Friday, 31 December 2021

Review: A Christmas Feast

A Christmas Feast A Christmas Feast by Katie Fforde
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

An anthology of stories written by Katie Fforde.

I have to say that while I enjoy a Katie Fforde novel occasionally, I am aware that she has a motif which can become a tad repetitive. Unfortunately, reading a series of short stories brings that into sharp focus, the shorter the story the less I liked it as a general rule of thumb as without character development and background details everything was a bit of a caricature.

However, in the foreword Katie Fforde suggests that these are little snippets to read when you manage to get 15 minutes to yourself in the chaos that is Christmas and I can see that it would work well for that idealised setting where everyone lives in a small cottage in the Cotswolds (or equivalent) and somehow has to conjure up Christmas dinner for 16 people on an hour's notice with a can of peaches and a bottle of cherry brandy. Sorry. my snark is strong today.

Anyway, my advice is read one a day as a palate cleanser or if everyone is grinding you down.

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Review: Sunrise by the Sea

Sunrise by the Sea Sunrise by the Sea by Jenny Colgan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Marisa enjoys her life as a births, deaths and marriages registrar until the death of her beloved Italian Nonno sends her into a pit of despair which creates a form of agoraphobia, forcing her to work from home. Her mother thinks Marisa is putting it on, so they have stopped speaking to one-another and her sort-of boyfriend Mahmoud wouldn't notice anything was amiss unless he was surgically removed from his computer games controller. Then her wealthy feckless landlord decides she is no fun anymore (especially since she is too sad to cook him delicious Italian food) and arranges for her to stay in a small holiday cottage owned by his (fabulously wealthy) uncle Reuben on the Cornish island of Mount Polbearne.

Next door to Marisa in the attached cottage is a Russian piano teacher called Alexei, a great big bear of a man who plays discordant modern classical music all night which reverberates around Marisa's cottage because there's no insulation to soundproof the rooms.

Despite living on a small island, Marisa lives like a hermit, ordering food and supplies online and never venturing out of her cottage, until she gets referred to a cognitive behavioural therapist who coaches her via Skype. Although they had never been close, Marisa reaches out to her Italian Nonna looking for someone to commiserate with over her grandfather's death. Through an almost permanently open Skype link the two of them go about their daily business and Marisa's Nonna sends her food parcels from Italy, ripe tomatoes, parmesan cheese, truffles, garlic, etc and encourages Marisa to cook proper food rather than microwaving ready meals. A word of warning, the wonderful food descriptions will have you drooling over your Kindle and longing for some home-cooked italian food.

Marisa comes to know some of the islanders through their piano lessons, which she can clearly hear through the paper-thin walls, and befriends Polly, the mother of five year old twins, who lives in the lighthouse and owns the local bakery. Polly and her husband are struggling to make ends meet so Marisa offers to cook Alexei dinner every night if he will continue giving the twins piano lessons for free.

Gradually Polly and Alexei and Marisa's Nonna help to draw her out of her grief and take baby steps towards life in the light.

I liked this, the combination of a small island and an Italian family had the potential to get uber-cheesy but somehow the randomness of the pet seagull, the gazillionaire and his Ritchie Rich son, the Skype calls, etc kept this the right side of sentimental for me.

All in all, a great book to finish 2021 with.

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Review: House Swap

House Swap House Swap by Olivia Beirne
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

DNF at 41%.

Twin sisters Katy and Rachel live very different lives. Katy is a career girl in the city while Rachel is happily married and living in the countryside, or so they think. Each is jealous of what they think the other has and so they've been embellishing their lives/downright lying to each other. But when they unexpectedly housewap for a week the lies are revealed.

I'll be honest, I couldn't get into this at all so I jumped ahead a way to see if I could get interested in the novel once the plot had developed. Unfortunately, I heartily disliked both Rachel and Katy, their lies were stupid and pointless and I couldn't understand why I was supposed to have sympathy for either.

Sorry, just not for me.

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

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Thursday, 30 December 2021

Review: It’s Not Me, It’s You

It’s Not Me, It’s You It’s Not Me, It’s You by Mhairi McFarlane
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Delia Moss' life has fallen apart before her eyes. She proposed to her boyfriend on their tenth anniversary and got a kind of begrudging agreement, but he just wouldn't do all the romantic things she had planned, then to top it off he sent her a text by mistake which was clearly meant for another woman. When tasked to identify and neutralise an anonymous mischievous commentator on the local Council's website rejoicing in the name of Peshwari Naan, Delia attempts reasoning which only escalates matters and results in her resigning her job.

Homeless, jobless and alone for the first time in a decade, Delia agrees to go to stay with her best friend from university, Emma, who is a lawyer in London, thinking at least that way she can't run the risk of meeting her ex and/or his new girlfriend.

Delia soon finds that her CV is less than impressive and whilst her skills might be transferable her lack of experience isn't, the only job she can find is for a PR company run by a shady guy called Max. Delia doesn't know what is worse, her boss' inability to recognise the truth or a certain investigative reporter who is blackmailing her into revealing Max's secrets. The only good thing in her life is thar sadness has revitalised her teenage dream of writing a comic strip featuring a fox detective.

But when her ex-boyfriend begs her to come back Delia must make a decision: stay in London or return to Newcastle, old life or new.

I liked this, it suffered slightly because I literally read it the day after Here's Looking at You, which also features a heartfelt letter towards the end of the book, but otherwise it was funny, sad and a bit of a caper.

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Review: Here's Looking At You

Here's Looking At You Here's Looking At You by Mhairi McFarlane
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Aureliana (Anna) Alessi is a history lecturer at UCL and a specialist in the Byzantine period, particularly the Empress Theodora. She might be single but she's loving life, she has great friends and a job she loves. She's trying internet dating but so far everyone she's paired with has been a disaster. When she's invited to a school reunion she can't think of anything more excruciating than mingling with the people who bullied and humiliated overweight Anna as a child, but her friends persuade her it would be a big eff-you to show up looking a million dollars. Despite losing all the weight, the braces and learning how to tame her wild hair, Anna still feels like that Billy-no-mates little Italian girl who was mocked and bullied at school.

When she gets to the reunion no-one recognises Anna or even speaks to her, until her secret crush, nemesis, and the architect of her most humiliating moment, James Fraser, turns up looking just as gorgeous as ever with his evil side-kick Laurence. Laurence might be sixteen years older but he still has a teenage boy's mentality when it comes to women (lots of phwoar get a load of that kind of comments) and he tries, unsuccessfully, to chat up Anna.

James works for an aching hip and trendy digital company, starting to feel his age he wishes his colleagues would turn the volume down on their incessant music, stop gabbing about their antics the previous night and buckle down to do some work, not a very popular opinion. His wife has left him after just a year of marriage, because she feels stifled, leaving him with the house she chose and furnished, together with a grumpy pedigree cat. James has always been the smug married guy at work with a screensaver montage of pictures of him and his wife Eva, he can't bear to tell everyone they've split up. James' firm has been engaged to do the digital marketing and communications for an exhibition at the British Museum on the Empress Theodora that Anna has helped to curate. It's their second meeting and James still hasn't made the connection between Anna Alessi and the girl he humiliated at school.

As someone else says, this book hits the cliché button hard, there's a nagging Italian mother, a bridezilla little sister, a grumpy cat, secret identities, enemies to lovers, fake relationships, and dreadful first dates. Yet I loved it, I just liked James and Anna.

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Review: Five Leaf Clover

Five Leaf Clover Five Leaf Clover by Mark Hayden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

It's been over a year since I read the last book in the series and I have to confess I am just as confused (if not more) about who's who so I would definitely counsel against starting the series with this book LOL.

