Posted May 19, 2010 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 0 Comments
Judith’s review of
Passionate Pleasures by
Bertrice Small
Librarians are expected to be a bit stuffy. But not Kathryn St. John. Miss Kathy keeps everyone up-to-date with the latest trends, literary and otherwise. She’s content in her career – and with her fantasies on the Channel, that secret interactive cable network known only to women. Any of her favorite literary heroes can become her lover on the Channel, while her public life remains scandal-free which is a m ust for a descendent of one of her town’s founding families.
But when Egret Pointe’s middle school gets a new principal, everything changes. One look at the town’s proper librarian, and Tim Blair is lost. That he’s several years her junion doesn’t matter to him at all. He knows he can offer the lady passionate pleasures that will go beyond her wildest dreams. But getting Kathy to give up her fantasies for reality isn’t easy until the Channel’s CEO takes a hand in the matter—because even the devil himself can have a soft spot for love and a pretty woman.
The Devil himself – yes, he is one of the important characters in this novel. To be sure, he is a shadow in the background, but as CEO of The Channel, he is trolling for the souls of women who can become his as he feeds them their sexual fantasies. However, Lucifer Nicolas as he is named in Small’s book, finds that even though Kathryn St. John (pronounced sin gin) has been a subscriber to The Channel for many years, she has not sucumbed to the wooing of Nicolas with the result that her subscription is summarily terminated. Nicolas has determined that Kathryn is too good and cannot be corrupted, and thus she must now find her personal satisfaction in a real, human, one-on-one relationship.
Now we get down to the nuts and bolts of this story: Can this 48-year-old librarian have anything to offer to a man like Tim Blair who is five years her junior? Can she hope to find the kind of sexual satisfaction in real life that she has so consistently experienced night after night on The Channel? Tim Blair knows that he has wanted Kathryn from the moment he encountered her in the grocery store, even though she was chastising him for leaving his dog in the car on a warm day. He hasn’t responded to a woman like this since his fiance was killed two days before their wedding. He is savvy about the social pressures of being one of the founding families of a small community, but he pursues Kathryn anyway. She begins to see past their age differences and begins to hope that her future might just hold a warm, sexy, good-looking man. Tim is fun and a gentleman. He doesn’t even try to kiss her on their first date. But he knows she is skittish and determines to woo her, even to the point of making her over-protective brother like him and accept the fact that Tim is dating Kathryn.
Now Bertrice has written quite a few books but the only other of her novels that I have read was The Border Lord & the Lady which I reviewed for The Book Binge some time ago. I loved that book and have determined it is one of those “re-read” musts. I am not sure about this book. It is set in a modern time and I like its premise. I think Small writes complicated stories with complicated plots. My one criticism of this book is that I grew tired of all the dialogue and repartee that just kept going on and on—often, in my opinion, to the detriment of the story. Now this just may be my bias, but I don’t think that is all of it. I am reading a number of books that are set in a wide variety of contexts. I liked the idea that genuine loving and respect can overcome temptation, even when perpetrated by the devil’s nephew. I like the idea that real people found real love which carried more weight and value than all the fantasies money could buy. I just think the book sometimes got unnecessarily wordy. All that aside, there’s lots to like here and I really loved Tim, his simple and focused pursuit of Kathryn, loved Kathryn’s consistent resistance to her overbearing brother, and her friendships that meant so much to her. I liked her sense of tradition but I also liked that she was willing to allow Tim into her life, even though she was almost ready t o throw in the towel due to her age.
I like that Small has told a story that was about someone other than two people in their twenties or thirties. She has given us a novel that celebrates not only the older adult but the nature of genuine love over the social barriers of age. Good job, Ms Small!!
I give this book a 3.75 rating out of 5.
This book is available from Berkley. You can buy it
here or here in e-format.
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Tagged: 3.75 Reviews, Berkley, Bertrice Small, Contemporary Erotica, Guest Reviews, Judith's Reviews, Reviews, The Pleasures
Posted January 21, 2010 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 2 Comments
Judith’s review of
The Border Lord and the Lady by
Bertrice Small.
Lady Cicely Bowen, daughter of the Earl of Leighton, is sent away by her doting father when her jealous stepmother presents a threat to her safety. Raised by a royal widow, Cicely becomes best friends with Lady Joan Beaufort, the king’s cousin. When Joan is married to King James I of Scotland, she chooses Cicely as one of the ladies to accompany her north.
At the Scot’s court, Cicely finds herself pursued by two men: elegant Andrew Gordon, the lair of Braemor, and Ian Douglas, the laird of Glengorm, a rougn-spoken border lord. When Ian kidnaps Cicely just as Andrew is about to propose to her, the royal court is sent into an uproar. The queen demands the return of her friend and the Gordons threaten to set the border aflame, even as Ian Douglas attempts to win Cicely’s love. But the border lord is difficult to tame, and the lady’s heart is even harder to claim.
