria Walker has called from their headquarters in Australia, her brother, who lives in New York, has died and she needs someone to catalogue and handle the sale of all his belongings.
Callan Walker is the black sheep of the Walker dynasty who spends his days on yachts with super models and various hangers-on. He learns of his uncle's death from a stranger at a party and is horrified to find that his mother had him created without any funeral service or even informing Callan. He is then astonished to find that his uncle left everything to Victoria rather than the plethora of charitable causes he had always intended. Convinced there must be a later will, Callan flies to New York determined to find the missing will and honour his uncle's wishes.
At first Callan thinks Grace is just another of his mother's raptors - all sharp suits and sharper teeth but soon he catches glimpses of the real Grace and realises that she is not at all what he thought.
This was pretty low angst for Sarina, I'm used to her wringing my heart strings with the awful lives her heroes/ heroines lead but although Grace was struggling she didn't have the terrible life/ background that I have come to expect.
I just enjoyed every single word. There's LOADS of coffee, a cute dog, fascinating neighbours, family strife, a bit of a mystery and 100 days of Callan - I know I'd sign up!
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Sarina Bowen does it again (and Sarah Mayberry of course).
Reminded me a little of Talk British to Me, I was relieved to find that it was by a totally different author.
Grace Kerrington is a young woman who has given up on her dreams of art and fashion to study marketing and business in order to look after her 15 year old sister Olivia whilst their mother is off getting high with her latest squeeze. In order to get Olivia into a good school they have to live in a really bad apartment.
Grace has recently stopped working as a bartender and is temping for the Walker Group with a hope of getting a permanent position when she gets called into her boss' office. The head honcho of the Walker Group, Victoria Walker has called from their headquarters in Australia, her brother, who lives in New York, has died and she needs someone to catalogue and handle the sale of all his belongings.
Callan Walker is the black sheep of the Walker dynasty who spends his days on yachts with super models and various hangers-on. He learns of his uncle's death from a stranger at a party and is horrified to find that his mother had him created without any funeral service or even informing Callan. He is then astonished to find that his uncle left everything to Victoria rather than the plethora of charitable causes he had always intended. Convinced there must be a later will, Callan flies to New York determined to find the missing will and honour his uncle's wishes.
At first Callan thinks Grace is just another of his mother's raptors - all sharp suits and sharper teeth but soon he catches glimpses of the real Grace and realises that she is not at all what he thought.
This was pretty low angst for Sarina, I'm used to her wringing my heart strings with the awful lives her heroes/ heroines lead but although Grace was struggling she didn't have the terrible life/ background that I have come to expect.
I just enjoyed every single word. There's LOADS of coffee, a cute dog, fascinating neighbours, family strife, a bit of a mystery and 100 days of Callan - I know I'd sign up!
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Monday, 11 September 2017
Review: Something New
Something New by Megan Ryder
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
DNF at 33%
Anna Maria Costado is an actress, she is filmed screaming at a waitress and her career is about to implode. She returns to her home town in Texas, five years after she left, for a friend’s wedding and runs slap-bang into Wyatt Turner, the man she loved, a former footballer until an injury destroyed his career just as it started.
I lurve second-chance romances, sports-romances and wedding-based romances but this book left me cold. I think Megan Ryder was too busy trying to find a good reason why Anna and Wyatt did and said the things they did (eg Anna was screaming at the waitress because she has a deadly nut allergy and the food contained nuts) to actually make Anna and Wyatt likeable. Basically, in all their interactions with each other, and Anna's interactions with others, they were narcissistic, jumped to conclusions, didn't trust and made everything all about them.
I promised that I would read another two chapters before I bailed but in the end I could only manage one, it just carried on, Anna being bitchy to someone (for her own special reasons) and then Wyatt deciding he was the arbiter of what is and isn't acceptable for Anna to do and say. Then they bring it all back to their break-up and a big case of "No, I didn't - but you did!" backwards and forwards between them.
I disliked both characters and just didn't want to read anymore!
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 1 of 5 stars
DNF at 33%
Anna Maria Costado is an actress, she is filmed screaming at a waitress and her career is about to implode. She returns to her home town in Texas, five years after she left, for a friend’s wedding and runs slap-bang into Wyatt Turner, the man she loved, a former footballer until an injury destroyed his career just as it started.
I lurve second-chance romances, sports-romances and wedding-based romances but this book left me cold. I think Megan Ryder was too busy trying to find a good reason why Anna and Wyatt did and said the things they did (eg Anna was screaming at the waitress because she has a deadly nut allergy and the food contained nuts) to actually make Anna and Wyatt likeable. Basically, in all their interactions with each other, and Anna's interactions with others, they were narcissistic, jumped to conclusions, didn't trust and made everything all about them.
I promised that I would read another two chapters before I bailed but in the end I could only manage one, it just carried on, Anna being bitchy to someone (for her own special reasons) and then Wyatt deciding he was the arbiter of what is and isn't acceptable for Anna to do and say. Then they bring it all back to their break-up and a big case of "No, I didn't - but you did!" backwards and forwards between them.
I disliked both characters and just didn't want to read anymore!
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 Kingpin of Camelot
The Kingpin of Camelot by Cassandra Gannon
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
OMG! Ilona Andrews recommended this book so that's an autoread as far as I'm concerned and what a fantastic book it was.
Imagine a world in which creatures from myths, nursery rhymes, fairytales and children's books are real. Where King Arthur and Queen Guinevere rule Camelot assisted by the Scarecrow and the White Rabbit is a scientist. Where Midas, the Pied Piper and Little Miss Muffet are criminal masterminds. Got that straight? The world is separated into Good folk and Bad folk - you are just born that way and it makes no difference how you behave, a saint could be Bad and a serial killer could be Good. The Good folk have all the power and the Bad folk have none. This is a world where there is such a thing as your True Love and Bad folk know immediately they meet. But folk also have twentieth century technology like cell-phones.
Arthur was a jerk and everyone thinks Gwen killed him, the Scarecrow wants to become king by marrying Gwen, but she refused and he locks her in the dungeon. Gwen escapes with her daughter Avalon and approaches Midas, the biggest, baddest, wealthiest Bad man there is and offers him a deal - Marry Gwen and help her win back her Kingdom, in return she will make him king.
This was a laugh-riot from start to finish. The sheer inventiveness of Cassandra Gannon and the humour she brought to the marriage contract between Gwen and Midas has to be read to be believed. As does Trysten (the Gryphon)'s comments on playing with dolls.
Overall, if you enjoy the books of Robert Rankin, the incomparable and sorely missed Terry Pratchett, Jasper Fforde and others of that ilk I think you will love this as much as I did.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
OMG! Ilona Andrews recommended this book so that's an autoread as far as I'm concerned and what a fantastic book it was.
Imagine a world in which creatures from myths, nursery rhymes, fairytales and children's books are real. Where King Arthur and Queen Guinevere rule Camelot assisted by the Scarecrow and the White Rabbit is a scientist. Where Midas, the Pied Piper and Little Miss Muffet are criminal masterminds. Got that straight? The world is separated into Good folk and Bad folk - you are just born that way and it makes no difference how you behave, a saint could be Bad and a serial killer could be Good. The Good folk have all the power and the Bad folk have none. This is a world where there is such a thing as your True Love and Bad folk know immediately they meet. But folk also have twentieth century technology like cell-phones.
