Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Chasing Stars by Alex K. Thorne

Chasing StarsChasing Stars by Alex K. Thorne

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


*I received this book from Ylva Publishing for an honest review*

This is one of those books that is tricky for me – in that I found it both intriguing and vaguely hard to get into in the beginning, and yet, despite that ‘hard to get into’, I read 62% of the book in basically one go – and only stopped because I slumped over asleep. I mean, it was 3 am at that point.

So – this book is the third in Ylva’s stand-alone Superhero books. For various reasons I have not yet read the other two books so cannot make any comment beyond what I just stated.

I do not mean to have a series of short paragraphs but . . . I do. One of the reasons I was first lured to this book was because I happened to notice that the author was from South Africa and I’d, as far as I know, had never read a lesbian fiction book from there, set there, or otherwise connected to there. This book, though, is set in California. One of the main characters is an alien to the country, though. Alien as in literally from outer space. Well, no, that might imply something one way or another. An alien from another planet who arrived to Earth in a spaceship that had crash landed on Earth roughly . . . . 17 years prior to the start of this book. I know it was 17 years prior because the lead and solo point of view was ten when the ship crashed and is 27 now.

Ava Eisenberg has two jobs – she works as the personal assistant to a high-flying Hollywood elite actress, Gwen Knight, and she also works as Swiftwing, superhero. Like, say, Supergirl, Ava’s personality changes when she has the mask on or off. Confident, in control, powerful with mask on. Not confident, stuttering, occasionally clumsy without mask on (okay, she wobbled once in her shoes, I’m not actually sure if clumsy works here or not). And like Supergirl, Ava’s boss knows both Ava and Swiftwing – separately (referring here to the Cat Grant/Supergirl dynamic, not whoever Supergirl’s boss is at the moment on the tv show).

That boss, as noted, is Gwen Knight. Highly successful, bitchy, ice-queen like Hollywood actress of 44. Who has a young adopted son named Luke. Which is important to the story line since it’s the reason certain things unfolded. Like, say, the part where Gwen’s ex-husband has now, after years not doing so, is fighting for full custody of Luke. Because he’s, the ex-husband Alfonso, is in a stable relationship, while Gwen is not. Which is how Ava and Gwen ended up in a fake relationship to show stability or whatever it was they were trying to show.
This was a rather neat, much more interesting, deeper, more exciting book than I had expected (or thought it would be after the opening parts). And has a lot more characters of importance and story-lines than I’ve mentioned – I can’t mention everything here.

Oh, and yes, there’s a tiny bit of graphic sex embedded in the book. At least one scene (if I recall correctly, just one scene – if that kind of thing matters to review readers).

And, since I haven’t expressly mentioned it before now, there is in fact a bunch of superhero stuff that occurs in this book. Actual flying around, doing superhero type stuff.

Rating: 4.78

February 28 2018




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Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Sugar's Spice: Choose Your Bondage Fantasy by Stephanie D. Nalle

Sugar's Spice: Choose Your Bondage FantasySugar's Spice: Choose Your Bondage Fantasy by Stephanie D. Nalle

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Over time I've picked up the habbit of occasionally popping into stories I can 'control'. As in 'choose your own adventure' type stories where 'I', or I should say 'you' with 'you' being the reader have control (you know like 'click here if you wish to continue reading this review', 'click here if you eat a candy bar instead of continuing to read', 'click here if you attempt to read the review while eating the candy bar' *click* You've smeared chocolate all over your face and you are drooling (occasionally the results of clicking on one of the choices has you doing stupid stuff that is even out of character of the 'you' in the story).

Haven't read this specific author before.

Slight complication immeidately, though I do not 'deduct' anything from it - I 'started' the book only to find myself in the middle of the action. That can happen, but I was confused so did moved back a page. And saw more text. Oopsie, this isn't set to start at the beginning of the book but some distance down the line.

Right no matter.

So, the 'you' in this story is female *yay*. And work in tech support. And are 26. Struggling actress (apparently playing a lot of 'extras' in a play has caused you to be 'desperately low on funds' - apparently acting in that play involved you paying to be allowed to act in it). Oh, and you are 'a hooker at 'Madam's'.

So . . . not a lot of choices so far for me the 'you' to make. I've left my day job, got into a crappy car, and driven towards job 2 - hooker. Where-upon my crappy car dies. Outside a house with a roaring fire (presumably in a fire place). And a man from the house emerges. He looks like Colin Firth. Still no choices for me to make. This is a CYOA book, right? For adults?