Some fae and other magick users have been perpetrating despicable crimes using information gleaned from an ancient text called the Codex Defanatus. A book which Conrad Clarke's ancestor thought he had hidden for all time. To stop further foul magic being performed against humans and other lesser fae, Conrad must track down who kept Morwenna Mowbray as a serf for years and performed forbidden magic to give her the appearance and memories of other beings.

Conrad's quest takes him to Ireland to confront two fae queens, he'll have to be extra Conrad to weave his way through the trickery of fae politics when (like Jackie Weaver of 2021 zoom fame) he has no jurisdiction.

Very much like my review of the last book, I feel that this had a cast of thousands, most of which I can no longer distinguish from one another, and seemed like a filler leading towards a final showdown soon.



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Monday, 27 December 2021

Review: Am I Allergic to Men?

Am I Allergic to Men? Am I Allergic to Men? by Kristen Bailey
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

The fifth and final book in the series about the Callaghan sisters turns to the youngest, Lucy. Lucy, I'll be honest, has not been my favourite character in this series, she's loud, brash, sweary, promiscuous, and lacking in basic social niceties. A budding actress she makes do by working as a Disney Princess at children's parties, waitressing and tending bar. At thirty years old she's still living in a flat share/commune, no significant other, and no career.

Then a freak accident involving a costume, a hired bicycle and a collision with a double decker bus lands Lucy in hospital. She wakes with amnesia thinking she's only seventeen years old, with dreams of marring her boyfriend and having a couple of kids.

As Lucy struggles to marry up her memories of over ad ecade ago with today's realities she tries to reach out to people in her past to understand how she got to where she is.

For me the earlier books were more romance driven whereas the last 2/3 have been women's fiction. In this book we see how Lucy might see herself as a failure when compared to her sisters, but they value her for her honesty, her bravery, and her commitment. I have to say, I still don't really love Lucy but I do like her a lot more now.

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


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Wednesday, 22 December 2021

Review: Dark Legacy: Raven Crawford, Book 4

Dark Legacy: Raven Crawford, Book 4 Dark Legacy: Raven Crawford, Book 4 by J.C. McKenzie
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Maybe 3.25 stars.

It's six years since the last book. raven has grown into her role as Queen of Corvids. There's also been a whole lot of things going on with her siblings in other series that I DID NOT know about. Bane, the Lord of War is still being a nuisance and has managed to engineer/take advantage of circumstances to bind Raven's younger sister Juni his caomhnóir (aka blood-bound guardian). Now Raven's younger sister is bound to her mortal enemy and is demanding that Raven drop the barriers she erected between the Mortal Realm and the fae realms.

Added to which, the trolls have come to seek Raven's assistance to find a missing troll prince, her brother Mike needs help finding a mortal boy who has been kidnapped, possibly by his mother who is estranged from his father. Also Raven's fox family have suddenly developed strange new physical attributes which are somehow linked to the issue which caused Juni to bind herself to Bane.

I love, love, loved the last book in this series. In retrospect t was clearly the finale of the series and this is the start of a new series. Hence this felt (to me) like scene setting, leading to lots of fun facts at the end of the novel but not really action-packed enough or with enough emotion to carry me along.

This is still a great series and I am definitely interested in where it is going next, but I also don't really want to read Raven eulogising about sex with Cole any more.

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

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Tuesday, 21 December 2021

Review: The Twyford Code

The Twyford Code The Twyford Code by Janice Hallett
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Steven Smith gets out of prison after spending eleven years inside for armed robbery and murder. Determined to go straight after a lifetime working for a London gang he tries to reconnect with his son, a maths professor at Brunel University without success. Dyslexic and practically illiterate, he uses an old iPhone his son gave him to record a sort of diary and also interviews with other people. These audio files have been retrieved and transcribed by a computer which sometimes mistakes Steven's London accent so that the words 'must have' is transcribed as 'mustard'.

Steven's criminal life began forty years earlier, he found an old children's book on a bus and took it with him to school, hoping he could sell it and buy some fish and chips. His Remedial English teacher Miss Iles catches him with the book and reads it aloud to the class. The book's author Edith Twyford was an Enid Blytonesque character, her books were beloved of children but loathed by academics as being elitist, racist, sexist, xenophobic and pretty much every other label you care to mention. One day Miss Iles took the Remedial English class on a school trip to visit Edith Twyford's home, Steven's memories of that day are foggy, what happened to Miss Iles? How did five schoolchildren get home? After that day Steven never returned to school and fell in with the notorious Harrison family.

The reader goes on a journey with Steven, through reading the audio files, to discover what really happened that day with Miss Iles with the help of the four other children who were in his Remedial English class. Along the way he discovers that there is a persistent rumour/urban myth surrounding Edith Twyford and her husband that they were variously: German spies sending coded messages in her books to Nazi Germany; English spies sending coded messages to allies; thieves who stole billions in British gold bullion which was supposed to have been shipped to Canada for safe-keeping during WW2; people trying to stop the theft of the gold bullion.

I don't know how I feel about this book. Part of me feels like I've been Keyser Söze'd (from the film The Usual Suspects) because there are so many stories within stories, stories which turn out not to be true, gotcha moments etc. The trouble with this sort of book/film is that once it ends the (this) reader is left suspecting that if they dissected the book carefully it would all fall apart and/or it was all a waste of time.

It was clever, but not for example in the same way as The Eighth Detective which was twisty and turny and made my head hurt but had a structure to it.

Overall, I enjoyed reading it, but I think I would have preferred the less complicated story.

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

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Sunday, 19 December 2021

Review: Asking for Trouble

Asking for Trouble Asking for Trouble by Rosalind James
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Alyssa Kincaid has always felt like a loser compared to her high-achieving big brothers. After quitting her job in medical sales when her boss told her to push the most expensive, not the best, drugs and do whatever it takes to get a sale and dumping her boyfriend when he was not only unsympathetic but also selfish she is stuck in San Francisco with no job, no home and no boyfriend.

Then her brother's wife suggests Alyssa's sales experience would be a great fit for a role in the charity to which her brother's foundation has just made its first big donation, Project Second Chance. The charity is close to her brother's best friend and business partner Joe Hartman's heart as he was kicked out of home by his mom's boyfriend and spent his teenage years in a bad situation. Luckily he got a full-ride scholarship to Stanford where he met Alyssa's brother Alex.

For fifteen years Joe has been spending the holidays with the Kincaids, treated like a member of the family (although as Joe rightly points out, they might say that but he still has to be on his bets behaviour, no temper tantrums for him), and for all that time he has had a massive crush on Alex's baby sister Alyssa. At first she was too young, then it was bro-code, now he just feels despite his millions (yuck, yuck), he's not good enough for the preacher's daughter.

Alyssa has always wanted Joe, but he's always treated her as a kid sister, it doesn't help that he and her brothers are all so successful while she fails time and again, needing bail-outs and nepotism to get a job.

This book is seven years old and I think time is beginning to tell. Joe's backstory is sooo familiar, seems like the plot to every angsty NA/YA book ever written, and the spanking scene was just too cringe-y for words.

There were some redeeming features. First Joe's reaction/comments on the spanking, hurrah. Second, Joe and Alyssa really had each other's backs 100% and there wasn't that awful moment where one person decides they must part for the good of the other (yawn).

Overall, my score might have been higher if I wasn't in a Grinch-worthy mood about the sex scenes.

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Review: Rogue Alpha

Rogue Alpha Rogue Alpha by K.N. Banet
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This series is just so great, not a dud amongst the seven books so far!