Arthur was a jerk and everyone thinks Gwen killed him, the Scarecrow wants to become king by marrying Gwen, but she refused and he locks her in the dungeon. Gwen escapes with her daughter Avalon and approaches Midas, the biggest, baddest, wealthiest Bad man there is and offers him a deal - Marry Gwen and help her win back her Kingdom, in return she will make him king.
This was a laugh-riot from start to finish. The sheer inventiveness of Cassandra Gannon and the humour she brought to the marriage contract between Gwen and Midas has to be read to be believed. As does Trysten (the Gryphon)'s comments on playing with dolls.
Overall, if you enjoy the books of Robert Rankin, the incomparable and sorely missed Terry Pratchett, Jasper Fforde and others of that ilk I think you will love this as much as I did.
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Review: Sledgehammer
Sledgehammer by P. Dangelico
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I read the first book in this series and was blown away by P Dangelico's fresh voice and engaging characters. When I saw this book available on NetGalley I was drawn to the cover (deep as a puddle, me) and googled the author - when I realised I'd read and loved the first book it was a no-brainer for me.
Sometimes second books show that the first book was a flash in the pan, not this one it's just as good and I loved it just as much.
Amber Jones is Cam's best friend from the first book. She's a struggling actress working as a bartender in New York. Her ex invites her to his parents' house for their New Years Eve party where she is blind-sided by his announcement of his engagement to another actress. Things get out of control and Amber might have accidentally almost burned the house down. When her ex's parents start shouting that she did it deliberately Amber is arrested and taken to the police station. Imagine her surprise when Fancy McButterpants (aka Ethan Vaughn, Cam's husband Calvin's best friend) turns up to bail her out. Ethan is a sports lawyer and a thorn in Amber's side ever since they met. He's a bit like Mary Poppins, practically perfect in every way, perfectly coiffed, perfectly dressed, perfect face, perfect body, always perfectly turned out - unlike Amber.
At Amber's bail hearing she is only allowed out on bail if she agrees to stay with a responsible individual, step forward Fancy. When she gets to Ethan's home Amber is shocked to discover that inside the fancy apartment is a building site and Fancy (as she insists on calling him) likes to do a bit of remodelling, using a sledgehammer, in his spare time.
Amber is snarky and funny. She has a scary collection of B.O.Bs (battery-operated boyfriends) and a humorous collection of T-shirts. Ethan eats mainly from Wholefoods and is corporate competence through and through. But as the two of them forge a strange relationship while they wait for Ethan's criminal lawyer colleague to make the charges against Amber go away Amber realises that the real Ethan is even better than she knew.
This is funny, heart-warming and Ethan is my new book boyfriend, although I also want Amber to be my BFF so that could be awkward. Thoroughly recommended.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I read the first book in this series and was blown away by P Dangelico's fresh voice and engaging characters. When I saw this book available on NetGalley I was drawn to the cover (deep as a puddle, me) and googled the author - when I realised I'd read and loved the first book it was a no-brainer for me.
Sometimes second books show that the first book was a flash in the pan, not this one it's just as good and I loved it just as much.
Amber Jones is Cam's best friend from the first book. She's a struggling actress working as a bartender in New York. Her ex invites her to his parents' house for their New Years Eve party where she is blind-sided by his announcement of his engagement to another actress. Things get out of control and Amber might have accidentally almost burned the house down. When her ex's parents start shouting that she did it deliberately Amber is arrested and taken to the police station. Imagine her surprise when Fancy McButterpants (aka Ethan Vaughn, Cam's husband Calvin's best friend) turns up to bail her out. Ethan is a sports lawyer and a thorn in Amber's side ever since they met. He's a bit like Mary Poppins, practically perfect in every way, perfectly coiffed, perfectly dressed, perfect face, perfect body, always perfectly turned out - unlike Amber.
At Amber's bail hearing she is only allowed out on bail if she agrees to stay with a responsible individual, step forward Fancy. When she gets to Ethan's home Amber is shocked to discover that inside the fancy apartment is a building site and Fancy (as she insists on calling him) likes to do a bit of remodelling, using a sledgehammer, in his spare time.
Amber is snarky and funny. She has a scary collection of B.O.Bs (battery-operated boyfriends) and a humorous collection of T-shirts. Ethan eats mainly from Wholefoods and is corporate competence through and through. But as the two of them forge a strange relationship while they wait for Ethan's criminal lawyer colleague to make the charges against Amber go away Amber realises that the real Ethan is even better than she knew.
This is funny, heart-warming and Ethan is my new book boyfriend, although I also want Amber to be my BFF so that could be awkward. Thoroughly recommended.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
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Review: Boomerang Boyfriend
Boomerang Boyfriend by Chris Cannon
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
I have to admit, I misread the blurb on NetGalley when I requested this book and thought, for some reason, that Delia was best friends with Jack's brother not his sister!
Anyhoo, Delia has been best friends with Zoe for ever and spends probably more time at Zoe and Jack's house than her own. Delia's parents work anti-social shifts and appear to be a bit switched-off, they don't remember to buy food and sometimes it seems as though Delia is the adult taking care of her feckless parents. Having said that, money is clearly tight and her parents love her, they just aren't often THERE.
Zoe and Jack have been touched by tragedy when their father and grandfather were killed in a car crash, at first their mother also seemed to have checked out but she seems to be doing better. They all three live with Zoe and Jack's grandmother. Zoe is dating Grant and Delia had high hopes of dating Grant's best friend Aidan, but he has firmly friend-zoned her after she spontaneously kissed him.
Delia is starting work at Betty's Burgers as the new dessert princess - basically she serves slices of cake and sings happy birthday if someone has a birthday (when they get a free slice of cake). Jack already works at Betty's which is a problem because Jack is a complete jerk. But it seems as though the fates are conspiring against Delia because not only does she have to see Jack every time she spends time at Zoe's house AND work with him but as his class' art teacher has left suddenly he is also taking art classes at school with her. But as they are forced into even close proximity Jack and Delia discover they may have more in common than they thought and the person who irritates them the most may also see them the best.
I have tagged this as "angst-angst-angst" because of Delia's parents and Jack and Zoe's situation and Jack's best friend whose brother died of an overdose, heck even Aidan has problems at home. But at the same time I have tagged it as low-angst because these things are just background and the actual plot is relatively angst-free.
I liked this, but I didn't love it. I see from Goodreads that this is the third in the Boyfriend Chronicles series and although it can definitely be read as a stand-alone there is definitely the feel that maybe I missed something - perhaps the start of Delia's crush on Aidan?
Overall, a sweet YA romance about your best friend's older brother, it's got dogs and pie and art jokes and it's about normal kids with normal names, albeit that some of them have had to deal with some difficult circumstances.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
I have to admit, I misread the blurb on NetGalley when I requested this book and thought, for some reason, that Delia was best friends with Jack's brother not his sister!
Anyhoo, Delia has been best friends with Zoe for ever and spends probably more time at Zoe and Jack's house than her own. Delia's parents work anti-social shifts and appear to be a bit switched-off, they don't remember to buy food and sometimes it seems as though Delia is the adult taking care of her feckless parents. Having said that, money is clearly tight and her parents love her, they just aren't often THERE.
