Day: September 17, 2013

Review: The Rules of You and Me by Shana Norris

Posted September 17, 2013 by Rowena in Reviews | 1 Comment

The Rules of You and MeRowena’s review of The Rules of You and Me by Shana Norris.

Hannah Cohen has always lived her life by a set of carefully constructed rules to maintain the image of perfection. But now, the rules aren’t helping control the chaos that is quickly taking over.

Opting out of spending the summer in Paris with her mom, Hannah instead heads to the mountains of North Carolina to stay with her aunt. The Blue Ridge Mountains provide a barrier between Hannah and the rest of the world, a safe haven where her secrets can be forgotten.

When Hannah crosses paths with Jude Westmore, a guy who hangs a different shirt from the tree in his front yard every day, she finds herself breaking out of the comfort of her rules and doing things she had never dared before. As the summer passes, Hannah and Jude grow closer and make up their own rules for dealing with life.

But when the secret Hannah has tried to forget is finally revealed, even the new rules can’t save her from possibly losing everything–including Jude.

This young adult romance is a standalone companion novel to The Boyfriend Thief.

When I opened up this book, I didn’t realize that this was a companion novel to The Boyfriend Thief. I remember wanting to read The Boyfriend Thief last year but it slipped off my radar and I never got around to it. Oh, well. That didn’t stop me from reading this book and I’m glad that it didn’t because I enjoyed this read.

This book follows Hannah as she travels to North Carolina to stay with her Aunt for the summer, instead of joining her mother in Paris like she planned. It follows Hannah as she learns about the person she is and the person she wants to be. Hannah’s journey wasn’t an easy one but it sure was a worthwhile one.

When we first met Hannah in this book, she’s talking to her mother on the phone and you just know that she dodged a bullet in going to Paris with her mother. Her mother is acting like a spoiled rich girl who’s only plan is to get wasted and spend her father’s money (or in her case, her husband’s money) to forget about the problems that are waiting for her at home. Hannah wants nothing to do with that but Hannah is also running away from her family problems as well. The only difference as far as I can tell is that Hannah knew she was running.

You see, Hannah’s father is in rehab and Hannah was brought up, thinking that she had to be perfect at all times and having a family member in rehab does not make a perfect family.

On her drive to her Aunt’s house, she gets a flat and some guy stops and changes her flat tire for her and because Hannah isn’t perfect anymore, she insults him and he storms off and Hannah is left behind feeling out of sorts.

Watching Hannah come into her own was great fun. At the end of the book, I could really see the progress that Hannah made in being okay with her imperfections and with her feelings with her father and standing up to her Mom. I also liked the resolution with Jude that came about. That ending scene with her family and him? Swoon. I loved it. I loved seeing Hannah grow and I loved seeing Jude come into his own as well. I really liked both of their characters and want to read The Boyfriend Thief to find out what happened with Avery. And Elliott.

This was a really cute book, one that is perfect for summer reading. I thought Norris shined in this one and I will definitely be recommending this book to my daughter as well as my nieces because I think this is something they’d enjoy.

Grade: 4 out of 5

This book is available from Shana Norris.  You can purchase it here in e-format.  This book was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.


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Review: Defiant in the Viking’s Bed by Joanna Fulford

Posted September 17, 2013 by Tracy in Reviews | 1 Comment

Consumed by revenge—and desire! Captured by his enemy and chained like a dog, Leif Egilsson has one thought in his mind: revenge. He’ll no longer be beguiled by the treacherous beauty of Lady Astrid, and her innocence, which he so craved, will finally be his.

On his escape, this fierce, proud Viking is bent on making her pay the price of her betrayal—in his bed! Only, Astrid has the heart of a warrior, and she will not be tamed as easily as he believes.

Astrid is a noblewoman who is promised in marriage to a horrible man. Her uncle, another horrible man, has arranged it all and it’s all political for him. Astrid, who was once asked by Leif Egilsson if she would be his mistress and declined, now tells Leif that she would happily be his mistress if he could just get her away from her fiancé. Unfortunately Leif, who is no friend of the uncle’s or of any of his acquaintances, is captured and is made a slave. He’s also made to believe that Astrid had a hand in his capture and the betrayal burns along with his anger until he’s rescued. He doesn’t leave without Astrid though and seeks to humiliate her as he was humiliated – by having her become a slave both in and out of his bed.

Astrid knows that Leif is angry but tries to make him believe that she had no part of the previous events. He eventually believes her and doesn’t bed her until she’s willing. They begin a relationship but when Astrid become pregnant she wants marriage and that’s one thing that Leif refuses to give her.

