Day: December 18, 2014

Review: Wallbanger by Alice Clayton

Posted December 18, 2014 by Rowena in Reviews | 3 Comments

wallbangerRowena’s review of Wallbanger (Cocktail #1) by Alice Clayton.

The first night after Caroline moves into her fantastic new San Francisco apartment, she realizes she’s gaining an intimate knowledge of her new neighbor’s nocturnal adventures. Thanks to paper-thin walls and the guy’s athletic prowess, she can hear not just his bed banging against the wall but the ecstatic response of what seems (as loud night after loud night goes by) like an endless parade of women. And since Caroline is currently on a self-imposed dating hiatus, and her neighbor is clearly lethally attractive to women, she finds her fantasies keep her awake even longer than the noise. So when the wallbanging threatens to literally bounce her out of bed, Caroline, clad in sexual frustration and a pink baby-doll nightie, confronts Simon Parker, her heard-but-never-seen neighbor. The tension between them is as thick as the walls are thin, and the results just as mixed. Suddenly, Caroline is finding she may have discovered a whole new definition of neighborly…

In a delicious mix of silly and steamy, Alice Clayton dishes out a hot and hilarious tale of exasperation at first sight…

I first heard about this book when Holly read it. She said it was hilarious so I knew that I was going to pick it up. I finally did when it became a book club pick and like Holly, I laughed my ass off while reading this book.

Caroline lives in an apartment with paper thin walls. They’re so thin that she can hear every single time that her playboy neighbor has someone over and is enjoying his time with them. At first, she’s pretty impressed and a little bit jealous of the girl but when it becomes a regular thing (with more than one partner), she’s no longer impressed or jealous. She’s just flat out pissed (and a little bit grossed out). She’s so pissed that she marches her pink teddy wearing self over to his apartment and bangs on his door to give him a piece of her mind. That’s when the shenanigans begin.

Simon and Caroline were fun. Getting to know them had me laughing one minute and frustrated as all get out the next minute. The book started off good. Both main characters were interesting, they were funny but they were also annoying. The way that Caroline kept talking to her elusive O? The first time, it was funny but over the course of the book, I wanted to choke her because who the hell does that? Ugh.

The fighting and the bickering was funny at first but I think it went on for too long and then everything goes great and the perfect ending for this book would have been that trip to Spain. I didn’t think anything after Spain was necessary. I thought they should have gotten their shit together by then and faded out into the Spanish sunset. But then Spain happened and I wanted to smack the shit out of  Caroline. She was too in her head a lot of the times and it drove me batty.

Simon was a pretty great hero, aside from the fact that he was banging three different women when we first meet him. I wasn’t a fan of that but Simon completely won me over so meh, I guess that didn’t bother me too much.

Overall, this book was predictable but still entertaining. Simon and Caroline finally get it right in the end and I was glad for it. Their friends were all pretty great but the downside to this funny book is that it took too long to end…and I heard that they get another book in this series? Is that really needed?

Grade: 3.5 out of 5

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


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Review: Caged in Winter by Brighton Walsh

Posted December 18, 2014 by Holly in Reviews | 0 Comments

Review: Caged in Winter by Brighton WalshReviewer: Holly
Caged in Winter by Brighton Walsh
Publisher: Penguin
Publication Date: November 4th 2014
Genres: Fiction, New Adult
Pages: 304
Add It: Goodreads
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two-half-stars

In this emotional and sexy New Adult debut from Brighton Walsh, the only thing more frightening than commitment is hope… Aspiring chef Cade Maxwell is immediately, viscerally attracted to Winter Jacobson. But it’s not her mouthwatering curves he’s drawn to—it’s the strange emptiness in her eyes. When Cade saves her from a drunken customer with grabby hands, he’s shocked at her response… Winter doesn’t need Cade’s help. After a lifetime of getting by on her own, she’s happy to rely on herself. She’s exactly seventy-six days away from graduating college, and if she can hold it together that long, she’ll finally be able to rise above the crappy hand she was dealt. But now, every time she turns around, Cade is there, ready to push her, smile at her, distract her from her plans. Winter knows she can’t afford to open up—especially to a man she’s terrified to actually want…

Let me preface this by saying I am approaching New Adult/Contemporary burnout. Take that into consideration while reading my review.

I really struggled with this book. The premise is good, but both main characters did a lot of internalizing, which made for slow reading. Winter, especially, spent a lot of time focused on her past and denying her feelings. There are two major problems with Winter. 1) we weren’t told her full backstory until close to the end of the book and 2) her pulling back became a repetitive refrain, even inside her own head. The situation wasn’t helped by the fact that Winter has nothing else going on in her life, outside of Cade. Sure, she has a crappy job she hates and she’s in her last semester of school, but nothing happened with either of those things. Pretty much every chapter from her was her doing something with Cade or her obsession about Cade while he wasn’t around.

Cade was a better fleshed-out character. He had responsibilities and something to focus on outside his relationship with Winter, which made the chapters from his point-of-view more interesting. His focus on becoming a chef was well-written. I also enjoyed his interactions with his sister and niece.

When Winter forgot to protect herself they worked well together. Unfortunately that didn’t happen often enough to save the story for me. I am looking forward to the next book, which features Cade’s sister and his best friend.

2.5 out of 5

two-half-stars


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