Jacky Leon is now werecat liaison for North America and sharing her territory with former Alpha of the Dallas pack Heath Everson together with his werewolf son Landon, his human daughter Carey, and her barmen Dirk and Oliver. Her werecat family are furious that she has chosen to date/love a werewolf and are hounding her (with love) to drop the relationship, suggesting that maybe she wasn't thinking straight after her fiance died and has latched onto the first available male. Added to which, the close bond between Jacky and Carey has begun to weaken as Carey distances herself, an issue compounded when Jacky discovers that Oliver is arranging Carey's birthday party - and no-one asked her for help, the only woman in their circle!

In the middle of Carey's birthday party, a large pack of werewolves attacks Heath's home, they knew it would be coming one way or another but when Heath interrogates the sole survivor it seems the truth is more shocking than they could have imagined.

What I like about these books is that they are action-packed and plot-driven, but no-one is infallible and there is a progression in the underlying relationship between Jacky and Heath. In addition, the secondary characters have their own storylines which also develop.

Overall, a great escapist read, fast and furious, acknowledging the way in which Jacky has developed as a leader.

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Wednesday, 15 December 2021

Review: Summer Nights with a Cowboy

Summer Nights with a Cowboy Summer Nights with a Cowboy by Caitlin Crews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Janie is a live-in geriatric nurse looking after a sprightly eighty-something year old widow called Damaris Gardiner in her big old house in Cold River. Janie has been resolutely friend-zoned by almost every man she's ever met and thinks of herself as an adult Pippi Longstocking, so it's a bit of a shock that the local sheriff Zack Kittredge thinks she's a femme fatale up to no good. Janie thinks she should be outraged at being judged so harshly, but actually she's thrilled that a woman wearing no make-up and sensible slacks with flat shoes could even be considered one iota dangerous.

Zack has always held himself and others to a high standard, when he was eighteen years old he left the family ranch and moved into his own home, leaving his inheritance for a job in law-enforcement. Ever since then there has been a coldness between Zack and his father Donovan, but that doesn't stop Zack from regularly going out to the ranch for Sunday lunch with his family, because that's what an honourable man does. When this flame-haired temptress with the bewitching freckles moves in with his elderly neighbour he's highly suspicious, especially since he can tell she's lying about something. Zack doesn't do relationships, even his flings are far away from Cold River and they are more like business arrangements with women who know the score. Yet every time he tries to shut down his feelings about Janie they just get bigger and messier.

This feels like the end of the Kittredge family saga. We finally discover what has kept Donovan and Zack at loggerheads for so many years, and Zack finally takes that stick out of his butt. TBH I don't think anyone comes out of this well, but that's just my opinion.

I had been waiting impatiently for Zack's book, but as is often the way the great unveiling of the secret was a bit of a damp squib. Also, I've come to the conclusion that writing a series of books about brooding cowboys from the same family just means the family seems highly dysfunctional and in need of family therapy. Even the reasons behind Zack's mother's behaviour sound frankly like some kind of psychological warfare rather than the actions of a rational mature adult.

An enjoyable end (I think) to the series, perhaps those no-good Hills will be the focus of the next series? But didn't quite hit the highs I was hoping for. Closer to my feelings for the second book rather than the emotion-fest of the first book.

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

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Sunday, 12 December 2021

Review: The Most Eligible Bride in London

The Most Eligible Bride in London The Most Eligible Bride in London by Ella Quinn
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

DNF at 56%.

Nate, Viscount Fotherby, thought he was saving his best friend, Lord Merton, from a gold-digging, scheming, fortune-hunter, aided and abetted by an ill-wisher, when he kidnapped Dorie Stern. Unfortunately he almost ruined Dorie's reputation and interfered in a love match. Forced to leave town and rusticate at his family's estate he has since come to see the error of his ways in almost every respect. Formerly a tory he now advocates reform, formerly an absentee landlord he has now become involved in all aspects of his tenants' lives. Assisting a local landowner to find a missing young woman in London he is of assistance to a young lady of quality, who turns out to be Dorie's younger sister Henrietta Stern. Instantly captivated Nate schemes as to how he can effect an introduction to Henrietta given that her family must loath the very sound of his name.

It is Henrietta's second season, last year none of the young bucks took her fancy, this year there are three: Viscount Fotherby, Lord St Alban, and Lord Bolingbroke. VIscount Fotherby shares her taste for rescuing women and children but would her family ever contemplate forgiving him for his past transgressions?

This is only the third book in the series (although I suggest it is a spinoff from another series) but already appears to be laden with back story references. It feels like at least six of Henrietta's friends have just got married/are pregnant/have just given birth and we as the reader are given the story of each romance. I'm over halfway through the book and very little seems to have happened, just one soiree/walk/visit/ride after another with nothing much decided.

I have enjoyed Ella Quinn's books previously but this one missed the mark for me.

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

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Review: You Had Me at Chocolate

You Had Me at Chocolate You Had Me at Chocolate by Amy Andrews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Clementine always wanted to a librarian in her home town of Marietta and she's been very happy. But recently she's been feeling stuck in a rut and the urge to spread her wings so she's got a short-term job in New York and then she's going to do some serious travelling.

Jude was a celebrity chef on a hit TV show (I'm thinking Gordon Ramsay style bad behaviour) until he realised that he was being encouraged into bad and self-destructive behaviours. So he quit his celebrity lifestyle, sold his New York restaurant and volunteered overseas. In a come to Jesus moment he decides what he wants is to open a restaurant in a small town, something like the inns he used to stay in with his parents as a child, where better than rural Montana, home of the little girl he met at Summer Camp all those years ago. Because he's a man, Jude decides nothing could be better than to marry said childhood friend, herself an antidote to all the glamorous models, actresses and wannabes he's dated/married in the past. So he proposes on bended knee in front of half the town!

It seems as though that is that. Jude wants to settle down and live the small town life while Clem is ready to spread her wings, then Clem's mother has a stroke and her bright shiny plans are cancelled. Clem and Jude realise they can help each other. He will cook for her and her father while they travel to visit her mother in hospital, in return Clem will let him stay in her spare room and help him search for the restaurant property of his dreams.

When Clem propositions Jude to help her forget her anxiety over her mother, they agree that this is a one-time thing, but as they spend more time together the lines seem to get a bit blurred.

I liked it but I didn't love it, I just don't think I was in the mood for a sexy Hallmark movie style book TBH.

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

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Friday, 10 December 2021

Review: Immortal's Honor

Immortal's Honor Immortal's Honor by Rebecca Zanetti
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Vampire-Demon Sam Kyllwood is The Keeper, part of the secret ritual to banish the evil Ulrich forever. Since the ritual which made him The Keeper Sam has been plagued by uncontrollable fire and being dragged into other realms by vicious creatures.

Honor McDovall doesn't realise she's an Enhanced human, she just knows she has a special sense about when someone is lying, a skill that she uses in her job as an interrogator with Homeland Security. When a suspected arsonist/terrorist is apprehended Honor is brought in but finds herself in over her head.

I have loved this series but honestly, enough is enough. There is so much infilling of back story and re-introducing previous couples plus furtherance of the overarching plot that the romance is pretty superficial. And that's the real problem, PNR really relies on the reader (well me) investing in the powerful feelings overcoming reason and honestly I didn't feel it. Also, not only did we have the trope of exerting dominance through doggie-style sex and hair-pulling, but also the dominance and physically hurting the woman (oh, yeah, hurts so good). I am just not comfortable with that any more, even in fiction. I truly hope that the next book has a woman who doesn't accept any of that macho BS and literally bitch slaps Garrett (or whoever) into next week when he tries it.

What I want, what I realy, really want (hello, Spice Girls) is a book that drives the overarching plot forwards, maybe Honor finds out about Drake and Paxton' extra-curriculur activities, maybe another male also comes onto the scene (a prophet?) just something other than couple #99 having marginally abusive sex and blowing things up and the plot advancing by miniscule degrees.