Ooh! How exciting, can make choice now. Course by this point there's a bunch I should have already made - like whether or not I decide to go up to a stranger's house after he asked if I'd like to do so; accepting a possibly drugged drink, etc. etc. But, choice be made here, first choice: making quick private call or going to fire to warm up.

Well, now that I have choices I stop making note of story. Or I mean, telling the story as it unfolds.

Oh bloody hell - more possible drugged items - wine in a glass, cheese. Right, sorry, I said I'd stop saying what occurring.

Heh, No reason for me to do so, but every chance I had I've taken the less naughty route (most of the time I, first read through, chose naughty route). Which I mention because, while causally eating food, I . . . just remove my dressing gown and reveal my lingerie. hehe. I mean, I had no choice to do that or not do that. Just *eating food, here's my breasts, want to see them?* mmphs. heh. Okay, seriously, how did I choose the least naughty path only to find myself - without being able to change the direction or control anyhing, with a ballgag in my mouth and all bound up? shesh.

Okay, this story became super weird. And long. And twisted. And . . . what the bloody hell am I reading anyway? This is kind of like the never ending story. It just keeps going and going, and now there's some man (unknown previously) sexually blackmailing some other woman (not seen previously) and . . . on and on.

“Dan, what do you know about a computer scientist work colleague called Ben?”

- I've skipped mentioning the conversations, but they can be quite . . . awkward. All three of you - Dan, 'you', and Ben worked with computers. Awkwardly saying 'computer scientist work colleague' seems . . . weird.

hehe - shesh. That first read through, the first path I chose to go down was weird. Truth be told, I didn't want to read about a sexually harassing school principal, so I backed up to see what the other path lead. Which lead to comic conventions. See, weird things turn up as you go down .. . this book's paths.

Interesting enough way to pass the time.

Rating: 3

February 27 2018



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Sunday, February 25, 2018

A Nude to a Kill by Cassie Caine

A Nude to a KillA Nude to a Kill by Cassie Caine

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


There's an episode of Seinfeld that includes Seinfeld having a girlfriend who is some form of nudist. Every time they are alone together, she strips off. Wanders nudely. She's not doing that for erotic/sex/or similar reasons. She's doing it because she doesn't like clothing (more or less). Seinfeld is initially pleased by this development until he realizes that there are just some angles that a body can be in that should not be seen while that body is naked. Where-upon he tries his best to get her to wear clothing - it just isn't 'interesting' for him any longer.

Unfortunately, this specific story follows a somewhat similar path in desire in me to 'see' the naked person. The story was just not as interesting as other stories I've read by this author.

There's a professional model - she's been hired to wander a wildnerness area while a photography class takes pictures of her. It's the first time she's done a nude shoot so she's nervous about that. But . . . you know the time she first strips off? She's more thinking of the creepy teacher who had sexually harassed her the night before and is still giving off bad vibes. Creepy. There's nothing erotic/sexy/exciting, to me personally, to sexual harassment.

I don't know. Too many people. Too many points of view. And before we even got the the crazed crossbow hunter, I'd been thinking that there was nothing erotic about this story. Then that person appeared and . . .. mmphs.

Unfortunate.

Rating: 2.7

February 24 2018



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Saturday, February 24, 2018

Supergirl: Age of Atlantis by Jo Whittemore

Supergirl: Age of AtlantisSupergirl: Age of Atlantis by Jo Whittemore

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Reasonably okay Supergirl story. One specific reason why I call this reasonably okay instead of good, though I'll mention that later.

I had two specific problems enjoying this book more – 1) I knew going in that this was a young adult book – geared for people younger than me. Though I thought it’d be geared more the level of, say, 1980s Star Trek media-tie-in books (which most libraries I spotted the books in would put the books in the juvenile section). Instead, well, I just didn’t realize that the book was geared more for people in the age group below young adult. Assuming the definitions of young adult I’ve seen apply – ‘targeted at ages 14 to 21’. This book here, instead, was geared for people aged 9 to 12 (grade level 4-7). And the book really did feel that way. Both from the overall tone and story, and the numerous ‘lesson’s people learned along the way. 2) Even considering that the book was geared towards people younger than me and that might have an impact on how I interpret things and ‘they’ interpret things, I’d have to say that the ending action scene was a little messed up – which is where that ‘reasonably okay instead of good’ comes in. And where I now mention what I mean more specifically. It’s not even plot holes, but the way the story was told in a specific series of events.

