Day: October 26, 2010

B&N Announced NOOKcolor

Posted October 26, 2010 by Holly in News | 2 Comments

NOOKcolor vs NOOK

I’ve been waiting for the official announcment to come out about this. For weeks there’s been specuation about what B&N had in store for the nook. I can’t believe the new NOOKcolor is debuting at the same price as the regular nooks that came out a year ago. Crazy what can happen in a year, eh?

Some of the highlights of the new color tablet.

Barnes & Noble today unveiled NOOKcolor, the first full-color touch Reader’s Tablet. Designed for people who love to read every kind of content imaginable, NOOKcolor delivers the ultimate reading experience and features:

 

  • A stunning 7-inch VividView Color Touchscreen and a thin, beautiful and highly portable design
  • The first full-color touch device dedicated to reading everything and built on Android
  • Access to the largest bookstore with an unprecedented selection of over two million digital titles a single search away
  • Read bestsellers to favorite magazines in full color, and interactive children’s picture books and enhanced cookbooks
  • Easy and fast book downloads in seconds over Wi-Fi
  • The most social reading device ever built; you’re only touches away from sharing with friends via Facebook, Twitter and email.
  • The new LendMe App, which enables NOOKcolor users to view LendMe books in their friends’ Barnes & Noble digital libraries and request to borrow a title they’ve been meaning to read
  • 8GB of space plus expandable memory to store it all your digital books, magazines, newspapers and children’s books
NOOKcolor is now available for pre-order at www.NOOKcolor.com and at Barnes & Noble stores tomorrow for $249, and will begin shipping on or around November 19. 
Debuting on NOOKcolor is NOOK kids, a state-of-the-art digital reading experience for children which brings storytime to life with nearly 12,000 interactive kids’ picture books and children’s chapter books.
The company also announced a partnership with the third largest US bookseller, Books-A-Million, in which NOOK products will be sold as the exclusive eReading devices at Books-A-Million’s 229 stores. With this announcement, NOOK products will be available in all Barnes & Noble , Best Buy and Books-A-Million stores and 2,500 Walmart stores, as well as online.
 
I think it’s interesting that they’re pushing the NOOK kids. Since kids are moving more and more into the digital age at home and at school, this is a pretty smart move on the part of B&N, IMO. It’s also smart of them to partner up with BAM. Having the devices in Walmart and other stores makes it more accessible, something I think gave the NOOK an edge over the Kindle right from the beginning. 

Since I don’t have an iPad, I can’t say how the NOOKcolor compares, but I’m sure others will. I can’t wait to get into the store and test it out.

B&N also released exciting news for existing NOOK owners. In the next few weeks they’ll be releasing another update that includes many of the features we’ve been asking for from the beginning, including an organizable library. From the way the press release reads, I think it might only be the B&N library, but it’s a step in the right direction. Also in the works: Faster page turn time, Improved search, Password protection and the big one, Sync



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Guest Review: The Duke’s Captive by Adele Ashworth

Posted October 26, 2010 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 0 Comments

Publisher: Avon, Harper Collins

Lori‘s review of The Duke’s Captive by Adele Ashworth

Ian Wentworth arrives in London with one goal: revenge. Now a duke of enormous wealth, he should settle down to the business of marrying and producing heirs. But nightmares of an ordeal from his past haunt him at every turn. All those he believes responsible have paid with their lives. All but one: Viola Bennington-Jones, the lovely Lady Cheshire. And he will not rest until he sees the tempting beauty suffer.

Viola keeps her secrets – and there are many – safe from society’s prying eyes. When she first spies Ian at a glittering ball, the rush of recognition immediately turns to panic. Does he remember the tender touches that once passed between them? Does he feel the electric passion that binds them still? Or does he blame her for the awful horrors her kin bestowed upon him? The enigmatic duke holds her captive: in desperate thrall to his powerful sensuality, her future – and her heart – in his hands.

Five years prior, Viola’s sisters had held Ian hostage; drugged him, stripped him, and chained him to a wall for many weeks. After his release, and once back to health, all he can think about is revenge. Viola, the youngest of the sisters, had tried to help him during his captivity, but was under her family’s thumb, afraid to reveal his whereabouts to the authorities. So she did what she could for him; bathed him, kept him warm, comforted him.