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

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Thursday, 9 December 2021

Review: Side Effects

Side Effects Side Effects by L.J. Greene
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Ally Michels has got a job at a start-up video game developer called Jet Stream Studios which is set to shake-up the industry when its new game is launched. The company was founded by two young entrepreneurs who are as different as night and day. Julian Dannen is blonde and charming, the CEO and frontman, Marcus Abby is more like a wasp at a picnic, although his is the creative mind behind the game. Ally got the job through her uncle Dave, a Venture Capitalist who owns a stake in the business. Eager to prove her worth, Ally pipes up in a huge meeting and earns Marcus' wrath. Unbeknownst to Ally she has acted as a catalyst for a coup for control of the company, her uncle introducing her to the man who will be parachuted in over Marcus' head.

Ally might not know everything that's going on, why is Marcus pretending the game is far less advanced that she knows it is? But she knows that the game is 100% Marcus' baby and no-one works harder than him and his team.

But does Ally really know Marcus, or is he using her just as much as her uncle is?

I really enjoyed this, I had no idea it was part of a series until the bonus chapter which refers to unfinished business between Marcus and Dan so it can definitely be read as a standalone, but I have already bought the first book in the series (featuring Dan).

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

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Monday, 6 December 2021

Review: Scammer Girl

Scammer Girl Scammer Girl by Michelle Dayton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

What can I say, well-written, cleverly plotted, engaging characters and a few twists along the way.

Jo Harper was destitute after breaking up with her long-term boyfriend and snapping her achilles heel. Homeless and broke she resorted to online romance scamming. Although she sits in a grey area because she only scams married men who are cheating. Now five years later she has a team of four women and a unique concept; her mark meets the girl, but once only in some kind of engineered meet-cute, designed to appeal specifically to the mark. Thereafter they engage via texts and emails, with maybe an occasional videochat - so the guys can't be being scammed because they met the girl right? She has some rules, no politicians or politics adjacent and no-one famous, that still leaves lots of rich cheating guys who are happy to buy a girl a diamond ring or stump up her college tuition.

Then on a makr fishing trip to California Sloan, one of Jo's team, tries to use her initiative, picks on the son-in-law of a high-profile, relentless tech billionaire and follows through rather clumsily, revealing true information about herself instead of a carefully curated persona.

Beyond peeved at Sloan's mistake Jo goes to drown her sorrows at a local dive bar where she meets a cute guy. They get to talking and are really getting along, when Jo realises from some things he said that he is the mark's older brother Jamie March and a famous campaigner for ethical internet behaviour. He saw his brother with Sloan and is mightily angry that his brother is risking his marriage. Sloan has put the entire operation in jeopardy, she's gone after a famous family of tech experts and she's been seen. Not only that, at the airport while discussing the disaster with the girls and how to rectify the issue JO realises that Jamie has been watching and listening to their conversation. Now he knows its a scam and he's seen all the girls.

But with righteous indignation warring with instant attraction can the grifter and the white knight find romance?

Loved it, loved it, loved it.

I was given a free copy of this book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.



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Review: Dark Whispers

Dark Whispers Dark Whispers by Helen Harper
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

DC Emma Bellamy is the only detective in the Supe Squad, she's responsible for the first Supernatural Summit which is taking place in a London hotel and it's imperative for her professionally but also for Supes in general that the summit is a success. It's been difficult enough to persuade the different Supe factions to come under one roof, now she has to worry about human protestor and a scurrilous gutter journalist who will stop at nothing to get some dirt on the Supes.

Added to which an omega wolf has just returned to London after a decade's banishment and is nearly beaten to death outside Lord Horvath's house, and a random human has decided to run around naked in Central London claiming he's a vampire. Funnily enough, both claim to know something about a mysterious man called The Chief.

Then if things weren't tense enough The Chief is found murdered in the hotel, it could only be one of the Supes - but if word gets out that a human was murdered by Supes, there will never be any peace between humans and Supes.

Yet another engaging, funny and intriguing mystery in this series. Less reliance on Emma's phoenix abilities this time and the identity of the murderer was a surprise - so that's good.

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Review: Safety in Numbers

Safety in Numbers Safety in Numbers by Sophie Penhaligon
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

DNF at 42%.

Seraphina Ellis received a traumatic brain injury in a car accident which has made interactions with others difficult. Faced with spontaneous choices she panics and so her life has become highly regimented with a daily meal plan, clothing selections and set routines for every part of daily life. her stilted speech and social awkwardness mean that despite her brilliance as a mathematician she has a lowly cubicle job in a tech firm.

Milo Grant is a billionaire CEO of the tech company where Seraphina works, young, handsome and good-looking of course he comes with a bad personality, sacking assistants regularly and shouting/swearing at people.

Seraphina originally interviewed for the role as Milo's assistant but failed the interview. Having seen how Milo bit the head off of the HR woman when she tried to introduce them Seraphina is sort of glad she didn't get the job, even if the alternative is that she has an unfulfilling job and no friends. She even meets him in a lift one day on the way to her cubicle and he makes an unkind joke at her expense.

After firing yet another assistant Milo decides to get the head of HR to trawl their employees qualifications to find someone who can handle the work - surprise, surprise it is the mousey woman from the lift. When she starts work it turns out she is perfect for the role, far better than Milo could ever imagine and he finds the time he spends in the lab with her the best parts of his day.

All this sounds great right? STEM heroine meets flawed billionaire yadda, yadda, yadda.

Sadly, the execution was lacking. First, I got the distinct impression that this had been written as a serial because things were repeated. For example, Milo uses escort agencies because he got his heart crushed and he likes his romance transactional (what a charmer!). The reader gets told this more than once, I'm like I know he's a sleazebag you don't have to repeat it. Similarly, we hear about the girl in the next cubicle to Seraphina who reads out bits from gossip rags more than once as if this is news.

Second, Milo is rude to his employees and thinks that's okay, similarly Seraphina is very scathing about her fellow cubicle drones, who all made an effort to befriend her but she gave them the hard shoulder and speaks ill of them behind their backs (in her head but it totally counts.

Third and finally, the book feels as though it is almost entirely written as interior monologue of Milo and Seraphina, first he thinks about something, then she thinks about something. There's a lot of unnecessary descriptions of her hair and his hair etc, etc.

Overall, I began to dislike both characters so I decided to stop reading.

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

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Friday, 3 December 2021

Review: How to Belong with a Billionaire

How to Belong with a Billionaire How to Belong with a Billionaire by Alexis Hall
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Slightly disappointing end to this trilogy which is like FSoG but better and with an actual plot and likable characters (and 1000% better writing).

Caspain's self-loathing is so strong that it's the only voice he can hear. He leaves Arden (for his own good) because he doesn't like the person (Dom) he is with Arden, instead he's gone back to his passive aggressive ex who is trying to change Caspian into a better man.

Meanwhile, Arden has moved into Caspian's sister's loft apartment (or do we mean derelict warehouse) and is starting to make headway as a journalist.

But the heart wants what the heart wants ...

I would have enjoyed this, but for the sinister cartoon villain figure who makes Jeffrey Epstein look like a choir boy.

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Review: Ancient Vendetta

Ancient Vendetta Ancient Vendetta by Katie Reus
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Welcome back to post-apocalyptic New Orleans. Ancient dragons came and laid waste to humanity and finally exposed the supernatural world to the humans. King, half-wolf shifter, is Alpha of the New Orleans pack and his vision has united the other supernaturals behind him. Slowly he is rebuilding a better, more ecologically sound city, in harmony with nature, and has raised the land to reduce the risk of flooding.

Aurora is one of the rarest shifters, a phoenix whose blood had regenerative properties. Having recently escaped from a crazed man who kept her captive for her blood for over a year she is suffering PTSD and fears that she will never trust another male enough to be intimate.