(view spoiler)

Right, so. As noted: this book was geared for people much younger than me and it read that way. There were many lessons to be learned by most of the characters in the story. The action had some odd weirdness in it. Most fanfiction seems to make Mon-El out worse than he actually appears on the show, and this book here makes him out slightly better than the tv series shows him. So, I mention that to note that Supergirl’s heterosexual relationship with Mon-El was quite relevant to this book. Alex and Maggie’s lesbian relationship was included but in a barely there, blink and you’d miss it way. Though that’s kind of the nature of the situation – Supergirl is the main character, everyone else are side characters. And Mon-El is quite important to her, while Maggie, Alex’s girlfriend, is not. I mean not at the same level.

Rating: 3.0

February 21 2018



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Friday, February 23, 2018

Neck Deep by Sophie Lack

Neck DeepNeck Deep by Sophie Lack

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


I hate when I forget to review a book. Which is why I, randomly, gaze about my shelves to see what I’ve read recently and what doesn’t have a review. Whereupon I saw this book here with the review column empty. Pfft.

Genre: Fantasy – mostly confined inside one city-state (Praza)
Setting: Not earth
Of note: I rarely read books involving vampires that are set on ‘not earth’ locations. Not exactly sure why that is – I’ve read many shifter books set ‘elsewhere’ but . . . well there’s this book that has vampires in a not earth setting and . . . can’t think of any other work. (view spoiler)

Story: Elanna, while not immediately obvious, is an elf. She’s also blind, though the kind of blind that can see. Heh. Though she sees things differently than those who still have eyeballs – she sees . . . light, and colors, and . . . impressions. She has the ability to ‘tell’ if the ‘thing’ over there is an elf, vampire, hunter, etc. etc. by the ‘colors, scars, etc.’, and has the ability to ‘see’ through walls to see what’s going on in various rooms. Oh, and she’s an assassin.

The book opens with Elanna in a bar talking with a ‘hunter’ – a religious fanatic who believes all creatures that are not human are evil and must be killed. With slight exceptions – like Elves are near the top of ‘vaguely acceptable’ list. The hunter, whose name is, I think, Oren, wants to hire Elanna to hunt down and kill a vampire. Which she has no problem doing – for the right price. Oren gives her a bag of gold and says he’ll give more after the fact. Elanna says she’ll get the job done within a week – possibly even by the end of that night.

Elanna promptly gets bitten by Valia, the vampire (also an Elf), and turned into a vampire.

After a bunch of back and forth, Elanna joins Valia on her hunt of Oren. Some feelings between the two women also begin to develop.

A quick satisfying easy read. I do not specifically recall if there is or isn’t graphic depictions of a sexual nature, but I do see the book on at least one shelf titled ‘Great Sex’ so . . . there probably was graphic depictions of sex in there. I assume that the sex was neither disturbing to me, nor exciting/arousing/whateverthefuck as I didn’t even recall if any sex occurred and it has only been two days since I read the book and I recall everything else about the book (including the part where we have yet another awful mother in lesbian fiction scene).

Rating: 3.8

February 23 2018



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Miss Frost Braves The Blizzard (Jayne Frost, #5) by Kristen Painter

Miss Frost Braves The Blizzard: A Nocturne Falls Mystery (Jayne Frost, #5)Miss Frost Braves The Blizzard: A Nocturne Falls Mystery by Kristen Painter

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Yeti’s are actually small blue creatures who inhabit the deep forests of the north pole. Or, at least, they did until a portal is accidentally opened between Nocturne Falls and the North Pole and hundreds of Yeti storm through. Stuff of extreme strangeness unfolds.

Many of the characters of the mainline Nocturne Falls series show up in this book, as does a good many of the Frost series characters. Missing, though mentioned, are Jayne’s former love triangle partners – Greyson the vampire and Cooper the summer elf. Present and actively being solo-boyfriend, is . . . um . . what the heck is donut boy’s name again? Crap, I forget. Well, he’s there looking all manly and stuff. He and Jayne get along as well as Spider (Jayne’s cat) and Sugar (donut dude’s cat) do.

Solid enough book, I suppose. But just . . . good enough.

My brain has turned into jello and bounced out my ear, so…

Rating: 3.00

February 21 2018




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Thursday, February 22, 2018

Finding Jaime by P. Dawn

Finding JaimeFinding Jaime by P. Dawn

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


I'm the odd one out this time, I know. I wrote a review, but it's on my phone. My reaction was such that I needed to get my thoughts down immediately while slightly seething in rage. *shrugs* Can't actually see my phone at moment, though, so . . ..

Guess I'll do a bare bones reconstruction of what I wrote, and then add more later. Or something. Maybe.

---

I did not like this book.

(view spoiler)

I rather disliked everything about this book, the main characters, the side characters, the side side characters (like Sam the sexually harassing boss), and the overall story line.