The characters:
Leif was a good guy who had been thoroughly screwed up by his first wife who tried to kill him. He swore he would never marry again and he meant it. Even Astrid’s pleas couldn’t get through to him at first. Yes, he was stubborn but he had good reason to be and was smart enough to think about what people said and know that they’re right and he’s wrong.

Astrid was wonderful. She had led a pretty good life until her uncle arranged that horrible marriage and was a kind and loving person. She was attracted to Leif but not willing to be his mistress until she was desperate. Once that happened she quickly fell in love, which was to be expected. I loved how she stood up for herself and when she made up her mind to do something nothing would stand in her way. She took a stand for what she believed was right even when it broke her heart to do so. She was a great heroine.

Oh how I love a good Viking tale! This had all the elements I adore – fierce and true Vikings, damsel in distress, avenging of honor, and of course in the end, love. If you love Vikings like I do then you won’t want to miss this one.

Rating: 4 out of 5

Joanna Fulford


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Guest Review: When She Said I Do by Celeste Bradley

Posted September 17, 2013 by Natalia S in Reviews | 3 Comments

When She Said I DoNatalia’s review of When She Said I Do (Worthington #1) by Celeste Bradley.

Angel’s Sin

Caught in a rainstorm, Miss Calliope Worthington takes shelter in a seemingly abandoned mansion. But when she finds a string of pearls in a dusty chest, she is caught red-handed by the house’s reclusive owner—Mr. Ren Porter—a fiery demon of a man who demands that Callie pay for the necklace…with her innocence.

Devil’s Bargain

When he first lays eyes on the beautiful trespasser, Ren mistakes her for an angel. But when he realizes Callie is a thief, he strikes a bargain she cannot refuse. She must take his hand in marriage and pay him back in full: one night of passion for each stolen pearl. But when Callie surrenders to his desires—night after wicked night—he awakens something deep inside of her. Something powerful and passionate. Like a fairy tale come true, the monster she married has become the man she loves…when she said I do

Calliope Worthington, also known as Cali is the eldest daughter of the Worthington clan. Her family is on some kind of road trip when they get stranded in the middle of a brutal storm. Soaking wet and hungry, they all take refuge in a seemingly empty house. After Cali insures that her family is fed and watered, she takes it upon herself to go exploring the mansion.

Ren porter is a lost soul. Embittered by his life, he stays stinking drunk most days, and is content to wallow in his own self-pity, until he hears the singing. He follows the voice he hears, finding Cali trying on a strand of pearls in one of his rooms. Immediately enthralled by her, he strikes a bargain with her. She must wed him, and earn back every pearl night by night. Only then will he allow her to go back to her family.

This Book had the potential to be a 5 star read. It had all the ideas I love. The first book in a series about a British family, historical romance, and of course a theme similar to one of my favorite Disney movies, Beauty and the beast. However, I’m sad to say that it just didn’t do it for me.

First off, the gaps. I felt so incomplete at times while reading this, that I actually went back pages just to make sure that I wasn’t missing something. Especially in the beginning. I felt that the book skipped around too much and too fast. One minute I’d be digesting one scene while the next thrust in to another. If I hadn’t had the actual book in my hands I almost would wonder if I had a defective copy.

Then, there were the characters. As I said, the idea was great. Personally I love series like this. I’m an avid fan of Lisa Kleyper’s Hathaway’s and wall flowers series, so of course when I picked up this book I was ecstatic that I had found another group of characters I could come to love. Except, I still don’t know any of them. For some reason, to me the characters were all one dimensional. I just couldn’t connect or relate to them in any way. I could relate to the idea of who they were supposed to be, but none of them ever became real people in my head. The two protagonists Cali and ren were definitely more real than the others, but I feel that separately and together they could’ve been more fleshed out.

I understood that the Author was trying to portray Cali as tired of being the constant caretaker of her boisterous family, hence trying to build a life of her own, but I didn’t truly connect with that aspect of her personality until the end. By that point, too many things were going on at the same time for me to appreciate it.

I thought Ren was a little bit unrealistic. Surely if you hate everything about life, are waiting to die, and are drowning in your own self-pity, your personality would be more bitter than his was. In my experience, when people are as bitter as he is supposed to be they are not nice to anyone. Why was he never mean, then? Also, what was the deal with the mystery? It was resolved sure, but it seemed to be thrown in there just to add something extra and with not much thought at all.