King knows Aurora is his mate, but as the Alpha he has to wait for her to come to him, meanwhile an ancient foe has arisen and wants to kill King. With powers beyond anything King has seen before can he and his allies defeat the vampire and save New Orleans?

Years ago I gave up on most PNR because it was all so same-same (J.R. Ward's 'mine, mine mine' epitomised the predictability of the genre) but there are a few authors that made it through the great PNR cull and Katie Reus is one. And I honestly don't know why, she throws every PNR cliche in the book into her novels and I just nod and smile and say 'yes, yes, yes very good, very good' Maybe it's the fight scenes? Or the epic list of characters? Who knows, I just lurve them and I'm never disappointed.

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

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Wednesday, 1 December 2021

Review: How to Blow It with a Billionaire

How to Blow It with a Billionaire How to Blow It with a Billionaire by Alexis Hall
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The FSoG but better trilogy continues.

Arden St Ives has left Oxford and Caspian has set him up in a Penthouse apartment with an Amex Black card and hot and cold running services (gym, swimming pool, spa, cleaners, food delivery etc). They could be happy but Caspian keeps his past a secret and seems ashamed of his Dom tendencies.

Arden is struggling with his identity as a kept man and what to do with his life, he's comfortable in his own sexuality and wishes that Caspian could be the same. But as he gets drawn into Caspian 's world he discovers that Caspian's ex may not be as ex as he thought.

I enjoyed this but I agree with other reviewers that the push-me, pull-me of the relationship got a bit wearing.

On to book 3.

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Tuesday, 30 November 2021

Review: How to Bang a Billionaire

How to Bang a Billionaire How to Bang a Billionaire by Alexis Hall
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Think FSoG but less cringe and more plot.

Arden St Ives is studying at Oxford University, having been full of dreams and ambition when he started, as he ends his time there he is feeling adrift, a bit of a fraud, and as though he hasn't fulfilled his potential. Roped into taking part in a fund-raising cold-calling of alumni Arden manages to make a complete hash of a call to one of the University's most illustrious alumni, the billionaire Caspian Hart, and yet he seems to have a date with Caspian for the next Alumni drinks evening.

Suave, debonair, sophisticated, and well-dressed, Caspian is everything that Arden is not, yet the cold persona that Caspian presents to the rest of the world seems to be absent when he talks with Arden.

Arden may be a bit flaky,, but he knows what he wants and he isn't afraid to ask for it.

Loved it and went straight on to read books 2 and 3.

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Review: Fated Blades

Fated Blades Fated Blades by Ilona Andrews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It's Ilona Andrews, five stars, need I say more?

Ramona Adler and Matias Baena are leaders of their families, two of the three powerful Kinsmen genetically enhanced families that rule the planet Rada. Oh and they are also mortal enemies, for reasons buried in the mists of time. But what happens when your mortal enemy arrives at your door to tell you that your respective spouses have run off together, taking with them the top secret research into universe-altering technology which each family has been progressing.

Forced to work together to recover the technology, Ramona and Matias find that they have more in common that they originally thought.

My only gripe with this was that it was a novella/short novel, I would have been happier if it were the length of the unabridged War and Peace! Great characters, amazing fight scenes, detailed world building and back stories. I am constantly amazed at what this talented duo can achieve in such a small page count, nothing skimped, nothing omitted. Just lush!

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Monday, 29 November 2021

Review: A Fair Warning

A Fair Warning A Fair Warning by Dianna Roman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Poppy Prince runs her family's bar The Silver Bullet. She's recently divorced after she discovered her ex banging his girlfriend in their bed, and living at her family home, albeit her widowed mother is travelling Europe with her sister.

Charlie 'Chuck' Duke is the local Deputy. He's been her nemesis since they were at school together, created her hated nickname Poppycock and generally takes any and every opportunity to push her buttons. She loathes him and wishes he'd stop coming into her bar, drinking his hillbilly swill beer, and making annoying comments.

Chuck has loved Poppy since they were kids, he's tried everything to get her to notice him 'that way'. Compliments, teasing, practical jokes, you name it. And he just loves pushing Poppy's buttons. He may have been away for a few years but as soon as he returned home to Grand Valley, Burnam County, Illinois he was as enthralled as ever. She might be a Townie and he's a River Rat but the heart wants what the heart wants. Can he ever get her to give him a chance?

This was pleasant enough but TBH it felt like a novella that had been stretched out to a novel. Most of the romantic tension happens quite early on, and then its just a bit of rinse and repeat as Poppy wonders why he looks so sad, is he breaking up with her and Chuck wonders if Poppy will realise he's not worth the effort and dump him *yawn*.

There's also a bit of tension which I could see telegraphed from miles away which didn't really go anywhere and felt a bit unrealistic to me.

Also, call me a cynic but if the author is dedicated to her writing how can she have the next seven books in the series already mapped out with hero and heroine? I get you have seven other characters for whom you want to find happy endings in future books, but to have already chosen their love interest?

Anyway, it was okay.

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

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Review: Danger on the Atlantic

Danger on the Atlantic Danger on the Atlantic by Erica Ruth Neubauer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is apparently the third in a series featuring American widow Jane Wunderly. I haven't read the previous two books and this could be read as a standalone, although the romantic elements probably suffered from not knowing the back story.

Jane is undercover on a cruise across the Atlantic with Redvers Dibble to catch a German spy, trying to obtain secret plans to pass to the German government. Jane and Redvers are posing as a married couple and they have the assistance of one of the stewards, Frances Dobbins. Apparently Redvers works for 'Her Majesty' which I assume is either a typo or a misunderstanding about who exactly was on the British throne in 1926.

Whilst ostensibly Redvers and Jane are investigating the three individuals who have been identified as possible spies: a german passenger; the german bandleader; and an American who runs the photography office; Jane actually spends more time embroiled in the affairs of a fellow passenger, Mrs Vanessa FitzSimmons whose newlywed husband (is that the right way to say it?) Miles Van de Meter has disappeared. Jane happened to see Mrs FitzSimmons and her husband indulging in a PDA as the ship left its berth which is just as well because none of the ship's crew believe a word Mrs FitzSimmons says, even going so far as to call her Miss FitzSimmons, as if she was fantasising about being married.

Whilst there were allusions to prohibition and dancing the Charleston, there was also a reference to dancing the Jitterbug which https://www.bellaballroom.com/dance-l... tells me didn't become universally popular until the 1930s - some four years after this book is set. Generally, there weren't really enough markers to really point the reader at the right decade in which the novel is set.

Overall, I would say there was a lot of talk about coffee, walking on the deck, changing for dinner and very little detective work, most of which happens off-scene and then Redvers updates Jane back in their cabin, over a cup of coffee. I read historical 'cosy' (lord do I hate that word) mysteries for a glimpse into a bygone era and a satisfying mystery, sadly this delivered neither.

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



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Friday, 26 November 2021

Review: The Blood Tide: A shocking, breathtaking, Scottish crime fiction mystery thriller

The Blood Tide: A shocking, breathtaking, Scottish crime fiction mystery thriller The Blood Tide: A shocking, breathtaking, Scottish crime fiction mystery thriller by Neil Lancaster
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

A police officer witnesses a suicide, but the man who committed suicide says that he is being forced to commit suicide in order to protect his family, and he references that they have accomplices in governmental agencies and were responsible for a recent murder at a loch. The policeman is sufficiently convinced that the man is being coerced by persons unknown that he records the conversation carefully in his statement to PIRC (the Police Investigations and Review Commissioner) and calls his old friend DS Max Craigie to discuss it and invite him over for a dram while he (Max) is touring the Highlands on his holiday.

