Day: August 14, 2014

Review: Stir Me Up by Sabrina Elkins

Posted August 14, 2014 by Rowena in Reviews | 1 Comment

Rowena’s review of Stir Me Up by Sabrina Elkins.

Cami Broussard has her future all figured out. She’ll finish her senior year of high school, then go to work full-time as an apprentice chef in her father’s French restaurant, alongside her boyfriend, Luke. But then twenty-year-old ex-Marine Julian Wyatt comes to live with Cami’s family while recovering from serious injuries. And suddenly Cami finds herself questioning everything she thought she wanted.

Julian’s all attitude, challenges and intense green-brown eyes. But beneath that abrasive exterior is a man who just might be as lost as Cami’s starting to feel. And Cami can’t stop thinking about him. Talking to him. Wanting to kiss him. He’s got her seriously stirred up. Her senior year has just gotten a lot more complicated…

Cami thought she had her future all planned out before but things come up that change the course you were on and you either jump on board or you fall behind. Cami’s plans for the future were centered on her desire to become a chef, like her father.  Her father wants her to go to college and get a degree to give herself more options to fall back on than just becoming a chef and that’s a huge fight they keep having and as they fight about it, you can see just how close they are.

Julian Wyatt was injured overseas and is coming home to recover fro those injuries. His parents are both gone and his Aunt Estella took him in and raised him as his own so now that he’s out of the Marines, he’s moving in with her and her new family.

When Julian comes into the picture, he’s a mess.  He’s a pissed off mess and he took his madness out on everyone around him.  I wasn’t a fan of that. The way he treated his Aunt when she comes to see him at the hospital, the way that he treated Cami when he first moved into HER ROOM and started sleeping in HER BED, sending her to sleep in the freaking hallway upstairs, it really got to me. I wasn’t Team Julian when he first came onto the scene but over the course of the book, my walls started falling because Julian starts to come around and make amends for the ass that he was when he first came into Cami’s life.

I liked seeing them come together. The chemistry between them was noticeable from the very beginning and I loved seeing them get closer and closer with each page I turned. Their attraction to each other was cute and I liked that Cami didn’t let him get away with a lot of the crap he was trying to pull on everyone around him. When she threw that muffin at his head? I laughed out loud. I liked that she gave as good as she got and that his injuries weren’t what she saw when she looked at him. I liked that she helped him just as much as he helped her and I loved seeing their feelings grow over the course of the story.

Cami was a strong young woman who had plans and even though she wasn’t sure what they were, she knew that she wanted to do something in the food business, she wanted to cook and she knew that whatever she did in the future, it would be somewhere she’d be able to cook. When her feelings for her boyfriend Luke start to waver because of her feelings for Julian, I liked that Cami was mature enough to end it with Luke before things got too complicated with Julian. I liked that she didn’t drag her relationship out while developing the new one with Julian.

I liked seeing Julian come into his new life. He came a long way from that asshole in the beginning and seeing him try to figure out what happens next for him was a treat. He was competely redeemed in my eyes and I ended up really liking him.

This was a cute story, one that I enjoyed a lot. I’m glad that I read it and I would definitely recommend it.

Grade: 3 out of 5

This book is available from Harlequin Teen. 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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Review: Falling for Max by Shannon Stacey

Posted August 14, 2014 by Holly in Reviews | 7 Comments

Review: Falling for Max by Shannon StaceyReviewer: Holly
Falling for Max: Book Nine of The Kowalskis by Shannon Stacey
Series: The Kowalskis #9
Also in this series: Taken with You: Book Eight of The Kowalskis
Publisher: Carina Press
Publication Date: August 1st 2014
Genres: Fiction
Pages: 196
Add It: Goodreads
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | The Ripped Bodice | Google Play Books
four-half-stars
Series Rating: five-stars

Max Crawford has reached the point in life where he's starting to think about settling down. Unfortunately, he's always been a little awkward when it comes to socialinteractions, and working from home doesn't help. He spends so much time alone,painting beautiful, historically accurate model trains that half of Whitford has begun to joke that he may be a serial killer. Not exactly prime husband material.
Tori Burns has found happiness in Maine, thanks in large part to her shifts at the Trailside Diner. She likes the work, and she loves the local gossip. When shy, geeky Max Crawford becomes a regular, she's intrigued. When she finds out he's in the market for a wife, she's fascinated…and determined to help.
Molding Max into every woman's dream turns out to be much easier than expected. But has Tori's plan worked a little too well? As she turns his comfortable life all sorts of upside down, she'll have to find a way to show just how she's fallen for him…the real him.

Max is the town recluse. Once a week he hosts a gathering at his house so the guys in town can watch sports without their wives complaining,  but otherwise he doesn’t get out much. When he decides it’s time to find a wife, at the suggestion of a friend, he makes an effort to go into town more to look for one. Tori waits on him at the local diner and takes him under her wing when he strikes out with a random woman. She offers to help him become dateable. She doesn’t want to change him, just help him learn to navigate the dating field.

They quickly become friends. Which would be great, if there wasn’t an underlying attraction between them. It isn’t long before they both want more than just platonic friendship. While Max is looking for forever,  Tori wants nothing to do with marriage. Her parents’ bitter divorce after 25 years of – seemingly – solid marriage has soured her on ever trying it herself.  After all, if her parents can go from polite and kind to angry and venomous overnight, what’s to say she couldn’t as well?

I really liked Tori. She’s not afraid to speak her mind. Her sense of humor is quirky and aligned perfectly with Max’s. Aside from her hang-ups about marriage, she was grounded and focused. She was settled and not afraid to work hard. Her fear of ending up like her parents was a genuine, real thing. It was easy to see why she struggled considering the way they acted and how she was constantly put in the middle. The foundation if her life was rocked when they decided to divorce,  but it was the way they acted and the hateful things they said that caused the deepest cracks.

Max is socially awkward and doesn’t navigate society well.  His job in model train restoration doesn’t help since he spends the majority of his time in his basement. Tori pushes him out of his comfort zone, but she doesn’t try to change him. She thinks he’s perfect as is, she just wants him to get out and live a little.  She really understood Max. His quirks didn’t bother her, in fact she found them endearing.

I love Max. He’s shy, sweet, mildly OCD and unlike any hero I’ve read before him. I wouldn’t exactly call him beta, but he’s definitely quirky and, yes, adorable. He felt comfortable with Tori right away, which was strange for him as it usually takes him a long time to warm up to someone. He felt protective of her, and found himself thinking about her all the time. It was great how they instantly connected and fell into each other’s lives.

The town and Kowalski clan provide a good back drop for the story. Max has made friends in town, even if he doesn’t realize it. Tori has a strong place in the community and a deep friendship with Hailey, the local librarian. The interactions outside their relationship really immersed me in the story. It was like I was there, living the story with them.

I am really sad to see the end of the Kowalskis. These novels have provided hours of entertainment, fun and drama. It’s kind of like saying goodbye to old friends.

4.5 out of 5

four-half-stars


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