The only time I ever seemed to connect with this book was during the Love scenes. I have to say those were quite good. They were real, emotional, and well written. Cali and Ren obviously had some great chemistry in that arena. It just makes me sad that I couldn’t find it anywhere else. They never really had a true conversation that I can recall. There wasn’t any bantering, funny moments and even fighting as couples often have. It seemed to me that they just fell in to instant lust with one another, eventually fell in love, but I can’t tell you how they got there.

I don’t believe I’ll go on to read the next books in this series. Although the idea and potential are great, I wasn’t left with even a little curiosity as to where the rest of the family will end up. I think that if we took the wonderful emotion and connection found in the love scenes and added them to the rest of the book, then we would truly have had a 5 star read.

Grade: 2 out of 5

This book is available from St. Martin’s Press.  You can purchase it here or here in e-format.  This book was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.


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Guest Review: Safe in His Arms by Renee Rose

Posted September 17, 2013 by Judith in Reviews | 1 Comment

18234479Judith’s review of Safe in His Arms by Renee Rose

For as long as she could remember, Becca dreamed of a dominant man to take her in hand, and Zac, the handsome Marine she met at her sister’s wedding, filled the role with aplomb… for a weekend. Then the fling came to an end, Zac went off to war and died for his country, and Becca learned she carried a child who would be born without a father.

Seven years later, Becca has done her best to move on and forget about Zac… until the day she walks into her kitchen to find the man she believed she would never see again locked in mortal combat with her son’s nanny, and realizes everything she thought she knew about Zac was a lie.

Like all Black Ops agents, Zac doesn’t exist in any government record. His life is a series of deadly missions, and relationships of any kind are unsanctioned. But he keeps one secret. He watches over Becca, the beautiful daughter of a rogue agent, and Parker, the six-year-old boy he fathered that fateful weekend. When he spots a known assassin in their apartment posing as a nanny, he’s forced to reveal himself and take them to safety… whether Becca likes it or not.

While Becca may have enjoyed his dominance once, bending her to his will again may not be quite so easy. He is determined to keep her safe, however, and if a long, hard spanking is required, he is more than willing to oblige. Having Becca over his knee rekindles more than his passion, though; even when the immediate danger has passed, he finds it much more difficult to “ghost out” on his family again. Must he resign himself to protecting those he loves from afar, or can he find a way to be the man Becca needs and longs for, the man who is worthy of her submission and love?

This is a very different kind of Black Ops/CIA/suspense novel with lots of eroticism mixed in with some mild BDSM thrown in to spice things up even further.  The story revolves around the experience of a young woman who met the quintessential hunk Marine at her sister’s wedding and their acquaintance resulted in the weekend-long “stand.”  Now, years later, Rebecca has a son, born of that unlikely liason, with a man who she now believes to be dead.  In reality, Zac has been watching over Becca and Parker all this time even as he carries out his government missions.  He is known as “the ghost” among his colleagues and his stealth is truly that of one who is almost “not there.”  Yet he “drops in” initially to save Becca and Parker’s life from the assassin posing as a nanny, and things get very complicated from that point on.

I’m a great fan of that mixture of suspense and romance, but I especially love those stories that have the undercover element mixed in.  Zac is a very dominant person and as he has watched over his son and lover, he has learned that Becca is a woman who he believes needs the security of a dominant person in her life.  She is a successful teach and feels that her life purpose is helping students see beyond the present-day obsession with technology through exposing them to great literature and the myriad ideas that have nurtured creativity for centuries.  Zac is a man whose life is empty of important people other than Becca and Parker, who wonders if he has ever had a life purpose, but is drawn to Becca’s gentle spirit that is bolstered by a staunch determination to care for her son while being true to her destiny.  Once Becca comes to realize that Zac really isn’t dead as she has believed for seven years, she becomes embroiled in the web of the dark world that is Zac’s life reality.  There are some additional surprises for Becca and her son, but the growing attachment between Zac and Becca is both a joy and a problem for Zac and his superiors.  All in all, it is a fascinating novel and was really quite compelling.

This is a new author for me and I was impressed that this complicated story was so well put together.  Writing any romance novel is a challenge but add in the complicated plot that Black Ops ingredient demands, and that kind of story and its author has my deep respect.  This is a book that demonstrates that the author has thought the story line through carefully, has crafted the plot and characters well, and has moved the action consistently throughout the novel.  The spanking ingredient was not really a problem for me as I saw it as something that Zac and Becca came to realize was necessary for their particular relationship.  Obviously that dynamic isn’t necessary or desirable for everyone.  There were times that I felt it went on a bit long–but then again, Zac had a point to make each and every time and Becca was a very stubborn woman–holding on to her insecurities and allowing them to shape her view of reality.  She allowed those insecurities to move her in directions that were not positive for her or her son.  For her the spankings were a way of renewing her sense of direction and helping her to trust someone who really cared about her.  It had not always been so.