In terms of other characters: Jaime's parents - both of them, were horrible. Jaime's mother is a nasty horrible shrew; while Jaime's father was a weak ass piece of shit who never stood up for his daughter. This reminds me, though that I really liked what Jaime said to her mother when she finally snapped and called the mother out on her hypocrisy. So much so that I'm going to go ahead and add another star to my review.

I've forgotten what else I wrote on my phone.

Rating: 2.4

February 22 2018



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The Vampire's Accidental Wife (Nocturne Falls, #8) by Kristen Painter

The Vampire's Accidental Wife (Nocturne Falls, #8)The Vampire's Accidental Wife by Kristen Painter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Well, now I come to the last Nocturne Falls romance book I haven’t yet read (I’d read the last, or most recently published, Nocturne Falls related book – the most recent Frost book, after this one). Again, and this is kind of a reoccurring theme with me, I was reluctant to read this specific pairing. More the Julian part.

You know rakes? And having them be a main character in a romance story? Most, or I should say, at the most we are talking about men who have ‘been with’ (oddly this is a quite clean undescriptive series, sex wise, so ‘been with’ instead of ‘fucked’) a large number of women in a rather short period of time, though occasionally ‘short period of time’ is ‘thirty years’. Here? Well, there’s no question Julian is a rake. He’s not someone who liked the idea of pretending to be one (as has been seen in some books), he’s not the one who is considered one but didn’t realize others thought of him that way, etc. etc. No, others know he is one, and he knows he is one. Of course he lives in ‘modern times’ so using the word ‘rake’ seems vaguely odd. Except . . . and here’s why I went on about 30 years and the like, except Julian has been a rake since before 1666, and it’s now, oh, 2017. He’s been with a ton of women for more than 350 years. He’s never been anything but a womanizer. When his family was ‘saved’ from the plague of 1666, his two brothers were married – while he himself never had considered the idea. He had continued to not considered the idea until about a year before this book begins (or, well, there’s a mix of ‘some stuff happened before this book starts’, ‘stuff happened’, ‘it’s now a year later’ that messes with my ability to tell time) when Julian first spotted Desdemona Valentine performing in Vegas. As a Vampire. Or, I should elaborate, she was performing as a human pretending to be a vampire (while, in actuality, having been a vampire for hundreds of years).

This is one of those rare Vampire-Vampire stories. It’s almost like seeing one of those creepy kinda icky books titled something like ‘My Billionaire’s Boss’s Butler’s Billionaire Boyfriend’s Roommate’, though here both parties would be billionaire’s, or, I mean, Vampires. If I recall correctly, this is only the second time in this series that two of a kind romance each other, and that includes the Frost series (well, a Winter Elf and a Summer Elf are two different things . . . in that universe). Here we have two vampires, and in ‘The Werewolf Meets His Match’, there are two werewolves.

Now that I’ve written all of that above, I’ve forgotten what I had actually intended to write about this book. Hmms. I rather liked both main characters, and the story.

ETA: Ah, I recall now what I wanted to write.

Julian and Des open the book in the same bed. Julian had been chasing her for a while, and Des kept putting him off. Willing to be near him but . . . she just can't allow herself to love because of her past history. Why are they in bed together at the start of the book then? Because . . . they had just gotten married the night before (not seen in the book). Des, you see, was celebrating a career advancement type thing (television contract), and was drinking. One thing lead to another and . . . well, I forgot to mention this part - they are in Las Vegas, so . . .Julian and Des got married.

Julian wakes up the next morning and wanders around, happily doing things, getting a drink, getting Des a drink, etc. (Crap. 'next morning' technically is 'next evening' since, Julian is a daywalking type vampire, but Des is a night-walking type vampire - as in, Julian can survive regardless of the time of day, while Des will burst into flames in sunlight). Des wakes up, looks around and . . . well, long story short, she's quite annoyed about the situation. One thing leads to another and Julian talks her into allowing them to stay married for a year then, if she still can't 'love' him, they'll get divorced.

Flash forward almost a year - Des calls Julian needing his help (and quite reluctant to ask for it). There's someone stalking her, which in and of itself isn't unusual, but they've injured her double in a car crash - so this is a much more serious situation. Again with the 'one thing leads to another' and Julian and Des head to Nocturne Falls to hide.

For the vast majority of their marriage, no one knew they were married - except for each other. And they hadn't actually consummated the marriage despite waking up in bed together afterwards.

Stuff in Nocturne Falls occurs. Des' backstory is revealed. Stalker bounces around. More story unfolds. etc. etc. The end.