Zoe and Jack have been touched by tragedy when their father and grandfather were killed in a car crash, at first their mother also seemed to have checked out but she seems to be doing better. They all three live with Zoe and Jack's grandmother. Zoe is dating Grant and Delia had high hopes of dating Grant's best friend Aidan, but he has firmly friend-zoned her after she spontaneously kissed him.
Delia is starting work at Betty's Burgers as the new dessert princess - basically she serves slices of cake and sings happy birthday if someone has a birthday (when they get a free slice of cake). Jack already works at Betty's which is a problem because Jack is a complete jerk. But it seems as though the fates are conspiring against Delia because not only does she have to see Jack every time she spends time at Zoe's house AND work with him but as his class' art teacher has left suddenly he is also taking art classes at school with her. But as they are forced into even close proximity Jack and Delia discover they may have more in common than they thought and the person who irritates them the most may also see them the best.
I have tagged this as "angst-angst-angst" because of Delia's parents and Jack and Zoe's situation and Jack's best friend whose brother died of an overdose, heck even Aidan has problems at home. But at the same time I have tagged it as low-angst because these things are just background and the actual plot is relatively angst-free.
I liked this, but I didn't love it. I see from Goodreads that this is the third in the Boyfriend Chronicles series and although it can definitely be read as a stand-alone there is definitely the feel that maybe I missed something - perhaps the start of Delia's crush on Aidan?
Overall, a sweet YA romance about your best friend's older brother, it's got dogs and pie and art jokes and it's about normal kids with normal names, albeit that some of them have had to deal with some difficult circumstances.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
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Friday, 8 September 2017
Review: Jagged Edge
Jagged Edge by Cara Carnes
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
A strong three and a half stars.
Mary Reynolds is 50% of the operational powerhouse known as the Quillery Edge, Mary is The Edge. Together she and her friend Vi have masterminded more SpecOps missions than anyone else. They are the brains behind the business known as The Hive. Some months ago the owner and founder of The Hive, Peter Rugers, had an 'accident' and died in mysterious circumstances. Since then Mary and Vi have been worked flat out by Peter's business partner Martin Driggs who is taking on questionable jobs and making reckless decisions.
The book opens with Mary having been captured, She is mentally and physcially tortured, raped and drugged in an attempt to extract her secrets, especially the cutting edge HERA security program they developed, but not even the knowledge that the kidnappers are doing the same to Vi in the cell next door is enough to make her talk.
Dylan Mason and his six brothers run a rival organisation, The Arsenal, based in their small home town. Each of the brothers has special forces experience one way and another and they are in awe of the skills of The Edge. When they get a tip off that The Edge has been kidnapped they are 'all in' - but what do the kidnappers really want and who made the tip off?
I enjoy spec ops/romances but they can be a little formulaic and the male characters can be a bit like cardboard cut-outs, similarly many authors write these kick-ass female characters who nonetheless somehow need rescuing by a bigger, badder man. Not kidding, she could be the deadliest assassin in the world at the start of the book but halfway through she becomes a crying shaking wreck clinging to the arm of the alpha male.
Cara Carnes managed to avoid that pitfall. Mary Reynolds is focused on her job with a singular dedication, she has no hobbies and no life outside The Hive. She eats, breathes and sleeps missions and she's crazy good at what she does. She has trouble socialising, except with her three friends from MIT and she has body-image issues.
Dylan is the middle Mason brother, he has had a bad experience in the past and has sworn off relationships, but there's something about The Edge which gets under his skin. Except he realises that The Edge and Mary Reynolds are two very different people: the confident woman in the control room who orders around field operatives with calm authority, who flirts and deliberately pushes to get results and the timid woman behind the persona who feels she is worthless and expendable.
There's a whole load of backstory for Mary (and Dylan) that only gets alluded to, as a reader you are running to try to keep up with the pace of events and just trying to work out who is who and what is going on. I don't know whether there was a previous series or maybe a prequel novella but there's a lot of other stuff swirling around - I like that, I like that things from the past are referred to but don't actually have any impact on current events, that not every secret is revealed, that the reader is forced to guess and speculate and wonder.
I guessed who was behind the kidnapping - but then I probably had a guess list of four or five people so it's not as though it was that obvious.
My only fear is that each of Mary's friends will hook up with another Mason brother and that Dylan's sister Riley will hook up with one of the male operatives in an increasingly incestuous circle of romance.
There's no cliffhanger, although the Mason brothers discover that something wrong appears to be going on in the next town, people are getting hurt and the townspeople are running scared - presumably that's the subject of the next book.
I liked this, it reminded me somewhat of Elle Kennedy's excellent Killer Instincts series or Julie Ann Walker's Black Knights Inc series. I would definitely read the next in the series.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
A strong three and a half stars.
Mary Reynolds is 50% of the operational powerhouse known as the Quillery Edge, Mary is The Edge. Together she and her friend Vi have masterminded more SpecOps missions than anyone else. They are the brains behind the business known as The Hive. Some months ago the owner and founder of The Hive, Peter Rugers, had an 'accident' and died in mysterious circumstances. Since then Mary and Vi have been worked flat out by Peter's business partner Martin Driggs who is taking on questionable jobs and making reckless decisions.
The book opens with Mary having been captured, She is mentally and physcially tortured, raped and drugged in an attempt to extract her secrets, especially the cutting edge HERA security program they developed, but not even the knowledge that the kidnappers are doing the same to Vi in the cell next door is enough to make her talk.
Dylan Mason and his six brothers run a rival organisation, The Arsenal, based in their small home town. Each of the brothers has special forces experience one way and another and they are in awe of the skills of The Edge. When they get a tip off that The Edge has been kidnapped they are 'all in' - but what do the kidnappers really want and who made the tip off?
I enjoy spec ops/romances but they can be a little formulaic and the male characters can be a bit like cardboard cut-outs, similarly many authors write these kick-ass female characters who nonetheless somehow need rescuing by a bigger, badder man. Not kidding, she could be the deadliest assassin in the world at the start of the book but halfway through she becomes a crying shaking wreck clinging to the arm of the alpha male.
Cara Carnes managed to avoid that pitfall. Mary Reynolds is focused on her job with a singular dedication, she has no hobbies and no life outside The Hive. She eats, breathes and sleeps missions and she's crazy good at what she does. She has trouble socialising, except with her three friends from MIT and she has body-image issues.
Dylan is the middle Mason brother, he has had a bad experience in the past and has sworn off relationships, but there's something about The Edge which gets under his skin. Except he realises that The Edge and Mary Reynolds are two very different people: the confident woman in the control room who orders around field operatives with calm authority, who flirts and deliberately pushes to get results and the timid woman behind the persona who feels she is worthless and expendable.
There's a whole load of backstory for Mary (and Dylan) that only gets alluded to, as a reader you are running to try to keep up with the pace of events and just trying to work out who is who and what is going on. I don't know whether there was a previous series or maybe a prequel novella but there's a lot of other stuff swirling around - I like that, I like that things from the past are referred to but don't actually have any impact on current events, that not every secret is revealed, that the reader is forced to guess and speculate and wonder.
I guessed who was behind the kidnapping - but then I probably had a guess list of four or five people so it's not as though it was that obvious.
My only fear is that each of Mary's friends will hook up with another Mason brother and that Dylan's sister Riley will hook up with one of the male operatives in an increasingly incestuous circle of romance.