Wow, this was a very intense book, and there is a lot of morally ambiguous behavior on the part of both hero and heroine. For his part, Ian pretty much put his desire for revenge against Viola out there right from the start, but Viola kept secrets from Ian for much of the book, until it was all stripped away. It’s a very angsty book, but it was totally appropriate. Basically, Ian stalks her, toys with her in a game of cat and mouse, and takes Viola hostage, in order to repay her for the wrong she’d done to him.

There is what I would call a forced seduction scene that fit completely with Ian’s thirst for revenge, and his interpretation of past events. Normally, I’m not down with scenes of this nature, but given Ian’s recollections and feelings of betrayal, violation, and horror at his past with Viola and her sisters, I was able to read it and not hate Ian (although I was sad that he went through with it). It was powerful and emotional for both Ian and Viola, and very well written.

Here is a man who, from his viewpoint, was held captive, raped, and starved near to death. I thought Ian’s recollections of his time in captivity were very well handled, realistically portrayed, and so very, very sad. As was his desire for revenge – for some sort of retribution, any sort, really, against the one who got away without any legal punishment.

This doesn’t get a perfect grade because I never truly bought that Viola couldn’t get word to someone, and I never truly understood the reason for the kidnapping in the first place. I thought it was a mistake to leave that reveal until the very end. It should have been brought out with the rest of Viola’s revelations.

All in all, however, a very intense, emotional book with many frequently used tropes juxtaposed onto the hero, which made for a more interesting, powerful read. While I was uncomfortable throughout much of the book, I can definitely say that it stick with me and was well worth the read.


4.25 out of 5

You can read more from Lori by visiting I Just Finished Reading and Living in the House of Testosterone.

This book is available from Avon. You can buy it here or here in e-format.


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Last Hero Standing: Final Round.

Posted October 26, 2010 by Rowena in Features | 2 Comments

It all comes down to this. One month of voting your heart out and this is what it all comes down to. Two heroes battling it out for the #1 spot in our Rachel Gibson hearts. The winner of this round takes the cake!

In the right corner we have the hockey player with the most memorable tattoo:

LUC MARTINEAU from SEE JANE SCORE

And in the other corner, we have the hockey player who started it all:

JOHN KOWALSKY from SIMPLY IRRESISTIBLE

Which hero do YOU want to win? Help him out by voting for him and getting everyone you know and love to vote for him too.

Good luck!

The winner be announced on October 31st so don’t miss out!


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Guest Review: Bound By Trust by Lila Munro

Posted October 26, 2010 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 0 Comments


Judith’s review of Bound By Trust by Lila Munro

The Widow After her husband Gage is killed in combat, Madi Melbourne finds out just how hard being a widow can be. She’s been left destitute, piecing together a life she never knew Gage was living, and as the puzzle takes shape, she begins to fall apart.

Her Savior Rafe McCarthy has always been known as the unit playboy. Having never married and being childless, he finds himself examining his life and looking at the what-ifs. Then a beautiful widow moves in next door and he begins to discover something he never knew existed inside of him.

Learning to trust… How can he convince her to trust again and place that trust in him? Will he be able to live up to the responsibility he has taken in teaching her to love again?

After the death of Staff Sgt. Gage Melbourne in Afghanistan, Madison Melbourne was trying to get her life back together. She was neck deep in trouble because he had obviously had a life apart from her own, complete with purchases for luxury items she didn’t even know about. Now the creditors were making her life a living hell and she didn’t know how to extract herself from this nightmare. She could no longer afford to live in Kentucky so she moved to Missouri, near Ft. Leonard Wood, where her grandmother had left her an old house, one that needed lots of work, but which would at least provide her a place where she could begin her life once more. Her greatest sorrow was leaving behind the grave of her unborn child, her little girl Shannon, the reason she and her husband had married initially. Now, ten years later, he is dead, she has no source of income other than her music students, and she is alone.

A night out at a local bar soon after arriving in Missouri changes the course of her life. She catches the eye of Gunnery Sgt Rafe McCarthy, a career Marine who had decided that he would not marry as long as he was in the military. Yet he is captivated by Madi, and after dancing with her leads her out to a dark corner in the patio behind the bar. Their intense attraction explodes in an erotic encounter. Rafe wants to take her home with him, but after a brief stop off at the men’s room, he discovers that Madi is gone–and he didn’t even know her name. Little did he realize that she was his new neighbor across the street.