Rating: 4.5

February 21 2018



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Wednesday, February 21, 2018

The Countess Conspiracy (Brothers Sinister, #3) by Courtney Milan

The Countess Conspiracy (Brothers Sinister, #3)The Countess Conspiracy by Courtney Milan

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


I kind of burned myself out reading roughly 12 to 13 books by one author in a row, so slipped over to a book I already owned but hadn’t read yet (owned because I bought the whole series in one package) – referring to this book here.

And you know what I found? That book that lead me to needing a respite from a particular author featured a titled guy from the late 17th century named Sebastian. And my did I loathe that man. LOATHED. ‘I’d never read another book with a man named Sebastian loathed.’ So I started reading this book here, and . . . the lead male character’s name is Sebastian. Heh. Mmphs.

This is the third full length book in this series. There’s been several shorter works I’ve read previous to this one – one is a generation before that follows the parents of several of the later works characters, and another involves a friend of the first book’s lead female character. I didn’t particularly like either shorter work, but I have, in general, liked the longer works – or that was what I was thinking before I started this book here. Two things worried me about this book before I started – I liked the idea of Violet Waterfield seen in prior works, but wasn’t sure I’d want to read a full length work about her, and, more importantly, I had glanced at . . . well, nothing, the prior book ends with the start of this one from a different perspective of the same scene – more importantly, Sebastian, the Sebastian of this series, seemed too depressing to follow in a full length work (shesh, Sebastian’s are depressing, aren’t they? Well this one and that one in Kristen Painter’s Nocturne Falls series).

But, as noted, I needed to read something, I owned this book, so I read it. And, oddly, it turns out I’m quite happy that I did (which bodes well for the next book, one I find myself even more reluctant to read; maybe the more reluctant I am to read a book before I read it, the more I’ll actually like it once I actually read it?)

Well, as I noted, this book starts with the end of the prior book (not literally, there are scenes after this one in that other book, heck, I’m not even sure if it was at the end portion of the book that this scene occurred, just that the scene did occur in the prior book). The scene involves Sebastian giving a speech about . . . I don’t remember exactly now, it wasn’t Violets, because that’s a later speech, hmm . . . amoebas? No, again, later . . . well, something about sexual reproduction in plants. Several characters from the series are in the audience – of importance to the prior book, that includes Oliver, and, of importance to this book, that includes Violet Waterfield. The scene shows an audience watching with both fascinated attention and horrified attention. And with Violet on the edge of her seat. Scene concludes with Sebastian telling Violet to fuck off. Or words like that.

Sebastian, you see – and it is quickly revealed in this book, has cracked under the strain. The prior books have shown how the other characters view him, and his ‘place’ in society – the scandalous jokey rake who has been making many advanced contributions to the science profession. Here we see that it had always been a lie (somewhat, shown in the book why it is ‘somewhat’). For, you see, the scandalous science theories, the speeches given, the science papers submitted and published in prestigious publications were all . . . actually authored by Violet Waterfield. Women, you see, just didn’t work as scientists. So . . . .. Mind, Violet tried hard to get her papers published in her own name, but . . . well, woman name on cover as author, no one would even glance at the papers. Then Sebastian, who was already Violets friend (and who had loved, at least lusted after, Violet since he was something like 8), put his name on to see if they’d get published with a man’s name there as the author. Fame and fortune followed.

This book is about the struggle Violet had trying to become a working scientist – trying to deal with a horrible marriage – trying to live, to breath. While also about the struggle Sebastian had trying to be taken seriously by people like his brother, trying to live a lie, trying to . . . get Violet to return some of his love. This is, in its way, a quite depressing book. Lots of struggling going on by super rich, titled people (Violet being a Countess, I forgot to mention; Sebastian is the younger brother, so he has no title himself but does have money to do whatever he wants in life).

Despite words I use, or any impression I might have given up to now – I rather enjoyed this book. A lot more than I had expected to do so. To a certain extent the book is more about Violet coming into her own as a person, but there is a real romance going on between Violet and Sebastian as well to be seen. And read.

Rating: 3.75

February 21 2018



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Tuesday, February 20, 2018

The Pony Girl Diva by Jim Lyon

The Pony Girl Diva: Lesbian D/s EroticaThe Pony Girl Diva: Lesbian D/s Erotica by Jim Lyon

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This really was much more of a story outline than a story. Don't get me wrong, there were elements in each section to add a level of 'story' to the activity, but this was very bare bones. Very little was revealed or conveyed. By that I mean about the characters, the world in which they inhabit, about anything.