When Max arrives to see his friend however he finds him hanging from the bannisters of his home, his police notebook has disappeared, and his witness statement has no references to coercion or any other murders. As the member of a small (three person) team with the long-winded title The Police Standards Reassurance Team, Max is responsible for identifying and tackling corruption and this stinks to high heaven.

So this is a police procedural with a difference, in so far as the reader knows who committed the murders, the mystery is who is the mysterious person feeding them information. I enjoyed the pace and plot of this novel, the first I have read by Neil Lancaster. However, I did have some concerns that there seemed to be a lot of coincidences/strokes of luck where someone not only could make the necessary connection but then off-the-cuff provide chapter and verse about the person and their associates (being deliberately vague). There were at least two separate instances where that happened. Also, I still can't wrap my head around how the final 'thing' happened and how they found out. Maybe I need to reread the book ...

Overall, another Scottish detective series to add to my growing list - what is it about Scottish murder mysteries?

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


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Review: A Fair Warning

A Fair Warning A Fair Warning by Dianna Roman
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Poppy Prince runs her family's bar The Silver Bullet. She's recently divorced after she discovered her ex banging his girlfriend in their bed, and living at her family home, albeit her widowed mother is travelling Europe with her sister.

Charlie 'Chuck' Duke is the local Deputy. He's been her nemesis since they were at school together, created her hated nickname Poppycock and generally takes any and every opportunity to push her buttons. She loathes him and wishes he'd stop coming into her bar, drinking his hillbilly swill beer, and making annoying comments.

Chuck has loved Poppy since they were kids, he's tried everything to get her to notice him 'that way'. Compliments, teasing, practical jokes, you name it. And he just loves pushing Poppy's buttons. He may have been away for a few years but as soon as he returned home to Grand Valley, Burnam County, Illinois he was as enthralled as ever. She might be a Townie and he's a River Rat but the heart wants what the heart wants. Can he ever get her to give him a chance?

This was pleasant enough but TBH it felt like a novella that had been stretched out to a novel. Most of the romantic tension happens quite early on, and then its just a bit of rinse and repeat as Poppy wonders why he looks so sad, is he breaking up with her and Chuck wonders if Poppy will realise he's not worth the effort and dump him *yawn*.

There's also a bit of tension which I could see telegraphed from miles away which didn't really go anywhere and felt a bit unrealistic to me.

Also, call me a cynic but if the author is dedicated to her writing how can she have the next seven books in the series already mapped out with hero and heroine? I get you have seven other characters for whom you want to find happy endings in future books, but to have already chosen their love interest?

Anyway, it was okay.

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

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Thursday, 18 November 2021

Review: Murder Most Actual

Murder Most Actual Murder Most Actual by Alexis Hall
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Liza and Hanna's marriage is in trouble. Hanna is a high-flying corporate finance-type and Liza has always been this scatty, flighty, artsy type. But now Liza's true crime podcast has really taken off and she has less time to spend with Hanna, it doesn't help that her podcast listeners are shipping romance between Liza and her co-host Rachael.

Hanna, in her typical high-handed fashion has determined that a weekend in a Scottish country hotel will do wonders for their marriage and booked it without consulting Liza which has created a bit of tension. When they arrive the other guests, many of whom are semi-permanent residents, are reminiscent of the board game Cluedo (as is intended by the chapter titles) with a Colonel who wears mustard coloured clothes, the Reverend Lincoln (as in green), a private detective, and a mysterious shadowy underworld figure known only as Mr B, etc, etc.

Then when the hotel is stuck in a blizzard and all internet/telephone lines are down, one of the guests falls/is pushed to his death from his room in one of the turrets. At first Liza thinks this is some kind of murder mystery weekend that Hanna has organised but it all becomes too real and the bodies keep piling up.

I adore Alexis Hall's books but sadly this one just wasn't for me. I see now that the blurb references Clue and Knives Out which should have given me fair warning as I didn't like either of them. Highly stylised to the point of absurdity, I persevered to the end but it didn't redeem itself. So very sorry because I really wanted to like it.

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

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Sunday, 14 November 2021

Review: Intolerable

Intolerable Intolerable by Darcy Burke
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

DNF at 50%.

In one of the previous books two young women sneak into the Phoenix Club disguised as servants to see what happens (unmarried women can't be members). One of them ended up married to her guardian, the other, Lady Cassandra Westbrook, ended up kissed by Ruark Hannigan, Earl of Wexford in a cupboard before he realised who she was (yes I know, the idea that it is okay to kiss servants willy-nilly is a bit distasteful). Neither Cassandra nor Ruark can get the 'incident' out of their minds, unfortunately Ruark is one of Cassandra's brother's best friends which apparently makes her off-limits as a potential bride. In addition, Ruark is Irish and his mother married a Catholic after his father died so that makes him unacceptable to Cassandra's father (who seems to have regressed after his softening in the last book).

Cassandra's father has decreed that she must get married this season, the trouble is his notorious temper has scared away all potential suitors, so Cassandra asks Ruark to pretend to court her, in the hopes that this will encourage other gentlemen to pursue her.

For his part, Ruark is tormented by memories of their kiss, but he promised his father on his deathbed that he would not marry until he was at least 30 years old, so he cannot form an attachment to Cassandra before that date, especially since she is his best friend's little sister (I really don't get this aspect of bro-code, if he's a great guy then why wouldn't you want him to marry your sister, and if he isn't why are you hanging around with him?).

Argh! I tried I really did, but Ruark's promise to his father was so asinine and he couldn't even really commit to it, he and Cassandra behave inappropriately at every opportunity, even getting caught kissing in a cupboard during a game of hide-and-seek FFS!

I am happy to turn a blind eye to the morals of the time in the interests of romance but the sheer hypocrisy of Ruark knowing his sister was compromised, perhaps ruined by being seen kissing a man when he had done much more and got away with it was a step too far in a book that wasn't really grabbing me anyway.

I enjoyed the first two books in this series and would be interested in reading the next book (if, as I assume, it features Ruark's scholarly sister), but this didn't do it for me and I gave up at 50%.

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

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Review: How to Cowboy

How to Cowboy How to Cowboy by Jennie Marts
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

DNF at 46%.

Cade is a former rodeo rider turned farmer. When his ex is killed in a car accident he becomes guardian to his teenage daughter Allie and responsible for her rehab. Taken away from her home, her friends, her school, and the city (and obviously having lost her mother), Allie is lashing out, especially at Cade who has barely been in contact, albeit that was more to do with his ex making it difficult rather than him not caring.

Now Cade and Allie are back on the horse rescue ranch where he works and his cousin has hired a physiotherapist to live in and help Allie get mobility back. Nora had a catastrophic breakup which tanked her career as well as her love life, a live-in job helping a young girl to walk again, thousands of miles away seems like a great way to lick her wounds in peace.

From the moment they met Cade and Nora have serious sparkage, but with an injured child with abandonment issues to deal with is there any time for love?

I tried with this I really did but honestly ... Cade is fighting an uphill battle to prove to Allie that he does care and that he's in it for the long term, he loves his daughter but he *had* to leave her because of 'reasons' and he carries the guilt to this day (after nearly halfway through I don't know what happened, but I have a strong suspicion). Allie is scared he will walk away just when she's got attached so she attacks him at every opportunity. So Cade (as a mature man) is too stupid to keep it in his pants. Also, he blows hot and cold more often than my hairdryer.

And don't get me started on Nora, her entire life went up in flames because she was involved with a doctor at the hospital where she worked. So she thinks it's a good idea to sleep with the client's father?

I had to stop, I had swiped past the sex scenes but there was throbbing, wet shirts and every cliche under the sun as far as I can tell, but when Cade sleeps with Nora then shuts her down because of the aforementioned 'reasons' I started to grind my teeth.