Their relationship grows very quickly–in spite of the fact that Madison has major trust issues. After being sandbagged by her husband’s hidden debt, she belatedly receives his personal effects, some of which were love letters to two other women. Imagine her complete horror to discover that he was planning to divorce her. So trusting anyone, least of all a man and one in the military, was almost impossible.

This is a very warm and emotional story about two people who need each other to complete their lives but who are both working through some very large piles of personal baggage. It is a complicated relationship that is not really made easier by the fact that Rafe and Madi get married almost on a whim only weeks after meeting one another. They really didn’t know each other very well. Rafe is a wonderful, caring, giving and quite gentle man–he wants Madison in his life and he is willing to do almost anything. She wants Rafe, recognizing that he is not anything like her dead husband, yet she just can’t seem to let go of the past and all the fears and insecurities connected to that first marriage. They have great sex but they aren’t very good at talking out their problems. Rafe doesn’t share some of his concerns because he doesn’t want to scare Madi off. Madi doesn’t share her fears because she is afraid Rafe will leave her as her former husband did. They get caught in some issues that just don’t go away simply in spite of the fact that things are good in the bedroom. Eventually even the bedroom gymnastics end as well and their relationship is in real trouble.

This is clearly a story that is taken right out of our contemporary situation of a nation that is fighting wars in the Middle East. It is a story that is set in the military family genre–so many hundreds of families are going through what Madison experienced. It is a well-known fact that military marriages fail at an alarming rate because of the pressure-cooker in which they are formed and the long absences that make loneliness so hard to bear. I really tapped into the emotions in this story because I was an Army wife for nearly six years and I experienced some of the loneliness and the extra burdens that wives have to bear with money problems and children issues while one’s husband is deployed away from the family. It just isn’t easy. Madison’s needs were never really met–her husband was a philandering jerk to begin with and their marriage was a sham. To find this out after his death couldn’t have been easy.

Yet this is a really good novel. The love story will warm your heart and the emotions can’t help but resonate with the reader’s feelings, regardless of their personal experiences. Ms Munro has written of this context with great sensitivity and created characters that are strong, believable, flawed as we all are, living with the same stresses we all face, and having to juggle relationships with jobs and friends and family. Perhaps this novel’s deepest message, though, is that no relationship can hope to be sustained without open honesty and transparency. Fears and insecurities only grow in shadows, and those kinds of “secrets” only add to the potential for damage and possibly destruction in the end.

I liked this book a lot. It remained in my thoughts long after I finished it. It gave me lots to think about and ponder. I like books that do that. So it will be understandable when I say that romance fans will like this story. It was really a very good reading experience for me.

I give this novel a rating of 4.5 out of 5.

This book is available from Whiskey Creek Press. You can buy it in here in e-format.
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What I Read Last Week