Someone could respond with something with 'well it's erotica so...'; to which I'd respond 1) even with erotica I want to know the characters, to feel them, inhabit them, to know them (oops, said know twice); 2) there were elements of erotica in the story, but it was as bare bones as everything else - heck, the sex scene was more fade to black than anything else (weird, considering) - though even there, I wasn't sad that it was fade to black since they lept to 'let's put on a gigantic strap-on and fuck you in the ass with it' without any conversation so . . . . (and yes indeed I'm glad this was fade to black - I'm so not into anal that if this wasn't roughly 0.01% of the story, and at the end, I'd probably have fled screaming).

Right, so. This story read.

Rating: 2.66

February 19 2018



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Monday, February 19, 2018

The Vampire's Fake Fiancée (Nocturne Falls, #5) by Kristen Painter

The Vampire's Fake Fiancée (Nocturne Falls, #5)The Vampire's Fake Fiancée by Kristen Painter

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


This was a very difficult book to read. The lead male character, the vampire Sebastian (and brother to Hugh - the lead in book one in this series), is just plain unlikable in almost every way. Somewhere around the 60 to 75% mark I just wanted to close the book and not continue, but I did, since this is something like the . . . um .. . 11th book by this author I've read. And I'd been able to complete all the other ones. So . . . I completed this one.

Just to remind myself later: Sebastian's wife of four hundred plus years has returned (after an absence of, roughly, four hundred years). Long story short: Sebastian’s grandmother dated a vampire in 1666 – plague breaks out, to save her family, she allowed herself to be turned, then she ‘turned’ her grandsons, who, in turn, attempted to turn their wives (well, two of the three brothers had wives at the time, the third did not). One of the wives died in the process – that’s Hugh’s former wife. Other found vampire life to be freeing and wandered off to ‘find herself’ for the last 400 years. But, as already noted, she’s back now. Sebastian has been pinning away for his wife, but her actions/reactions/comments when she returns annoy him to the point of saying that no, she can’t just slide back into his life as his wife – in fact, he already has a fiancée sooo… He doesn’t, but, meh.

Enter into the story one Tessa Blythe – who everyone, it seems, calls super plain and boring. She’s a librarian with a cat. In a crappy job (mostly because of her crappy boss). Her sister, who is a deputy in Nocturne Falls, finally talks her into moving to Nocturne Falls since there’s a great librarian job open there. So she does it – quits her job, moves . . . before actually having that other job.

During the interview a man rushes in – Sebastian – without even paying attention to the fact that anyone other than Hugh is in the room, he rants about his wife then said he needed a fake fiancée. Tessa sister is, for whatever reason, in the room with Tessa (this is kind of mind-boggling, why the fuck is the sister in there? Seriously? Is it normal for someone to have their sister join her on a job interview?) and immediately says that her sister, Tessa, could be the fake fiancée. She, Tessa, just sits there in shock. Sebastian, for his part, takes one look at Tessa, and calls her a plain mouse. And that she wouldn’t do.

One thing leads to another and the complete jackass Sebastian ends up with his fake fiancée. Throughout the story, Sebastian attempts to mold Tessa into someone else (clothing, hair, jewelry, fencing), though Tessa does, at times, stand up for herself.

The wife and the extended family meet, have dinner, stuff happens, (view spoiler).

Rating: 2.25

February 16 2018




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Sunday, February 18, 2018

The Dragon Finds Forever (Nocturne Falls, #7) by Kristen Painter

The Dragon Finds Forever (Nocturne Falls, #7)The Dragon Finds Forever by Kristen Painter

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


In my previous review in this multi-series universe, I made a point of noting that Jayne Frost and Elves in general, from the Miss Frost series, seemed alarmingly and noticeably absent from the Nocturne Falls Series. Despite both series sharing the same small town in Georgia as a setting (and the same time period).

Then I read this book here and . . . oops. This Nocturne Falls series book came out 8 months before the Miss Frost series book I had made the comment in. And it includes both Jayne Frost, in a cameo, and elves. Heh, oopsie. Tis what I get for both not paying attention to series universe chronology, and twice skipping over book five in the Nocturne Series. Right, no matter.

So, Jayne Frost and her gang of feral Yeti’s invade . . . I’ve no idea what I’m writing at the moment. No, Frost makes just a cameo, she’s not the center of this story. And there are no Yeti’s in this book.

Like the first Jayne Frost book, though, one of the main characters in this book goes undercover. Unlike in that first Frost book, it isn’t to catch a criminal (or more accurately figure out why store employees keep disappearing). No, here, the undercover work is more like spy work. There’s a specific word and or phrase for it in the spy fiction word, what did they call it . . . a honey trap or something like that? It’s not honey pot, I know that, that’s something completely different. Right, sorry. The female main character in this story, Monalisa Devlin, has taken an assumed name and an assumed position to attempt to lure the other main character, Ivan Tsvetkov, back into the supernatural version of the ultimate fighting league.