There's no cliffhanger, although the Mason brothers discover that something wrong appears to be going on in the next town, people are getting hurt and the townspeople are running scared - presumably that's the subject of the next book.
I liked this, it reminded me somewhat of Elle Kennedy's excellent Killer Instincts series or Julie Ann Walker's Black Knights Inc series. I would definitely read the next in the series.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Thursday, 7 September 2017
Review: The Break
The Break by Marian Keyes
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Four and a half, might even be five stars!
Marian Keyes was the writer of my thirties. Books like Watermelon and Rachel's Holiday created a whole new genre for me, Irish chicklit with a twist. When I saw this on NetGalley I had to request it, for the sake of my thirties but I had this little pit of dread in my stomach, what if it was the same as the stuff I read 20 years ago? I needn't have worried, this is still my Marian Keyes, just her heroines have a whole load more baggage and years.
Amy (44) has been married to Hugh (46) for a long time. A modern family they both work, they have three 'daughters': Neeve is Amy's from a short-lived previous marriage; Kiara is their daughter; and Sofie, who is actually Amy's brother's daughter but Amy and Hugh unofficially adopted her after his relationship with her mother imploded and poor Sofie fell through the cracks. Amy spends two days a week in London in her PR job, the rest of the time she is in Dublin with four siblings and a father with Alzheimer's. This is modern living: complicated relationships; remarriages; aged parents; twenty-something children living at home; two adults with good jobs and yet money problems; sibling rivalries; and professional angst. But overall, Amy and Hugh are happy, they are each other's best friends, they complete each other's sentences, until Hugh announces he wants a six month break in South East Asia to 'find himself'. Trouble is, no matter what her friends and family want her to, Amy doesn't hate Hugh, heck she even sympathises with him (when she isn't swearing at him or begging him to stay).
When stalking Hugh on Facebook, Amy finds incriminating photos of him with a young woman and suddenly all bets are off.
This is hallmark Marian Keyes full of "rides" and wacky family members, yet it also spoke to me personally on a deeper level about the doldrums we fall into in long marriages, how we swap romantic love for a kind of best friends love and the lies we tell ourselves about our feelings and our actions. It made me want to go home (I was working abroad at the time) and make mad passionate love to my husband and tell him how much I do love him and appreciate him.
Just like the other Marian Keyes books I've read no-one is entirely good or bad and people aren't always what they seem.
Absolutely loved it!
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Four and a half, might even be five stars!
Marian Keyes was the writer of my thirties. Books like Watermelon and Rachel's Holiday created a whole new genre for me, Irish chicklit with a twist. When I saw this on NetGalley I had to request it, for the sake of my thirties but I had this little pit of dread in my stomach, what if it was the same as the stuff I read 20 years ago? I needn't have worried, this is still my Marian Keyes, just her heroines have a whole load more baggage and years.
Amy (44) has been married to Hugh (46) for a long time. A modern family they both work, they have three 'daughters': Neeve is Amy's from a short-lived previous marriage; Kiara is their daughter; and Sofie, who is actually Amy's brother's daughter but Amy and Hugh unofficially adopted her after his relationship with her mother imploded and poor Sofie fell through the cracks. Amy spends two days a week in London in her PR job, the rest of the time she is in Dublin with four siblings and a father with Alzheimer's. This is modern living: complicated relationships; remarriages; aged parents; twenty-something children living at home; two adults with good jobs and yet money problems; sibling rivalries; and professional angst. But overall, Amy and Hugh are happy, they are each other's best friends, they complete each other's sentences, until Hugh announces he wants a six month break in South East Asia to 'find himself'. Trouble is, no matter what her friends and family want her to, Amy doesn't hate Hugh, heck she even sympathises with him (when she isn't swearing at him or begging him to stay).
When stalking Hugh on Facebook, Amy finds incriminating photos of him with a young woman and suddenly all bets are off.
This is hallmark Marian Keyes full of "rides" and wacky family members, yet it also spoke to me personally on a deeper level about the doldrums we fall into in long marriages, how we swap romantic love for a kind of best friends love and the lies we tell ourselves about our feelings and our actions. It made me want to go home (I was working abroad at the time) and make mad passionate love to my husband and tell him how much I do love him and appreciate him.
Just like the other Marian Keyes books I've read no-one is entirely good or bad and people aren't always what they seem.
Absolutely loved it!
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
Review: Stormking Road
Stormking Road by T.L. Haddix
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
How odd!
So I was drawn in by the unusual blurb but ended up confused by what genre I was reading.
On the face of it this is a straightforward small-town romance between Sydney Gibson, a 26 year old woman, and Sawyer Evans, the 46 year old man she has had a crush on since she was six years old. She comes back to the small town she grew up in after a devastating divorce. Not needing money, she does need a job to keep her busy so her father suggests she help Sawyer with his fledgling private investigations business.
Sawyer used to be a policeman and has the dubious honour of having arrested Sydney as a teenager, he remembers a rebellious teenager and is shocked at the young sophisticated woman she has become. Despite their mutual attraction he tries to hold back because: a) he's her boss; b) he's 20 years older than her; c) he's friends with her father and grandfather; and d) he has some rare incurable sterility so he could never give her children.
I quite liked the romance, it was a slow burn and there was some good banter, especially between Sydney and various women who drape themselves all over Sawyer.
But ...
Sydney and her family all have special powers. Yep, special powers. Now this is the sixth book in the series, I haven't read any of the rest so I'm not sure whether the other books are more or less woo-woo than this one, but this just seemed odd. Sydney has some odd healing power, they think she may have cured her aunt's cancer when she was younger, one of her cousins can see/ speak to the dead and other relatives are different kinds of shifters. As far as I could see this was just an excuse to abracadabra an insurmountable obstacle (can you guess what it might be?). I didn't get it. I also thought it was odd that they all had different powers - surely genetics would suggest they all had the same power or manifestations of the same power?
There were also a couple of scenes which crossed a line for me. I don't mind rough sex between consenting adults but when one person uses it to express sadness by biting, pinching, hair-pulling etc and it is out of the ordinary that actually raises red flags for me. Expressing emotion through violence? Not acceptable. The other scene is where Sydney and Sawyer have sex before meeting his ex-wife - as I read that scene I thought if it were written about anyone other than the heroine it would have been seen as trashy and tacky - so why is it okay for Sydney to do/ think that?
If those two scenes had been written differently and there were no special woo-woo powers I would have liked this book a lot more.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
How odd!
So I was drawn in by the unusual blurb but ended up confused by what genre I was reading.
On the face of it this is a straightforward small-town romance between Sydney Gibson, a 26 year old woman, and Sawyer Evans, the 46 year old man she has had a crush on since she was six years old. She comes back to the small town she grew up in after a devastating divorce. Not needing money, she does need a job to keep her busy so her father suggests she help Sawyer with his fledgling private investigations business.
Sawyer used to be a policeman and has the dubious honour of having arrested Sydney as a teenager, he remembers a rebellious teenager and is shocked at the young sophisticated woman she has become. Despite their mutual attraction he tries to hold back because: a) he's her boss; b) he's 20 years older than her; c) he's friends with her father and grandfather; and d) he has some rare incurable sterility so he could never give her children.
I quite liked the romance, it was a slow burn and there was some good banter, especially between Sydney and various women who drape themselves all over Sawyer.
But ...