Posted October 26, 2010 by Tracy in Features | 11 Comments

What’s up? What have you all been up to? Anything fun? Tell all!
Sorry this is so late today folks, I’m just busy, busy, busy!
So this is a short work week for me as tomorrow evening I’m leaving for San Francisco to go to Yaoi-Con and to meet up with Chris, Kris, Tam & Jenre and have a jolly good time. I can’t believe I’m actually going to meet all of these fabulous ladies from all over the globe. (Chris is from Minnesota, Kris from Australia, Tam from Canada and Jenre from England) It’s amazing that we could all work our schedules to get together and it’s going to be fabulous!
My reading this week was a tad frenetic – didn’t exactly stick to my normal routine of reading different sub-genre’s (contemp, then paranormal, then historical…in no particular order). I needed to get several books read so that the reviews could post on time so that kind of directed my reading. I’m happy to say that I got it all done – yay! And now I’ll have no worries about the blog while I’m gone. Hopefully my hubby will give up his laptop for the trip cuz I need to be connected!
Not a lot of excitement here other than getting ready for my trip so on to what I read last week:
First up was book 4 in the Farm series by Andrew Grey called Love Means…Freedom. This was a book about Stone who was kicked out of his father’s house when he came out to him. He was working his way south to warmer weather but got kicked out of his ride during a blizzard. He happens upon Eli and Geoff’s farm and is taken in. He meets Preston, who is in a wheelchair after being hit by a drunk driver and is doing the riding therapy at the farm. The two hit it off but as it usually does, life creates obstacles. This was a good installment in the series. It was almost a little too sweet for me between Preston and Stone. Preston’s father was an ass and I kept thinking that it would be revealed that he was the one that was hurting Preston’s work options but that never came to light. Who knows. 🙂 Cute though. 3.5 out of 5
Saving Lady Ilsa by Crystal Kauffman was a book that I read for The Book Binge. A historical about a second son who’s father wants him to marry but he’s in a committed relationship with another man. He’s willing to marry but not have the marriage be in name only. On a whim he takes home a tailor’s assistant, Ilsa, who is being abused by the tailor and decides to make her his bride. But he and his partner, Frederick, might want to keep her around and have the marriage be more than just in name. A cute book but it was a little hard for me to think of two gay men suddenly wanting a woman. 3.5 out of 5
Next was Duchess of Sin by Laurel McKee. This is book 2 in the Daughters of Erin series. I didn’t read book 1 but didn’t feel that I was missing anything. The story revolved around an Irish Duke who is anti-Union in 1799 and a woman who is looking for some meaning in life. The two fall in love and it’s quite romantic. The book mostly takes place in Dublin. I read this one for The Book Binge – it releases on November 30th. 4 out of 5
Next was a book that I received from the author for review – Forsaken by Shadow by Kait Nolan. The first book about the Mirus, who are paranormal beings. This story was about Cade who woke up and had no memory at all. Ten years later the woman he loves shows up needing his help to save her father. She would have looked for him sooner but she was told he was dead. We get to meet shadow walker, dragon shifters, fey, vampires. It was quite a good book and not that long so if you’re looking for a quick paranormal read this might be for you. You can a short review here. 4 out of 5
Craving Beauty by Nalini Singh was my DIK reading challenge book for the month. I’ll post my review on Friday.
My Tracy’s TBR challenge read for the week was Allergies by TA Chase. A shifter story about two men who meet at work – Lou’s a wolf shifter but Ray seems to be allergic to him when he’s in his human form. The story covered them getting together and the issues around Lou “coming out” as a shifter and those issues. There was another part of the book that had some shifter hunters coming into the territory but that wasn’t dealt with by the end of the book which was a bit surprising, and a little annoying. I can only assume it will be in the next book? IDK. I’ll have to read it and see. 3.25 out of 5
Undeniably Yours by Shannon Stacey was my next read. This was another book that set with the Kowalski family. Kevin has a one night stand but he’s really likes the woman, Beth, and wants to see if more can come from it. Well it did since she got pregnant – but she wants to just stay friends – friends that are having a baby together. I’ll post my review for this on Wednesday. It releases from Carina Press on Nov. 1. 4 out of 5
Picture Postcards by JM Snyder was a very short book but one I really liked. It was about a man, Donny, who was in love with his best friend, Greg, but his friend marries a woman and moves away. They fall out of contact but suddenly Donny is getting random postcards from Greg about his feelings and how he misses Donny, etc. Only 15 pages but it packed a punch. 4 out of 5
After Midnight by Teresa Medeiros was next and this was a book I read about when Luisa Prieto was on DIK recently. It’s a historical about a woman who thinks that the man who is courting her sister might be a vampire. Whether he’s a vampire or not she finds herself falling in love with him and he with her. Good book. The end resolution was a bit rushed but overall I really liked the story, thanks Luisa! 4 out of 5
Next up was Icing on the Cake by Alison Kent. I read this one for the True Vows tour and will be posting my review on Nov. 3rd. Let me just say though that the romance was great and I very much liked Kent’s writing.
Dance with a Vampire by Fabian Black was next. Only 7 pages long. The story was told in first person but it was told as if retelling a story to the person it happened to. (example: if I was telling the story of how I met my husband to my husband). It was short but sweet. I liked it. 4 out of 5 (free on ARe)
Last on the list was the novella You Get What You Want by Janey Chapel. This was a great book. An ex con, Jay, meets Patrick, a cop, when Patrick gets a drink at the bar that Jay works at. They are incredibly attracted to each other and have a great time in the bar’s office after closing. But Patrick can’t stop thinking about Jay and has 12 hours to kill before he has to head home (to another city), so seeks out Jay’s company. The time they spent together was very touching and sexy and I really loved the emotion that was infused into the story. 5 out of 5
My Book Binge reviews that posted since last Monday
Happy Reading!


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