She’d earlier blinded him in a fight that had occurred roughly two weeks before the start of this book. Blinding him In the middle of the fight, so that he was not able to block the attack of his opponent which infected him with supernatural venom which has basically removed him from the fighting world. For reasons that are unclear, Monalisa, or, as she calls herself ‘Lisa Devers’, is there in Nocturne Falls to finish the job . . .well, to lure him back to Vegas to fight . . . ‘finish the job’ just sounded better. She pretends she’s his League assigned physical therapist.

‘For reasons that are unclear’ – I don’t mean Monalisa’s reasons, those are clear – she’s being forced to do it (like she had earlier been forced to blind Ivan, or, as he calls himself, Van) by her father, the king of the Leprechauns. It’s the reasons of the father that are unclear. I mean, he’s a greedy vicious tyrant, but why he’s trying to do the things he’s trying to do to Van is unclear.

Right, so, Van and Monalisa fall for each other but Monalisa’s super sad about it because, you know, the undercover thing, and the luring thing. Oh, so luring – Monalisa is a ‘Will O’the Wisp’ who has ‘luring’ powers. A leprechaun had a Will … daughter? Well, her mother is a pixie which means . . . nothing to me in terms of Will’s. No idea why Monalisa is a Will O’the Wisp. Wisps are ‘an atmospheric ghost light’ which has nothing to do with leprechauns, or pixie’s. It’s like the author decided to have a cat and dog mate, and their off-spring is aurora borealis.eh, whatever.

Where’d I leave off before I started talking about lights? Hmms. Well, Lisa and Van circle each other. Van’s dog does cute stuff. Revelations occur. A visit to Vegas occurs. Characters great and small from prior books (and other parallel series) appear. The end.

Rating: 3.45

February 15 2018




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Saturday, February 17, 2018

Miss Frost Cracks A Caper (Jayne Frost, #4) by Kristen Painter

Miss Frost Cracks A Caper (Jayne Frost, #4)Miss Frost Cracks A Caper by Kristen Painter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This specific series book starts immediately . . . adjacent to the previous series book. I mean, literally. Hmm. Does literally work here? What does the word ‘adjacent’ mean again? Mmphs.

The previous book ended with ‘someone from the past’ turning up right when the book was ending. This book picks up that same scene – reprints it, and adds a few . . . hundred more pages.

The ex-best friend from college (well, later learned they grew up together, but they didn’t become friends until college, or at least until learned going to same college), is back after about 11 years and wants forgiveness for the crappy things she did. Which directly impacts both Cooper and Jayne. Two parts of the love triangle I’ve never actually mentioned exists in this series (Jayne is openly dating two men at the same time – Greyson the vampire, and Cooper the Summer Elf (who always seems to immediately be described (okay, several times, not always) as a kind of surfer dude looking guy – as opposed to Jayne, who is a Winter Elf (one has heat and heat related magic; other has cold and cold related magic)).

Here I jump to – there can be and have been mystery, or at least ‘peril’ threads in the Nocturne Falls series, but that one is definitely a Paranormal series (unless tons of graphic sex are needed to be considered to be in the paranormal series – these are heterosexual stories (sometimes almost aggressively heterosexual – at least in the sense that every bloody person ever bumped into mentions being attracted to, having been married to, or otherwise romantically linked to people of the opposite sex; and by ‘aggressively’, I mean, there are several times that seem to include an ‘of course’ – of course that specific woman would be interested in that specific man – because they do not share the same gender (there’s more to this but I’ve rapidly lost my train of thought and hadn’t even meant to include any of this anyway)) so I’m quite happy to lack graphic details. While the other (good grief all these asides have just ruined, I say ruined the natural flow of my paragraph, which is common to me) series, this one I mean – the Miss Frost one, is more mystery with traces of romance. And since it’s kind of ‘opposite’ – and because it follows the same character while the other series changes ‘lead couples’ each book, I call the Nocturne Falls one Paranormal, and the Miss Frost one Urban Fantasy. You know ‘Cozy Mysteries’? Well these are more ‘Cozy Urban Fantasies’.

Wow I’m really just rambling around like a moron lately in reviews.