This is a book that will be difficult for some but good reading for others.  I personally enjoyed it and am delighted to discover another new author whose future work I will be be looking forward to reading.

I give this novel a rating of 3.75.

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

This title is available from Stormy Night Publications.  You can buy it here or here in e-format.


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What I Read Last Week

Posted September 17, 2013 by Tracy in Features | 3 Comments

Hey there everyone! How are you? Life here is…interesting. I won’t get into details but I’ll say there’s never a dull moment. lol

Giveaways:

I currently have a few giveaways going on the blog…
A digital copy of Protector by Joanne Wadsworth – book 1 in the Magio-Earth series. (YA)
A print copy of Steam Bath: Sweaty Gay Erotica – an anthology of m/m short stories edited by Shane Allison. (this giveaway is US Only)
**My 2013 5 Star Read Giveaway – a list of my 5 star reads (so far) and you can win 1 of them in digital fro the book seller of your choice. 
**And…I’ll have another one coming up this week so check back!

Also, the winner of Blue Hydrangeas by Marianne Sciucco was Crystal C-B – Congratulations! Crystal I’ve already passed your email address off to Marianne so you should get your book soon if you haven’t already.

On to what I read last week:

First up was a novella in Elder Races series by Thea Harrison called The Wicked. The story was about an Owl shifter who was working on security while a group of magical librarians got ancient tomes off of Carling Severin’s island. It was a really good novella. 4 out of 5

Next was Steam Bath: Sweaty Gay Erotic edited by Shane Allison. This was an anthology of short stories all centered around bath houses. Lots of sweat, and lots of sex. 🙂 You can read my review here. 3.75 out of 5

Rumors That Ruined a Lady by Marguerite Kaye was historical romance based around a woman, Caro, who is married and has left her husband. Her hubby then spread rumors about her that were NOT true. Her “friend” Sebastian helps her and saves her life and they end up falling in love. It was a much darker book than expected but really great. This one comes out next month and isn’t to be missed. 4 out of 5 (Is it just me or does the lady on the cover look like Annette Bening??)

My next read was one of the free reads that All Romance eBooks put out in their Fall in Love series giveaway called Tied and True by Marie Harte. The story is about a woman who hears her coworker spouting off that he has a “money shot” of her. She breaks into his house to get the pic but ends up tying him to the bed for most of the weekend to have her way with him. It was a decent short story – and it was free! lol 3 out of 5

The Volatile Amazon by Sandy James is book 4 in the Alliance of the Amazon series. This book follows Sarita the water amazon and her pretty much star crossed relationship with a highlander named Ian. It was a pretty great book and a great end to the series. I’ll post my review of this one next week. 4.25/4.5 out of 5

Edenbrooke (A Proper Romance) by Julianne Donaldson was a great little historical that follows Marianne Daventry as she heads off to Edenbrooke to visit with her sister who’s also visiting there. She meets Philip one of the sons of Edenbrooke but she has no idea that this is the man that her twin sister Cecily has her eye on. The romance is very sweet and I loved watching Philip and Marianne together. 4 out of 5 

(Never) Again by Theresa Paolo is a New Adult story about a girl who is in her first year of college when she meets up with her ex-boyfriend who broke her heart. The book is about her dealing with him, her current boyfriend, her virginity, her brother and others. It was a decent read but I did have some issues with Liz and her manic way of dealing with her life. 3 out of 5 (read for Book Binge)

Lycan’s Mate by Chandler Dee is a short story about a woman/alpha of her pack who is gearing up for the “chase” that will decide who her mate will be. The story is strange and short and kind of leaves you hanging. I was just feeling like it might be something I could get into and then it stopped. Odd, very odd. 1 out of 5

Last for the week was Runaway by Sandy James. This is book 2 in the Safe Havens series. The story is about heiress Cassie Shay who saves 2 men from death – death that her uncle ordered. Those two men, Ty Bishop and Jake Curtis then help Cassie escape from her family who wants her to marry a evil abusive man twice her age. Ty and Cassie fall in love on their way back to White Pines, Montana but the welcome they get in White Pines from Ty’s adopted family isn’t all hearts and butterflies when they find out that Cassie belongs to the Shay family.  I’ll post my review for this one this week.

 
My Book Binge reviews that posted last week:
Fighting Fate by Linda Kage
Not Planning on You by Sydney Landon
The Untamed Mackenzie by Jennifer Ashley

Happy Reading!


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