Sydney and her family all have special powers. Yep, special powers. Now this is the sixth book in the series, I haven't read any of the rest so I'm not sure whether the other books are more or less woo-woo than this one, but this just seemed odd. Sydney has some odd healing power, they think she may have cured her aunt's cancer when she was younger, one of her cousins can see/ speak to the dead and other relatives are different kinds of shifters. As far as I could see this was just an excuse to abracadabra an insurmountable obstacle (can you guess what it might be?). I didn't get it. I also thought it was odd that they all had different powers - surely genetics would suggest they all had the same power or manifestations of the same power?
There were also a couple of scenes which crossed a line for me. I don't mind rough sex between consenting adults but when one person uses it to express sadness by biting, pinching, hair-pulling etc and it is out of the ordinary that actually raises red flags for me. Expressing emotion through violence? Not acceptable. The other scene is where Sydney and Sawyer have sex before meeting his ex-wife - as I read that scene I thought if it were written about anyone other than the heroine it would have been seen as trashy and tacky - so why is it okay for Sydney to do/ think that?
If those two scenes had been written differently and there were no special woo-woo powers I would have liked this book a lot more.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, 5 September 2017
Review: Breakaway
Breakaway by Sophia Henry
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
So, my bad, I saw the cover and requested the book based on it and the blurb without checking whether I had read anything by Sophia Henry before. I have, I DNF'd it.
The good news is that I didn't DNF this book but I got steadily more irritated as I continued to read.
First, the blurb that sold this book to me is totally misleading. On the assumption that it gets changed, can I just say that the second paragraph of the blurb references something that I as a reader didn't get told until well over halfway through the book. In fact, the blurb I read basically tells you the entire plot of the book, including all the "twists".
Luke Daniels is a pro-hockey player whose career was cut short prematurely after a tackle left him with a compressed disc in his neck. He has been in denial for the past twelve months, believing that if he obeys everything his doctors and physiotherapists tell him to do he will make it back. Without hockey he feels lost.
Brianna Collins is a paediatric oncology nurse, she has moved to Charlotte on a nursing rotation for a few months. On a St Patrick's Day city pub crawl with one of her new colleagues she joins her colleague's friends which include a certain hockey player who is described as looking like Jon Snow (from GoT) or Leonardo di Caprio.
What follows is standard smexy novella territory. Bree and Luke decide to become f$ck buddies and they proceed to have sex for what felt like a third of the book. At this point I was disappointed because I actually liked the plot and wanted more of that ... big mistake!
Of course Luke volunteers at the hospital where Bree works, in fact on the ward where she is stationed. The reason being that one of his team-mates has a son with terminal cancer who is on the ward.
I try not to be mean when I review books, I am conscious that I have been gifted a review copy but sometimes I can't hold back. I felt that this book just hit every cliche known to romance. Luke has a terrible childhood, Bree is the less-favoured sibling of millionaire parents. There's a cute moppet with cancer. Luke flirts with addictions. Heck, he wallows in self-pity for two days and he's suddenly an alcoholic. He gets prescribed pain killers by the doctor following his surgery and then he needs help to wean himself off them. As an aside, do doctors in the USA actually prescribe such dangerous drugs for someone recovery from back surgery? My husband has had three surgeries on his back and is taking a cocktail of strong pain-killers (for the pain) and he is perfectly capable of holding down a full-time job, operating heavy machinery, being around small children and is not addicted. Why would an otherwise healthy athlete become addicted to strong pain-killers and suddenly be unsafe around children in a hospital?
It felt as though there was no development of the characters, there was no evidence that Luke was depressed until we were told he was; he vacillated from happier than he'd ever been to depressed and looking to narcotics to dull the pain. He went from a naturally confident and cocky athlete, with millions in the bank and puck bunnies falling on the floor with their legs open to a self-pitying whiner who talks as though he's on the brink of food stamps. With absolutely no reasoning, not even an attempt to imply that his first person POV was him lying to himself.
In the first third of the book Bree is portrayed as a dirty-mouthed (in a nice way), sexually liberated woman looking for a hook-up with no strings attached. Then suddenly Luke is talking about her as if she's Mother Teresa and some sweet, innocent Pollyanna rolled into one. The characters changed direction so many times I got whiplash and the plot was so tired and cliched (and spoiled in the blurb) that I read on in disbelief.
I'm sure this book would appeal to others, heck its the fifth book in the series so lots of people must love them but definitely not for me.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
So, my bad, I saw the cover and requested the book based on it and the blurb without checking whether I had read anything by Sophia Henry before. I have, I DNF'd it.
The good news is that I didn't DNF this book but I got steadily more irritated as I continued to read.
First, the blurb that sold this book to me is totally misleading. On the assumption that it gets changed, can I just say that the second paragraph of the blurb references something that I as a reader didn't get told until well over halfway through the book. In fact, the blurb I read basically tells you the entire plot of the book, including all the "twists".
Luke Daniels is a pro-hockey player whose career was cut short prematurely after a tackle left him with a compressed disc in his neck. He has been in denial for the past twelve months, believing that if he obeys everything his doctors and physiotherapists tell him to do he will make it back. Without hockey he feels lost.
Brianna Collins is a paediatric oncology nurse, she has moved to Charlotte on a nursing rotation for a few months. On a St Patrick's Day city pub crawl with one of her new colleagues she joins her colleague's friends which include a certain hockey player who is described as looking like Jon Snow (from GoT) or Leonardo di Caprio.
What follows is standard smexy novella territory. Bree and Luke decide to become f$ck buddies and they proceed to have sex for what felt like a third of the book. At this point I was disappointed because I actually liked the plot and wanted more of that ... big mistake!
Of course Luke volunteers at the hospital where Bree works, in fact on the ward where she is stationed. The reason being that one of his team-mates has a son with terminal cancer who is on the ward.
I try not to be mean when I review books, I am conscious that I have been gifted a review copy but sometimes I can't hold back. I felt that this book just hit every cliche known to romance. Luke has a terrible childhood, Bree is the less-favoured sibling of millionaire parents. There's a cute moppet with cancer. Luke flirts with addictions. Heck, he wallows in self-pity for two days and he's suddenly an alcoholic. He gets prescribed pain killers by the doctor following his surgery and then he needs help to wean himself off them. As an aside, do doctors in the USA actually prescribe such dangerous drugs for someone recovery from back surgery? My husband has had three surgeries on his back and is taking a cocktail of strong pain-killers (for the pain) and he is perfectly capable of holding down a full-time job, operating heavy machinery, being around small children and is not addicted. Why would an otherwise healthy athlete become addicted to strong pain-killers and suddenly be unsafe around children in a hospital?
It felt as though there was no development of the characters, there was no evidence that Luke was depressed until we were told he was; he vacillated from happier than he'd ever been to depressed and looking to narcotics to dull the pain. He went from a naturally confident and cocky athlete, with millions in the bank and puck bunnies falling on the floor with their legs open to a self-pitying whiner who talks as though he's on the brink of food stamps. With absolutely no reasoning, not even an attempt to imply that his first person POV was him lying to himself.
In the first third of the book Bree is portrayed as a dirty-mouthed (in a nice way), sexually liberated woman looking for a hook-up with no strings attached. Then suddenly Luke is talking about her as if she's Mother Teresa and some sweet, innocent Pollyanna rolled into one. The characters changed direction so many times I got whiplash and the plot was so tired and cliched (and spoiled in the blurb) that I read on in disbelief.