Sorry, just not my cup of tea and I had to DNF at 46%, I can see how it's going to pan out and it's pretty predictable.

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

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Saturday, 13 November 2021

Review: Scot & Soda

Scot & Soda Scot & Soda by Catriona McPherson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

It's Halloween and Lexy Campbell has gone all out with the spooky decor and food as she entertains the inhabitants of the Last Ditch Motel on her houseboat. Unfortunately, when she pulls up the rope which is attached to the 72 bottles of beer she has cooling in the water they come attached to a dead body dressed in a Tam O'Shanter and orange wig (a Jimmy wig as we would say).

The Cuento police don't seem to be taking Lexy seriously, they ignore her comment that there was a large signet ring on the body's finger which seems to have gone missing, so Lexy, Todd and Kathi decide to do some detecting of their own.

There seem to have been a series of incidents on Halloween linked to the events in the Robert Burns poem Tam O'Shanter and all the evidence points to the victim being a former resident Thomas O. Shatner who was in town to attend a fiftieth high school reunion. But who could have murdered him? Was it some sort of retaliation for being gay? Could it be the former senior class president and captain of the football team? Was it one of a quartet of girls that used to hang around with the captain of the football team? Is it connected to the mysterious disappearance of one of those girls after the graduation party?

There are red herrings galore and, I'm afraid, it maybe got a bit too clever for itself partway through and like another reviewer I was left a bit confused at the end. Still enjoyable but a little confusing.

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Review: Scot Free

Scot Free Scot Free by Catriona McPherson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Having read an ARC of the fourth book in the series I was sufficiently intrigued to buy the first book and see where it all began.

Lexy Campbell is originally from Dundee, Scotland. A marriage counsellor she moved to California in a whirlwind romance and marriage. Unfortunately, things went rapidly downhill, the things she found charming about the small (fictional) town of Cuento, Beteo County are just what her husband hates. He has a beige house and doesn't understand her humour (I have to say taking Spotted Dick to a potluck party seems odd, done just for the novelty factor of the name rather than something anyone would want to eat!). Anyway, the marriage implodes when Lexy finds her husband boinking his ex-wife in their bed and four weeks later, thanks to Reno, the two of them are divorced. Lexy is about to leave California for good, she just has one last couples guidance session booked for a sweet old couple in their eighties called the Bombaros who are finally divorcing. Mrs Bombaro has asked Lexy to witness the signatures on their divorce papers and Lexy is happy to oblige.

Unfortunately, the Bombaros never arrive. Mr Bombaro, a famous firework manufacturer, has been murdered, Mrs Bombaro has been arrested for his murder, and she is asking for Lexy's support. So Lexy shelves her plans to return to Scotland and tries to find a motel room (on the Fourth of July) which is how she comes across the Last Ditch Motel.

The mystery is very reminiscent of the early Stephanie Plum novels (a firework manufacturer being murdered by having a firework inserted in his anatomy), as are the inhabitants of the motel. There's a lot of comedic value drawn from the differences between American English and Scottish English which might get a bit repetitive after a while.

If you like zany or kooky comedy and/or cosy detective stories then I think this series may be for you.



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Review: Code of Matrimony

Code of Matrimony Code of Matrimony by April White
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Anna and Colette might be identical twins but not in personality. Anna is an all-action adrenaline junkie, socially inept, prone to blurting out everything she's thinking, happiest in flat shoes and jeans. Colette is sophisticated and elegant, measured, and easily mistaken for a model.

Anna is getting married to Darius (see Code of Honor, a small beach affair with a few friends and family at her parents' home in Rockport, Massachusetts.

Colette is dating the millionaire Sterling Gray, which is a bit awkward because she only got close to him originally to distract him while Anna broke into his father's vault and stole a painting which belonged to their mother. They've got over that but their relationship is still very formal, very polite, they only see each other once a week. Despite that Colette really likes him, but is he ready to meet her bohemian (swims naked in the sea every day) mother and spend time in close company with her zany sister? She might love them both but they don't strike her as the sort of people Sterling would want to spend time with. Colette aims to avoid the awkwardness by not inviting Sterling to Rockport but instead hosting a dazzling engagement party in the city for Anna and Darius, which is much more to Sterling's taste.

For a novella this packs a heck of a punch.

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Review: Celebrity SOS: Love Survives

Celebrity SOS: Love Survives Celebrity SOS: Love Survives by Helen Buckley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Katerina Murphy is a very successful actress on British TV and has agreed to take part in Celebrity SOS, where a group of celebrities are left in a cabin in Alaska to fend for themselves (think I'm A Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here but with snow). She's really looking forward to challenging herself and learning new skills, until she comes face-to-face with her childhood sweetheart Finn Drayson, former member of boyband 1Dream. He broke her heart when they were teenagers but he's just as handsome as ever.

Finn only agreed to do Celebrity SOS because he had invested unwisely and is being pursued by the taxman for a lot of money. SInce 1Dream split up he hasn't managed to get his solo career off the ground and he hopes that the show might give him some exposure. When he sees Katerina he is delighted, she may have broken his heart all those years ago but she is as charming as ever.

But as we the readers find out gradually what happened all those years ago the secrets are revealed in the most shocking way on live TV - and Finn and Katerina's burgeoning rekindling of their romance is shattered.

I really liked this, I liked Finn and Katerina, I liked that the big reveal doesn't come right at the end of the book, instead there is a fair amount of dealing with the aftermath.

Overall, I thought this was fun and sweet and a great read.

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Review: Strictly Christmas Spirit

Strictly Christmas Spirit Strictly Christmas Spirit by Helen Buckley
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Emily Williams had one season as a professional dancer on Strictly Dancing with Celebs. Now her life is very different, she is the manager of a drop in centre in central London dealing with the drunks, the homeless, the elderly and the lonely every day. The last thing she needs is thrice divorced, fresh out of rehab, Hollywood actor Blake Harris swanning around taking selfies and getting in her way as his community service for crashing his car.

Blake needs an image rehab, stat. After his latest divorce and car crash, as well as some frankly appalling interviews on TV, the job offers have dried up. He'll turn up for his allotted community service, dole out some food to the homeless and be on his merry way as quickly as possible, charming everyone in his radius. But turning up late on the first day doesn't go down too well with the centre's grumpy manager Emily, she seems to be the only one immune to his charm.

I liked this, but I didn't love it. For some reason it reminded me of the film Last Christmas (maybe it's just the homeless shelter). As I came to write this review I couldn't remember what plot lines belonged to this novel and which ones belonged to the previous novel in the series. Also, the link to Strictly is a bit tenuous in comparison to the previous books which were much more about the reality TV programmes.

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Review: Call Me Maybe: Could it be love at first talk?

Call Me Maybe: Could it be love at first talk? Call Me Maybe: Could it be love at first talk? by Cara Bastone
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Vera has a small business which chooses bespoke gifts and days out for people based on a website questionnaire. Unfortunately, her website is a big fat mess - which is a problem because she is going to need it for an exhibition she is attending on Friday. Having spent hours on hold with Curio, the website hosting company, (a company her brother recommended) she is delighted to speak to Cal from customer support and, as you would, she refuses to hang up and let him call her back (haven't we all sat around waiting for that non-existent call-back from customer support?).

As Cal tries to work out why Vera's website isn't working properly (I'll give you a hint, she hasn't updated her operating system EVER) they chat about this and that and over the course of many hours they develop a bond.

Unbeknown to Vera, Cal is actually the owner of Curio, he randomly takes customer service calls one day a week to better understand issues with the software directly from the users. Cal usually finds it difficult to talk to women, but because of the nature of their interactions he finds it easy to talk to Vera and her offbeat sense of humour suits him.

