Day: October 23, 2010

Guest Review: Hot in the Clutch by Ann Jacobs

Posted October 23, 2010 by Ames in Reviews | 1 Comment

Ames‘ review of Hot in the Clutch (Gridiron series, Book 3) by Ann Jacobs

After twenty years in the NFL, Dave Delaney’s playing days are over and he’s back home in Hedgecock, Texas, coaching football at his old high school. He’s tired of meaningless sex and his empty lifestyle. Dave is ready for change and sets his sights on the girl who got away.

Diane Connors is attracted in a big way, but Dave is used to being chased by groupies almost young enough to be his daughters. He’s still a chick magnet with a wild reputation, and she’s gun-shy after escaping a miserable marriage with a bully—another local jock.

Thing is, neither of them can forget what might have been.

I thought Hot in the Clutch was ok. The characters are a bit older – Dave had to leave the NFL due to an injury and Diane is divorced and now a single mother. But I think that age lends itself to the novella in that it makes it more realistic. Diane divorced her abusive ex-husband when he turned on their young son. And she doesn’t want to get married ever again but when she sees Dave back in town, she figures there’s nothing wrong with a fling. Because even though sex with her ex was awful, she knows with the right partner things can be good – and that makes her so sensible! I like sensible and practical heroines. And Dave, Dave wants to settle down – and he wants to do that with Diane. So you can see how their age makes this a bit more believable. If these characters were younger, them willing to move so quickly wouldn’t have been realistic.

Also, Dave always had a thing for Diane, even back in high school. But she was already with her ex back in their high school days and so Dave never made a move. I enjoyed the fact that he had been attracted to her before.

This is book 3 in the Gridiron Lovers series but reads fine as a stand-alone.

Coming in at 90 pages, Hot in the Clutch is a quick read. So if you’re interested in a hunky, albeit injured jock getting together with a woman who knows what she wants, check this quickie out. 3.25 out of 5.

This book is available from Ellora’s Cave.  You can buy it here in e-format.


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Guest Review: Taming An Angel by Kathleen Lash

Posted October 23, 2010 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 1 Comment

As a final installment in a military career wrought with horrid events, Jessica Storm is sent to rescue a Braugh warrior and his men from prison. All she wants is to be safely on her home planet, to forget her “throwback” status and to live a normal existence. The warriors intimidating size and raw strength contrast with his tender nature, skillful lips and gentle touch, awakening sexual urges she thought had been stripped away years ago.

Shane Tiernan knows that the piercings that adorn Jess’s body once created pain and taught her to suppress arousal and desire. And he knows what’s needed to take her beyond the torture. But providingt a sexual release may be easier than convincing her that something stronger exists between them. All he needs to claim his angel, in every way, is her consent.

This is a sci-fi thriller paired with an interesting love story. In an interplanetary world where a consortium of planets have come together to prevent war and destruction throughout the galaxies, a Governance general has invaded the planet Blue and murdered all the baby boys. Only females are allowed to survive and then taken into custody to be “trained” as warriors. They are not allowed to feel sexual pleasure nor are they allowed to sing. The are, in a word, “throwbacks.” The original maker of this policy has died and in his place General Bragg has come to take over the control of the “throwbacks” of which there are only three left. Now the general has promised that Jessica Storm and her two warrior companions may return to their home planet in exchange for rescuing an entire contingent of Braugh soldiers, clansmen (which closely resemble Scotsmen in their brogue and ways) who are greatly feared through the galaxies for the fierce fighting and clever strategy. They are needed to rescue a Governance general that has been taken hostage.

Now Shane and his men are on Gen. Bragg’s ship and are being wined and dined. Even Jessica is “given” to Shane as a woman of comfort for the duration of his stay. But his treatment of her is so different, so caring, so gentle, so very respectful. During their days together a bond develops and he is truly smitten with her. He has found The One that the gods have designed for him. He wants her for his wife. His loving, his consistent assault on her numbed responses finally bring her to full pleasure. She agrees to be his wife.

But this is not the HEA ending. Actually about one-third of the story still remains. Jess knows Gen. Bragg hates Shane and is using him to attempt the dangerous rescue, hoping Shane will die as well as the general being held hostage. That’s not how it works out. And without giving anything away, there are “. . . miles to go before they sleep.”

This is a story that embraces pain and suffering, physical, emotional and sexual abuse and its long-term damage, betrayal and disappointment, fear of failure and the insecurity that comes from never being valued. Jess wants to be in Shane’s life forever but she knows what Gen. Bragg has made her. How can she live among good people with her dignity intact and her head held high? It is the story of the power of love to care for, nurture, and heal. And it is the story of one woman whose strength, rare beauty, and unusual gifts may indeed be curbed almost to the point of extinction, but they survive anyway. Her bond with Shane is put to the test in a number of ways and there stresses on the relationship she holds dear with her two companion throwback warriors, Zoe and Angela.

This is such a well-written short novel. There are wonderful characters but there are bad guys, too. The Braugh warriors are wonderful and Shane is a man who is a born leader but who holds his leadership as a gift given by equals. His heart never allows him to forget the true friendship that binds him to his brother-warriors. It is this ability to accept freely and unequivably that heals Jessica. Ms Lash has created a wonderful future world filled with good citizens who want the greater good and want to live in peace. Yet there are still injustices that must be addressed and inequities that perpetrate wrongs. These individuals are, after all, flawed as are we. And futuristic fiction such as this book help us understand that citizens of any world can never grow complacent about wrong-doing in any form, nor can the systematic diminishing of any people, for the purpose of controlling their gifts, be tolerated.