I'm sure this book would appeal to others, heck its the fifth book in the series so lots of people must love them but definitely not for me.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
Review: Arm Candy
Arm Candy by Jessica Lemmon
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Love the cover!
I really enjoyed this but I think if you haven't read the first book you would miss a lot of the sexual tension that grows between Davis and Grace. I've noticed this with a few series where the seeds of a romance are planted in the previous book, if you are not careful the actual novel feels as though it is missing something; in this case the banter between Davis and Grace.
Davis is a stock analyst, even though he works at home he still wears a suit and tie EVERY day. Each night he comes to McGreevy's Pub for a Sam Adams, more often that not he leaves with a petite blonde on his arm, but rarely the same one. Grace is the red-haired bartender at McGreevy's, she and Davis trade insults nightly, until she bets him $100 that he won't go out with the next non-blonde that approaches him, $200 if it's a redhead. Challenge accepted, but Davis chooses Grace.
Davis really is the perfect date, thoughtful, attentive, caring, handsome and educated. Six years ago he was left at the altar by his redheaded fiancé and that has left some scars, and an aversion to redheads. But he finds Grace intriguing. Grace is the daughter of two divorce lawyers who stayed together for her sake, something she wishes they hadn't done. Since then, she has not seen her father which has also left a mark on her.
Can an uptight suit and a fiery bartender make a go of it? Hell yes!
I think I liked this even more than the first one. Can't wait to see who the third one is about. Is it the mysterious Dax or maybe Davis' colleagues Simpson and Charmaine?
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Love the cover!
I really enjoyed this but I think if you haven't read the first book you would miss a lot of the sexual tension that grows between Davis and Grace. I've noticed this with a few series where the seeds of a romance are planted in the previous book, if you are not careful the actual novel feels as though it is missing something; in this case the banter between Davis and Grace.
Davis is a stock analyst, even though he works at home he still wears a suit and tie EVERY day. Each night he comes to McGreevy's Pub for a Sam Adams, more often that not he leaves with a petite blonde on his arm, but rarely the same one. Grace is the red-haired bartender at McGreevy's, she and Davis trade insults nightly, until she bets him $100 that he won't go out with the next non-blonde that approaches him, $200 if it's a redhead. Challenge accepted, but Davis chooses Grace.
Davis really is the perfect date, thoughtful, attentive, caring, handsome and educated. Six years ago he was left at the altar by his redheaded fiancé and that has left some scars, and an aversion to redheads. But he finds Grace intriguing. Grace is the daughter of two divorce lawyers who stayed together for her sake, something she wishes they hadn't done. Since then, she has not seen her father which has also left a mark on her.
Can an uptight suit and a fiery bartender make a go of it? Hell yes!
I think I liked this even more than the first one. Can't wait to see who the third one is about. Is it the mysterious Dax or maybe Davis' colleagues Simpson and Charmaine?
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
Monday, 4 September 2017
Review: Mend Your Heart
Mend Your Heart by Tracey Alvarez
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Five years ago Isaac Ngata had the world at his feet, a player for the New Zealand All Blacks rugby team, he and his best friend Jackson Fisher together with the team had just beaten England and were celebrating in London when a terrible accident resulted in Jackson's death and ended Isaac's career. Isaac returned to Bounty Bay and set up a business with his brother Sam.
Natalie Fisher has never forgiven Isaac for his part in Jackson's death. To this day she avoids him whenever possible, something which has become increasingly difficult as their two sets of friends have started to intersect. But when Natalie's daughter Olivia finds out that the girl's rugby team might not play this year because they don't have a coach, who could be a better choice than a former All Black?
Isaac never wanted to set foot on a rugby pitch ever again, but when the girl he thought of as a member of his family tells him he owes her for getting her dad killed he knows he can't refuse. And maybe making Olivia happy might go some way to thawing Natalie's heart. Isaac has loved his best friend's wife for as long as he can remember, but with his guilt about the events of the night that Jackson died can he ever move on?
I loved Isaac, I love a grumpy tortured hero (especially with tattoos) and Isaac was all of that. Oh, and he makes a mean cup of coffee - but only the good stuff. His favourite refrain in the morning is "I don't want to adult today" and I know how he feels. Watching him trying to teach a group of teenage girls the finer points of rugby as they (and their mums) lust over his ripped body is hysterical and his solution is nothing short of genius.
To assuage the headmistress' concerns about a man of Isaac's reputation and notoriety teaching a group of impressionable young girls, Natalie is forced to act as a chaperone, but Isaac insists anyone who attends the training has to participate. Much to her dismay, as a woman allergic to exercise, Natalie finds herself dragged out of bed at a ridiculously early hour, before she is fully caffeinated, to run and play tag rugby with a group of teenagers. But as Isaac and Natalie are thrust together for the first time in five years Natalie discovers that there's a fine line between hate and love.
I can never decide whether I love the Stewart Island or the Bounty Bay series more - maybe its whichever I'm reading right now. All I can say is that these books are pure catnip to me. I love the characters and their down-to-earth lives, the Maori traditions and the weekly family Sunday dinners. The sulky teens and the hero-worshipping of rugby players. I also love that rugby players who are worshipped in their own country would NEVER pay another man to paint their houses - its a reason to revoke their man cards!
If you love American sports romances and want to try something a bit different I thoroughly recommend this book.
I requested a free ARC copy of this book and I’m writing an honest review of it. I was not compensated for my review, and I was not required to write a positive review. The opinion expressed here is my own.
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Five years ago Isaac Ngata had the world at his feet, a player for the New Zealand All Blacks rugby team, he and his best friend Jackson Fisher together with the team had just beaten England and were celebrating in London when a terrible accident resulted in Jackson's death and ended Isaac's career. Isaac returned to Bounty Bay and set up a business with his brother Sam.
Natalie Fisher has never forgiven Isaac for his part in Jackson's death. To this day she avoids him whenever possible, something which has become increasingly difficult as their two sets of friends have started to intersect. But when Natalie's daughter Olivia finds out that the girl's rugby team might not play this year because they don't have a coach, who could be a better choice than a former All Black?
Isaac never wanted to set foot on a rugby pitch ever again, but when the girl he thought of as a member of his family tells him he owes her for getting her dad killed he knows he can't refuse. And maybe making Olivia happy might go some way to thawing Natalie's heart. Isaac has loved his best friend's wife for as long as he can remember, but with his guilt about the events of the night that Jackson died can he ever move on?
I loved Isaac, I love a grumpy tortured hero (especially with tattoos) and Isaac was all of that. Oh, and he makes a mean cup of coffee - but only the good stuff. His favourite refrain in the morning is "I don't want to adult today" and I know how he feels. Watching him trying to teach a group of teenage girls the finer points of rugby as they (and their mums) lust over his ripped body is hysterical and his solution is nothing short of genius.
To assuage the headmistress' concerns about a man of Isaac's reputation and notoriety teaching a group of impressionable young girls, Natalie is forced to act as a chaperone, but Isaac insists anyone who attends the training has to participate. Much to her dismay, as a woman allergic to exercise, Natalie finds herself dragged out of bed at a ridiculously early hour, before she is fully caffeinated, to run and play tag rugby with a group of teenagers. But as Isaac and Natalie are thrust together for the first time in five years Natalie discovers that there's a fine line between hate and love.