After 10 hours on the call on Monday Cal has fixed Vera's website, but the questionnaire still isn't working properly, he promises Vera he will have it fixed by Friday morning, in time for her expo. This is a big deal for Vera because her whole family think of her as a quitter, she's half-completed two degrees and taken up (and dropped) playing several musical instruments. If her website isn't fully functional her parents will chalk it up as yet another failure.

Over the course of four days Vera and Cal call, DM and send text messages, they even order each other takeaway food, and fall in love, despite never having met - but will Vera forgive Cal when she learns the truth?

I had already read the second book in this series, which features Vera's brother, so I knew what happened between Vera and Cal, but I enjoyed the journey anyway. A sweet romance.

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Friday, 12 November 2021

Review: A Husband's Regret

A Husband's Regret A Husband's Regret by Natasha Anders
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Two years ago Bronwyn's billionaire husband threw her out of their mansion when she told him she was pregnant. Since then she's lived off her savings, a small legacy, and a series of low-paid jobs. She's recovering from a bout of flu when her brother-in-law walks into the restaurant where she is working and starts haranguing her for leaving his brother and ruining his life. Next thing she knows, Bronwyn is lying in a hospital bed recovering from pneumonia and her husband is shouting at her. Apparently after she left their home he chased after her, crashed his car and lost his hearing as a result. Now he has found her again he is using his power and money to insist that she and their child return to live with him as Bronwyn has 'stolen' his child from him.

Still desperately in love with her husband, despite his frankly deranged accusations, Bronwyn is too weak to resist, especially when he sometimes treats her so kindly and his kisses are as sweet as ever. Can these two resolve their differences and reconcile?

I know this book is seven years old and written at a time when romance readers relished cold-hearted billionaires who are secretly madly in love with their wives but conflicted because of 'stuff' where they have hate sex, but actually Bronwyn's husband Bryce came across as a petulant child, stamping his foot because of what he thinks his wife did. In contrast, Bronwyn was completely wet and pathetic.

Not one of her better ones.

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Review: Love in Numbers

Love in Numbers Love in Numbers by Scarlett Cole
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Meh.

Emerson Dyer and her siblings have inherited their father's gin distillery after his heart attack. Money is tight and they want to expand to capitalise on the success of their latest gin. Connor Finch is Finance Director of his father's multi-million dollar liquor business. He's been trying to persuade his father to acquire some premium brands, like high-end gin distilleries but his father won't countenance Dyer's Gins as he counts Emerson's father as his worst enemy.

Emerson and Connor meet by chance on a flight where they have both, unaccountably, have been allocated the same seat. They feel an instant attraction so Connor is bewildered when he finds out she is the daughter of his father's nemesis. Initially Connor thinks he can get close to Emerson to get the inside dirt about her company but soon he is falling for her. But can this Romeo and Juliet overcome their enmity?

I have loved some of Scarlett Cole's previous books but I have to say this and the last book I read indicate that our love affair is over. I hate to be unkind but honestly this felt predictable, lazy and cliched, complete with the moustache-twirling (figuratively) evil uncle.

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Review: Christmas at Lilac Cottage

Christmas at Lilac Cottage Christmas at Lilac Cottage by Holly Martin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Penny Meadows might be single, after a disastrous ending to her first relationship many years ago, but she loves her cottage, her smelly dog, her friends in the village and her job as an ice-carver. But she is a bit lonely, so she is delighted to be renting out the annex to her cottage. She and her new tenant Henry have an instant attraction, but he is wary of falling for anyone without his daughter's approval after one too many mistakes. Also he's moved for a new job at the local high-end furniture manufacturers and doesn't want to jeopardise that by falling out with his landlady.

This is super cute and very sweet, I have a loathing of heroines who have only ever had one boyfriend/lover but this just about squeaked through. It's set at Christmas, there's a village party, an ice-carving competition and plenty of women just queueing up to take Henry out for a spin.

If you want a gentle, feel-good, holiday romance then this is the one for you.

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Review: Scot Mist

Scot Mist Scot Mist by Catriona McPherson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I love Catriona McPherson's Dandy Gilver series set in the 1920s in Scotland but I have avoided these because the covers have tartan edges and I have learned to avoid romances where the cover features kilts and/or tartan. Big mistake, huge!

The permanent residents of the last Ditch Motel are a motley crew: the motel is run by a lesbian couple, one of whom is a germaphobe; there are a couple of gay doctors, one of whom is terrified of creepy-crawlies and is therefore on extended medical leave; and there's a single mother and her new (much younger) husband and son.

As California is on the verge of shutting down due to Covid-19 Lexy comes up with Operation Cocker to fill the vacant rooms at the motel with the vulnerable and families of first responders so that they can't be forced to take in strangers, and then lock down as Kathi's germaphobia is reaching dangerous levels. Two of the newcomers are escaping abusive partners and when vague but threatening messages are left draped over the fence the gang aren't sure which spouse is responsible. Reporting the messages to the local police, in the form of Detective Molly, leads nowhere, until another incomer, a doctor's wife, goes missing, leaving behind her two small children, and the place is bathed in blood.

Can Lexy and the gang uncover who killed her?

This is the fourth book in a series set in the Last Ditch Motel, featuring Dundee-born therapist Lexy Campbell. The blurb suggests it would suit fans of Janet Evanovich and I can see the similarities with Janet's early books, before they became repetitive. I loved it but I can see other people might find the humour a bit grating. Basically, there is a lot of humour gained from the fact that Lexy is from Scotland and so she shares a language but not a vocabulary with the other guests.

Anyway, I found it high-octane, funny and great fun. Having read this I have already purchased the first two books in the series, read the first and I halfway through the second.

Very different to Dandy, but enjoyable nonetheless.

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 Arctic Curry Club

The Arctic Curry Club The Arctic Curry Club by Dani Redd
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Four and a half stars because I wanted it to go on for longer.

Maya is a short, (very) plump, half-Indian, half-English woman. Brought up in India until she was seven years old, she and her father moved to England after her mother's death. Maya has no memories of her time in India and suffers from crippling anxiety, even in quite innocent situations, which has forced her to give up her career as a chef and take much less rewarding work (can you tell I can't remember what). Her boyfriend Ryan studies polar bears and so she has agreed to move to the far north of Norway, inside the arctic circle, for a year when he gets a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to study them up close and personal.

Maya and Ryan soon realise that life in the arctic circle is not quite what they expected, Ryan is in his sporty element, husky sledding, long-distance skiing etc, whereas Maya has no friends, no job, is scared of getting lost in the snow, and can't stand the 24-hour night.

One of the guys who runs an arctic excursion business for tourists hears that Maya was a chef and offers her a part-time job cooking for the small groups of tourists. One of the tour guides asks Maya to cook some Indian food and she is too embarrassed to admit that she doesn't know how to cook Indian food, which leads her to explore her cultural heritage with a trip to Bangalore and the help of her father's Indian fiance and her mother's old cookery book. But as Maya cooks her mother's recipes she finds that they spark memories she thought long buried and lead her to uncover some family secrets. Maya uses her mother's recipes to start up a supper club, inviting a small number of paying guests to eat a home-cooked Indian meal.

I loved this, in fact I read all the way through the night to finish the novel. While some parts of the story were (to me) predictable, there were also lots of things that weren't. In the author's notes at the back Dani Redd notes that she has spent time in both India and the arctic circle and I think the authenticity shows through. I really wanted to cook some of the delicious recipes Maya serves to her guests, I especially loved the way she adapted certain recipes to use ingredients available in Norway, even if some weren't always successful.

Highly recommended.

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

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Review: City of Destruction

City of Destruction by Vaseem Khan My rating: 4 of 5 stars Persis Wadia is Bombay's first female pol...