Day: September 22, 2013

Guest Review: Bodyguards of Pleasure by Melody Snow Monroe

Posted September 22, 2013 by Judith in Reviews | 0 Comments

17984088Judith’s review of Bodyguards of Pleasure (Pleasure, Montana #8) by Melody Snow Monroe

Overweight computer nerd Brooke Armstrong lives her dream of store ownership. When she witnesses a drug deal gone bad, the killer is intent on seeing her dead. Scared for her life and that of her family’s, she reluctantly accepts protection from two hot bodyguards, Gavin Kirkwood and Riley Landon.

Gavin can’t believe how much Brooke entices him. He’s drawn to her lush curves and intelligent mind. He knows she will make the perfect submissive for him and Riley.

Never in her wildest dreams did Brooke think the muscular former military man would find her attractive, but when he ties her up and demands her obedience, she’s in heaven.

Too bad the killer won’t let them revel in their passion. After a kidnapping gone wrong that ends in a do or die battle, the killer is brought to justice. How can the men convince Brooke they want her in a permanent ménage relationship?

This novel has lots of stuff in it that makes for fun sexy reading.  Throw in some BDSM and its the best of all worlds.  Now it is not intended to be a textbook on any one thing, but it’s simply a fun story about a geeky, overweight lady who is totally wrapped up in her business and being responsible about serving her clients and keeping her life together the best way she can.  But as often happens to all of us, a simple occurrence can become a defining moment and one which changes the course of one’s future.  So it is with the BBW as she is placed in the care of two ex-military hunky guys because she has witnessed a murder and is now in serious danger of losing her life.

It seems that there are more and more romance novels that are featuring women who are in the size 12-14-16 size range rather than featuring the runway model skinny minnies as has been more the kind of heroine of the past.  These heroes like curvy women–they’re big men to begin with and like a woman with enough body substance to hold on to.  That the heroine has anything but a positive self-image poses a challenge for these two guys.  But by virtue of Brooke’s need to trust them with her life and her safety, she is drawn into a closer proximity to them 24/7 so that it becomes easier for them to work on helping her to become willing to allow them in her life long-term.

This is pure and simple a fun read and to make more out of it would do it a disservice.  Set in a curious little town of Pleasure, Montana, of course it is going to be a romantic fiction but still lots of entertainment quality.  I have read several works by this author and all of them are fun-filled stories, with enough substance to keep the reader mentally engaged, and yet fully aware that it is fiction.  Yet it is also containing a lesson about the romantic possibilities that are available to full-figured women who needn’t allow their curves to become a problem.  Our society has long sought to convince women that size 2 is normal.  Not so, and one has only to read the optimum weights for certain heights and one realizes that anyone who aspires to size 2 is not dealing with reality.  (IMHO)  So I can honestly say that I thought this novel preached a very good “sermon” to women to live their own lives and be willing to accept love in whatever form it comes into your life.

I give this novel a rating of 3.75 out of 5.

The Series:
Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover

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

This title is available from Siren Publishing.  You can buy it here or here in e-format.


Tagged: , , , , , , , , , ,

Guest Review: The Dream Thieves by Maggie Stiefvater

Posted September 22, 2013 by Whitley B in Reviews | 0 Comments

The Dream Thieves- Maggie StiefvaterWhitley’s review of The Dream Thieves (The Raven Cycle #2) by Maggie Stiefvater.

Now that the ley lines around Cabeswater have been woken, nothing for Ronan, Gansey, Blue, and Adam will be the same. Ronan, for one, is falling more and more deeply into his dreams, and his dreams are intruding more and more into waking life. Meanwhile, some very sinister people are looking for some of the same pieces of the Cabeswater puzzle that Gansey is after…

As a novel in its own right, The Dream Thieves was pretty good. As a sequel, it was a disappointment. It felt more like an alternate version of the first book than a true sequel. All the character development got reset, entirely new concepts and people were introduced and became the focus, and stuff from the previous book had very little in the way of repercussions. A few major themes from the first book got straight-up repeated (“the ley line needs to be fixed” is not that different from “the ley line needs to wake up.”)

On the other hand, I did like this book by itself. The plot felt a lot more cohesive and focused than the first, although the writing style still gave it that dreamy, unfocused atmosphere. The author didn’t have to reintroduce all the characters, so we got to skip the chapters and chapters and chapters worth of description and backstory; that helped a lot.

I loved the concepts in this book, the creativity that the author displayed in playing with them. I also loved the low-key feel of it all. This is fantasy, but it’s a very calm fantasy, there’s very little flash-and-bang. The magic is restricted to a few magical things, and it’s treated like something real, like something that may be fantastical but that can still be played with and measured and explored. It was a very practical approach to the fantasy aspect, while still being enormously inventive, and I just love that combination.

That said, the plot did drag on quite a bit. I’m still not a fan of the writing style in this. It’s got too much fluff, too many repeated lines, too much extraneous information. This book never met a tangent it didn’t like, and it uses the same tone on everything, whether it’s a tense moment or an everyday moment. Between all the extra chapters and the lack of variance, this book felt less like a ride and more like a straight highway that goes on forever.

A few more random notes: There was very little Blue in this book, and when she did show up, she wasn’t memorable. She went from a character in her own right in the first book, to a tertiary character in this book.

The Dream Thieves is very Ronan-centric, and Adam gets some spotlight, but Gainsy and Noah might as well not even be there.

Much like the last book, while there are plenty of funny and haunting lines, there’s also a ton that are just…well…

“She made a neat rack of teeth at the Grey Man.” (48%)

If you say so.

There’s a character that does some heavy drug use, and while he is a bad guy, there are no physical consequences show. He does a line of coke, then the scene moves on like nothing’s changed. Casual drugs use is a pet peeve of mine; I feel like if you’re going to write that in, you should at least have the authorial gonads to really show it.

Another pet peeve is that a character uses “feminist” as an insult, and it came right after Blue delivered an extremely feminist-positive argument. But the message she gave gets undercut by the line “wow, you are a raging feminist,” especially since there’s no counterargument and Blue more or less folds after he says it. I know teenagers aren’t always well informed on feminism, but that doesn’t mean we adults have to reinforce the idea that speaking up like Blue did is somehow worthy of being insulted.

So, on the whole, it was a very interesting book, with a lot of really good stuff in it, and only a few things that hit my buttons. I’d still recommend it.

Grade: 4 out of 5

This book is available from Scholastic Press. You can purchase it here or here in e-format.


Tagged: , , , , , , , ,