While I freely admit that sci-fi/futuristic fiction is not my normal choice, I actually enjoyed this story and ended up liking it a great deal. The narrative is written in such a way that the reader is kept moving through the story, can relate to the emotions and concerns of the characters, and can easily feel a part of the story. Can’t ask for much more than that. I think romance fans as well as sci-fi literature fans will like this story a lot.

I give it a rating of 4 out of 5.

You can read more from Judith at Dr. J’s Book Place.

This book is available from Ellora’s Cave. You can buy it here in e-format.


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Guest Review: Lord of Always by Cynthia Wicklund

Posted October 23, 2010 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 0 Comments

How does a good and honorable man atone for misdeeds when he was neither good nor honorable? How does he tell the woman forced to marry him of the supernatural event that transformed his life, that cleansed him of the darkness? Above all, how does he convince his wife that he loves her, that he, too, is worthy of being loved, when all she feels for him is hatred?

Evan Richmond, a spoiled, debauched aristocrat is confronted by an obligation he can’t ignore. He must marry, and Brenna Hilliard is to be his bride. On his wedding night, he committed an unforgiveable deed, stirring the wrath of something beyond this world. In the guise of a raging storm, he is struck unconscious. When he awakes, his life is forever changed, for he no longer carries the soul he was born with. Another has taken its place. Thus Brenna is faced with a choice. Does she reject her husband because of what he has always been–or love the man he is becoming?

This is a complicated story that begins in Ireland where Lady Brenna Hilliard was born, daughter of an English lord and his Irish mistress. Her birth was legitimatized when her father’s wife dies and he married her mother. Now Brenna’s father is dead and her older half-brother, a man who hates her because of her mother and his father’s infidelity, has decreed that the Irish holding will be sold and that she will honor an old agreement to marry Brenna to Evan Richmond, son of an earl and his father’s neighbors in England. In the midst of her mourning and grief, her pain at being wrenched from the only home she has ever known, and facing a loveless marriage, Brenna arrives in England. She is graciously received by her soon-to-be in-laws, and her reception into the home went relatively well–that is, until Evan Richmond and his obsessive, compulsive, possessive, self-centered twin sister Evangeline appear and the situation goes south very quickly. Brenna hopes against hope that she can have some kind of relationship with a man who clearly disdains her from the outset. Yet his betrayal on her wedding night nearly broke her spirit and she must find a way sistain her personal sense of self, her dignity, and to live with a man who would stoop to such depths of wickedness.

But unbeknownst to Brenna and even to his twin sister, an ancient soul that had been condemned to dwell between Heaven and Hell, in retribution for his evil life hundreds of years earlier, has now come to dwell within Evan Richmond and Evan’s soul has departed to be purged and cleansed of its evil. The man who began the evil acts against Brenna on their wedding night was vastly different when he emerged from his coma. He looks like Evan on the outside–walks and talks like him, but has no appetite for the evil deeds and companions that were the substance of his life. He rejects them as well as his sister, and slowly but surely she slides toward insanity. One of the great sadnesses in this novel is the broken hearts of Evan’s parents as they see what their daughter is and what she eventually becomes.

This is a remarkable story that is, on the one hand, a very good historical novel and, on the other hand, a curious journey into the fantastic. Whose soul really resides inside Evan Richmond? And can this new person be a person that Brenna can love and claim as her true spouse? This story is full of surprises, dark and shadowy characters, parents who have to face their own failures and a woman who has to discover her own inner resources in order to manage her life in the coming years. It is also about the reclamation of a soul, albeit an ancient one, that has “learned his lesson” and has returned to a full earthly existence, living now in the life of Evan Richmond.

This novel touches on a question many have asked: Can the human soul really be reclaimed? Ms Wicklund has crafted a story that taps into the concerns all human beings have that the soul lives on and that it perhaps can live a redemptive existence. It is a creative way of using fantasy to create a scenario, a possible way of seeing the radical changes we sometimes witness in people who think and act in destructive ways. The characters in this novel are strong, real, feeling and thinking individuals. There are no lightweights here. The reader can easily empathize with Evan’s parents as they watch his twin slowly abandon her connection with reality. You can also be a part of Evan and Brenna’s story as they try to establish some way of muddling along together. There is hope, betrayal, disappointment, loss, renewal, and light at the end of the tunnel. It is about the stuff of which life consists and in this story I would find it hard to believe that we couldn’t all find ourselves in one way or the other.

Ms Wicklund has written a story that is totally readable, well-written, well-researched, creative, with a plot that is unusual and a story line that moves along well toward its conclusion. The characters fit the story and the dialogue keeps the readers interest while the internal dialogue doesn’t overwhelm the external action of the story. Historical fiction fans and romance fans will find much to hail here. The thread of fantasy that runs throughout adds spice–just enough to take this story out of the ordinary. It is one I have come to like a great deal and it is on my re-read list. I look forward to future work by this very adept author.

I give this story a rating of 4.75 out of 5.

You can read more from Judith at Dr. J’s Book Place.

This book is available from Cerridwen Press. You can buy it here in e-format.


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