I can never decide whether I love the Stewart Island or the Bounty Bay series more - maybe its whichever I'm reading right now. All I can say is that these books are pure catnip to me. I love the characters and their down-to-earth lives, the Maori traditions and the weekly family Sunday dinners. The sulky teens and the hero-worshipping of rugby players. I also love that rugby players who are worshipped in their own country would NEVER pay another man to paint their houses - its a reason to revoke their man cards!
If you love American sports romances and want to try something a bit different I thoroughly recommend this book.
I requested a free ARC copy of this book and I’m writing an honest review of it. I was not compensated for my review, and I was not required to write a positive review. The opinion expressed here is my own.
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Review: Cover of Night
Cover of Night by Laura Griffin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Two and a half stars.
This is very different from Laura's other series and not recommended for readers of Tracers as it just doesn't have the same tension or plot density. I think the biggest problem for me is that I can feel Laura trying to write a bigger, deeper plot and then being held back, or holding herself back, which leads to this reader feeling a bit confused and disappointed.
Karly Bonham is a journalist spending time on a luxury island resort with the US Ambassador to Thailand and his daughter as they holiday whilst writing a cover story for her magazine. Returning from a day-long boat trip Karly sees men with guns on the beach and is horrified when her companions and the boat's crew are gunned down before her eyes. She manages to make a short call alerting the authorities before swimming to shore.
Ethan Dunn is part of a small group of Navy SEALs inserted onto the island as a result of Karly's message, they are there to provide reconnaissance for a larger team to rescue the Ambassador and other guests and staff from the ACB terrorists who have taken them hostage.
Much like the previous books in this new series half of the action takes place on the island and is full of tension and SEAL bravery, then the action returns to San Diego where the pace and focus suddenly shifts to more mainstream romance rather than your typical military-romance or romantic-suspense. And then the ending bish-bash-bosh, if my Kindle version gave me pages I would tell you how few pages were used to wrap up the plot compared to sightseeing in Manila, for example, okay, I've checked and the entire plot gets wrapped up in a four minute (to read) chapter!
Overall, I just don't think Laura Griffin is clear what she wants to do with this series or how she wants to write it. I love her Tracers series and I want her to succeed at this series too but at the moment it isn't hanging together properly.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Two and a half stars.
This is very different from Laura's other series and not recommended for readers of Tracers as it just doesn't have the same tension or plot density. I think the biggest problem for me is that I can feel Laura trying to write a bigger, deeper plot and then being held back, or holding herself back, which leads to this reader feeling a bit confused and disappointed.
Karly Bonham is a journalist spending time on a luxury island resort with the US Ambassador to Thailand and his daughter as they holiday whilst writing a cover story for her magazine. Returning from a day-long boat trip Karly sees men with guns on the beach and is horrified when her companions and the boat's crew are gunned down before her eyes. She manages to make a short call alerting the authorities before swimming to shore.
Ethan Dunn is part of a small group of Navy SEALs inserted onto the island as a result of Karly's message, they are there to provide reconnaissance for a larger team to rescue the Ambassador and other guests and staff from the ACB terrorists who have taken them hostage.
Much like the previous books in this new series half of the action takes place on the island and is full of tension and SEAL bravery, then the action returns to San Diego where the pace and focus suddenly shifts to more mainstream romance rather than your typical military-romance or romantic-suspense. And then the ending bish-bash-bosh, if my Kindle version gave me pages I would tell you how few pages were used to wrap up the plot compared to sightseeing in Manila, for example, okay, I've checked and the entire plot gets wrapped up in a four minute (to read) chapter!
Overall, I just don't think Laura Griffin is clear what she wants to do with this series or how she wants to write it. I love her Tracers series and I want her to succeed at this series too but at the moment it isn't hanging together properly.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
Review: Billionaire in Her Bed
Billionaire in Her Bed by Regina Kyle
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Graphic designer and part-time bartender Brooke Worthington has a torrid one-night stand with a mysterious stranger who walks into her seedy bar in Sunset Park one night. She never expects to see him again so imagine her surprise when he turns out to be her new neighbour.
Eli Ward is a real-estate mogul from Manhattan but his last few projects have all been snatched from under his nose by a competitor, convinced he has a mole in his organisation her decides to let no-one know about his new projects, something that he thought of when his hot one-night stand let slip about Fairway Supermarkets sniffing around the neighbourhood. Eli decides to go undercover to acquire an apartment building which he will develop into luxury apartments in what looks like an up-and-coming area. He first attempts at going incognito fail spectacularly when he turns up wearing his designer-label clothes but gradually he gains the trust of his neighbours, all whilst planning to move them into alternate accommodation. But the longer he spends with his neighbours the more he comes to question his business model.
This felt like a mash-up between the character played by Sandra Bullock in the film Two Weeks Notice and an episode of Undercover Millionaire. Brooke has a heart of gold, she's surrounded by cliches of rom-com - the gay couple and the single mom - she actually comes from a wealthy family but has rejected their cold snobbish attitudes, she's confident and kind and sexy and talented. Eli, on the other hand, appears to be a kind-hearted man with blinkered vision about his business until he learns to see the other tenants as 'real people'.
I liked this but it was a little too on the saccharine side for me, a bit too 'nice'. In my opinion it slipped from a romance into an unrealistic, idealised fantasy. I like a bit more grit and real life in my romance. Recommended if you need to read about nice people getting their rewards.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Graphic designer and part-time bartender Brooke Worthington has a torrid one-night stand with a mysterious stranger who walks into her seedy bar in Sunset Park one night. She never expects to see him again so imagine her surprise when he turns out to be her new neighbour.
Eli Ward is a real-estate mogul from Manhattan but his last few projects have all been snatched from under his nose by a competitor, convinced he has a mole in his organisation her decides to let no-one know about his new projects, something that he thought of when his hot one-night stand let slip about Fairway Supermarkets sniffing around the neighbourhood. Eli decides to go undercover to acquire an apartment building which he will develop into luxury apartments in what looks like an up-and-coming area. He first attempts at going incognito fail spectacularly when he turns up wearing his designer-label clothes but gradually he gains the trust of his neighbours, all whilst planning to move them into alternate accommodation. But the longer he spends with his neighbours the more he comes to question his business model.
This felt like a mash-up between the character played by Sandra Bullock in the film Two Weeks Notice and an episode of Undercover Millionaire. Brooke has a heart of gold, she's surrounded by cliches of rom-com - the gay couple and the single mom - she actually comes from a wealthy family but has rejected their cold snobbish attitudes, she's confident and kind and sexy and talented. Eli, on the other hand, appears to be a kind-hearted man with blinkered vision about his business until he learns to see the other tenants as 'real people'.
I liked this but it was a little too on the saccharine side for me, a bit too 'nice'. In my opinion it slipped from a romance into an unrealistic, idealised fantasy. I like a bit more grit and real life in my romance. Recommended if you need to read about nice people getting their rewards.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Bumped for release.
View all my reviews
Sunday, 3 September 2017
Review: The Hygge Holiday: The warmest, funniest, cosiest romantic comedy of 2017
The Hygge Holiday: The warmest, funniest, cosiest romantic comedy of 2017 by Rosie Blake
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Reminds me a little of the film Chocolat.