This is a wonderful historical romance—and I do mean “historical”–in that Bertrice Small has done outstanding research on the culture and times which forms the backdrop of this intriguing love story. But don’t let that put you off: this story is so skillfully told that the historical context never interferes with the telling of the complicated loves of Lady Cicely. The heroine is quite unusual for her time: a young woman of great personal honesty and integrity, a true friend to Lady Joan Beaufort, a woman who knows her own mind and is not afraid to stand up for herself even in a culture that looks upon women, especially women with large dowries, as brood mares and chattel for sealing political alliances. Cicely’s father has wrested a promise from King James I that Cicely will not be forced to marry anyone with whom she has not formed an emotional attachment. Therein lies the conflict that moves throughout this saga of Lady Cicely’s romantic life. When Ian Douglas “bridenaps” Lady Cicely, the fireworks start and they don’t let up soon. Weave into that kind of clash of strong personalities the marvelous sexual tension that the author handles so well, and you have a story that keeps you riveted and which really never lets up.
I am especially delighted to have read this book. I am a lover of history in almost any form, and I truly delight in a historical romance that is well-written and well-researched. Add to that the fact that this story is linked to my favorite novel of all time – Kathryn by Anya Seton – in that Lady Joan Beaufort is the granddaughter of Kathryn Synford & John of Lancaster—the main characters in Kathryn, and I am hooked! Great novels are only truly great if they contain strong characters that are well-developed and which “live” in the imagination of the reader as the story progresses. Add to that a story that is built around a conflict that is believable and sustainable throughout the book. Ms Small has managed both beautifully.
This is a book for those who really love to “sink their teeth” into a story that is meaty and complicated, full of fun and tension, involving politics that always has everyone a bit edgey, knowing that their future safety is always just a little in jeopardy. Anyone who has ever dealt with the Scots knows that those ancient clans were ever at each others’ throat, raiding one another’s territories, led by hot-headed lairds that were constantly looking for ways to expand their power and holdings. It’s all right here in this book as the undercurrent of a story that sizzles all on its own. If you want to meet some powerful personalities, watch the unfolding of relationships against a backdrop of the raw beauty of the Scottish borderlands, eavesdrop on athletic bedsport as Lady Cicely is introduced to the joys of the marriage bed, then you have picked up the right book. I don’t think you’ll be disappointed!
I give this book a rating of 5 out of 5
You can read more from Judith at
Dr J’s Book Place.
This book is available from NAL. You can buy it
here or
here in e-format.
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Tagged: 5.0 Reviews, Bertrice Small, Guest Reviews, Historical, Judith's Reviews, NAL Books, Reviews
Posted August 30, 2008 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 2 Comments
Kris‘ review of Dangerous Pleasures (Pleasures Book 4) by Bertrice Small
Annie Miller, a widow with five kids, didn’t have any fantasies. She didn’t have the time or the money. But then her younger sister enters her in a contest. Annie wins, and suddenly her life falls into place. Whisked off to The Spa at Egret Pointe Annie discovers The Channel for the first time. And after her week of pampering she’s offered a job at the spa. Wanting to have the wherewithall to help her children have a few small luxuries Annie finds she has a talent for business, and climbing the corporate ladder is more fun than she ever anticipated. But Dangerous Pleasures may cost Annie everything she holds dear. Still, it is really all for the children. Isn’t it?
If you are interested in a good erotic story then this one is pretty good. The first three books in the series had an HEA but this one does not. This is an erotic story not an erotic romance. Which I think is surprising from Ms Small. I thought this was a romance so I kept looking for a hero and waiting for her to fall for one of the guys in the story but it did not happen.
The story was interesting but not what I was expecting so that detracted a lot. The synopsis on the book is a good one and summarizes it better than I could. She gets sucked into her job so much that she never sees her kid and they become raised by their nanny that her new job pays for, but keeps saying that she is doing it for the kids and I know that that is supposed to be the irony of it but I think because it was about her kids it bugged me that she could be that self absorbed. She was an okay heroine for a erotic story but not for a romance.
For the most part these books can be read in any order, but this one has a lot of Nora Buckley in it, who is the heroine from the first book, Private Pleasures. If you have read the other books I will say that you find out interesting stuff about Mr Nicholas (the guy who owns The Channel) and about The Channel itself.
Because of the lack of HEA I would have to give this one a 2.5 out of 5.
But even if I knew that it had been just erotica I still think I only would have given it a 3 out of 5.
This book is available from NAL Trade. You can buy it here.
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Tagged: 2.5 Reviews, Berkley, Bertrice Small, Erotica, Kris' Reviews, NAL Books, Reviews, The Pleasures