Clara is a Danish girl travelling around England with her rucksack. Spending an evening in a Suffolk pub (quaint ye olde outside but depressing interior) she is entertained by one customer, Louisa, who arrives in her pyjamas and dramatically announces that she is selling her toy shop and moving abroad. Despite her initial misgivings, Clara feels she wants to spend more time in the village so she offers to house-sit Louisa's apartment and the toy shop while she is away.
The village of Yulethorpe is suffering, the shops are closing and people are moving away. Louisa's toy shop and the pub and Roz's post office shop are practically the only places still open. Clara feels a deep need to bring the Danish concept of Hygge to the village. If you don't know what Hygge is, its a feeling a warmth and comfort - that feeling when you are all toasty warm in front of the fire with a fluffy blanket on your lap and a dog sitting on your feet, sipping hot chocolate and reading a good book.
Louisa's son Joe is horrified to find that his mother has just dashed off and left a perfect stranger living in her home and running her business. Joe works in the City in M&A, he is Very Busy and surgically attached to his iPhone. Clara thinks Joe is more in need of Hygge than any other person she has ever met.
So far this book has made me want to clean my house, buy some rugs, start drinking hot chocolate and move to Suffolk! This is such a lovely book to read, the characters are warm and inviting, well apart from Roz who is a bit tetchy, I love the idea that one person could stimulate life back into a village and create such a sense of community.
If you are looking for a sweet romance set in the country (and don't mind foul-mouthed parrots with a weakness for screeching famous lines from movies, accompanied by an ad-libbed obscenity) then I can't recommend this highly enough.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Reminds me a little of the film Chocolat.
Clara is a Danish girl travelling around England with her rucksack. Spending an evening in a Suffolk pub (quaint ye olde outside but depressing interior) she is entertained by one customer, Louisa, who arrives in her pyjamas and dramatically announces that she is selling her toy shop and moving abroad. Despite her initial misgivings, Clara feels she wants to spend more time in the village so she offers to house-sit Louisa's apartment and the toy shop while she is away.
The village of Yulethorpe is suffering, the shops are closing and people are moving away. Louisa's toy shop and the pub and Roz's post office shop are practically the only places still open. Clara feels a deep need to bring the Danish concept of Hygge to the village. If you don't know what Hygge is, its a feeling a warmth and comfort - that feeling when you are all toasty warm in front of the fire with a fluffy blanket on your lap and a dog sitting on your feet, sipping hot chocolate and reading a good book.
Louisa's son Joe is horrified to find that his mother has just dashed off and left a perfect stranger living in her home and running her business. Joe works in the City in M&A, he is Very Busy and surgically attached to his iPhone. Clara thinks Joe is more in need of Hygge than any other person she has ever met.
So far this book has made me want to clean my house, buy some rugs, start drinking hot chocolate and move to Suffolk! This is such a lovely book to read, the characters are warm and inviting, well apart from Roz who is a bit tetchy, I love the idea that one person could stimulate life back into a village and create such a sense of community.
If you are looking for a sweet romance set in the country (and don't mind foul-mouthed parrots with a weakness for screeching famous lines from movies, accompanied by an ad-libbed obscenity) then I can't recommend this highly enough.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Saturday, 2 September 2017
Review: Cold-Hearted Rake
Cold-Hearted Rake by Lisa Kleypas
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Devon Ravenel led a charmed life of pleasure and selfishness. Moderately wealthy, distant relative to an earl, he and his brother Weston enjoyed their lives of drinking, gambling and womanising. When Devon's cousin Theo dies after being thrown by his horse and Devon becomes the new Earl of Trenear he is horrified, suddenly he has inherited a widow, the late earl's three younger sisters and a dilapidated estate in Hampshire that generates no income and is in urgent need of reparations.
Devon's first instinct is to sell everything and kick his cousin's widow and three sisters out to fend for themselves. But a spirited interchange with Kathleen, his cousin's widow persuades him otherwise, in fact the pretty widow has an altogether unforeseen impact on Devon who is already half in love with her.
As Devon and Weston discover the joys of hard work and having a purpose in their lives they become closer to Kathleen, Helen, Pandora and Cassandra and the estate workers who rely on the earl for their livelihoods. But can Devon persuade Kathleen that he has changed from the arrogant, selfish man she first met and can they save the estate without sacrificing some of the tenants, or Helen?
Kathleen had only been married three days when her husband's legendary temper led him to ride an untrained, spirited stallion whilst drunk. Her experiences of married life are not good and she has learned to distrust the Ravenel family who are quick to anger and violence, prone to excess and known libertines and rakes. Devon seems to be the worst, yet he shows her more careless kindness than her husband did their entire courtship. But Kathleen's natural caution leads her to suspect the worst motives and she is quick to see the worst in Devon.
Although I suspect that there were some historical inaccuracies (I could be totally wrong) relating to department stores, plasters and plaster casts, I really enjoyed this novel. Devon and Weston are engaging rakes who reluctantly embrace responsibility for others and learn to enjoy it. There are clear signs of future books being set up, obviously Helen's story which overlaps with this one, but also, I suspect, one of Devon's friends with one of the twins.
A fun historical romance set in the time when England suddenly becomes accessible through the railways, where women are still chattels exchanged between their fathers and their husbands and sex is a taboo subject for gently bred women.
I love Lisa Kleypas' novels and I look forward to reading Helen and Winterbourne's story.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Devon Ravenel led a charmed life of pleasure and selfishness. Moderately wealthy, distant relative to an earl, he and his brother Weston enjoyed their lives of drinking, gambling and womanising. When Devon's cousin Theo dies after being thrown by his horse and Devon becomes the new Earl of Trenear he is horrified, suddenly he has inherited a widow, the late earl's three younger sisters and a dilapidated estate in Hampshire that generates no income and is in urgent need of reparations.
Devon's first instinct is to sell everything and kick his cousin's widow and three sisters out to fend for themselves. But a spirited interchange with Kathleen, his cousin's widow persuades him otherwise, in fact the pretty widow has an altogether unforeseen impact on Devon who is already half in love with her.
As Devon and Weston discover the joys of hard work and having a purpose in their lives they become closer to Kathleen, Helen, Pandora and Cassandra and the estate workers who rely on the earl for their livelihoods. But can Devon persuade Kathleen that he has changed from the arrogant, selfish man she first met and can they save the estate without sacrificing some of the tenants, or Helen?
Kathleen had only been married three days when her husband's legendary temper led him to ride an untrained, spirited stallion whilst drunk. Her experiences of married life are not good and she has learned to distrust the Ravenel family who are quick to anger and violence, prone to excess and known libertines and rakes. Devon seems to be the worst, yet he shows her more careless kindness than her husband did their entire courtship. But Kathleen's natural caution leads her to suspect the worst motives and she is quick to see the worst in Devon.
Although I suspect that there were some historical inaccuracies (I could be totally wrong) relating to department stores, plasters and plaster casts, I really enjoyed this novel. Devon and Weston are engaging rakes who reluctantly embrace responsibility for others and learn to enjoy it. There are clear signs of future books being set up, obviously Helen's story which overlaps with this one, but also, I suspect, one of Devon's friends with one of the twins.
A fun historical romance set in the time when England suddenly becomes accessible through the railways, where women are still chattels exchanged between their fathers and their husbands and sex is a taboo subject for gently bred women.
I love Lisa Kleypas' novels and I look forward to reading Helen and Winterbourne's story.
View all my reviews
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