1) An ex-friend arrives, asks for forgiveness; Jayne agrees to be ‘civil’;
2) 11 months (I think it said 11) months pass
3) The head vampire holds a ball – that ex-friend DJ’s the party; Jayne’s mother and aunt (otherwise known as Mrs. Kringle (Santa Claus wife) and the Winter Queen) attend. Neither of Jayne’s boyfriends attends.
4) Before and during the party, various thefts occur.
5) The thefts are investigated.
6) Jayne drools over yet another man to add to her, I believe it’s called ‘reverse harem’.

I mentioned the stuff about genre’s, types of fantasy (Paranormal/urban), and mystery above because, while there are mysteries and the like, they are really simple mysteries. I’d probably have to reread the series to make this comment, but you can almost determine the ‘villain’ by who Jayne doesn’t suspect. But, meh. I’m not here for the mysteries. But instead for the interesting story and characters. (to be fair to Jayne, the book description’s inclusion of ‘Jayne Frost … now private investigator’ is weird – except for the very first book in which she goes undercover at the store in Nocturne Falls, Jayne doesn’t really get ‘hired’ by anyone to solve anything; occasionally ‘forced’ to right the wrongs others say are her fault; or strongly told not to investigate (like in this book here), but at no time does she hang up a shingle with ‘P.I.’ or the like (but the description includes ‘sort of’! . . . right, oops, never mind).

Where was I? Oh, yeah. Good solid story. Passed the time well.

Rating: 3.75

February 14 2018




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Friday, February 16, 2018

The Shifter Romances The Writer (Nocturne Falls, #6) by Kristen Painter

The Shifter Romances The Writer (Nocturne Falls, #6)The Shifter Romances The Writer by Kristen Painter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Sixth in the Nocturne Falls series, though only fifth I’ve read in that specific series (though I’m up to 9 expanded universe books read – counting the 4 I’ve read in the Miss Frost series). This one stars a love story between a human and a cat. Actually, several of the books have that – the Frost series, for example, includes the ‘love story’ of Miss Jayne Frost and Spider the cat (who can, later in the series, talk). Then there is Jasper & Willa in ‘The Gargoyle Gets His Girl’; and Pumpkin & Pandora in ‘The Professor Woos the Witch’ (at least I think I recall it being Pumpkin & Pandora). Here in this book it’s Roxy & Alex. Unlike the other books, though, Alex isn’t a domestic kitty, he is a panther (and a shifter; the domestic kitties, including the talking one, are standard issue domestic kitties, not shifters).

Roxy St. James is a paranormal romance writer who is escaping her horrible marriage by moving to Nocturne Falls. Recommended, the small town in Georgia, to her by her friend Delaney James (who also, I recall now, has a cat, though I do not recall that huge Maine Coon’s name). Despite their similar last names, they are not related. Though both are from New York.

Alex Cruz is an officer in Nocturne Falls, and a cat. Or, I mean, a panther. He brings into the story his mother (who visits), and brother (who moves in) Diego. Roxy actually meets Diego first – since, coincidentally Roxy and Alex live next door to each other and Diego is staying at Alex's place; but doesn’t like his macho attitude.

This introduction of the two Cruz brothers to Roxy probably would lead to mentioning the opposite reaction of Roxy to meeting Alex. Except – the two first meet when Alex pulls Roxy over for speeding. And she’s quite disgusted with him for doing so. He, in turn, briefly contemplates whether Roxy might be drunk or have taken some drug like substance – for, instead of crying or the like, she’s quite bold towards him and his stopping her.

The two, Roxy & Alex that is, circle each other, as would be expected, and . . . stuff.

Good enough story – passed the time well. I like that there’s such shifter diversity in this series, what with the werewolves, werebears (seen, not major character), wereravens, and werecats. I’d make a comment about the elves also showing diversity, but none (unless they popped up in the fifth book I’ve yet to read) have appeared in the Nocturne Fall series. Other people with pointy ears, like Vulcans, have (wait, no, I mean Faerie, which is not the same type of thing as an Elf), but no elves. Which is kind of strange, the lack of elves in this series, since there’s a ton of them living in Nocturne Falls in the other series (Miss Frost), and yes, most work for the store that has never appeared in the Nocturne Falls series (the Santa’s Workshop/toystore/whatever it’s called), but not all of them – heck, one of them work as a firefighter, and one of the main characters, the Sherriff, is the brother of the chief fireman (which means nothing, of course, since there’s a ton of police related people in the town, and not all get lines/get seen/etc. – for a small town, their police force is huge -

huge

(though, admittedly, most are ‘adjuncts’, or whatever you call part-time cops)).

I’ve completely lost whatever it is I’ve written, wanted to write, and would wish to write. So, um, off I go.

Rating: 3.75

February 14 2018



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Thursday, February 15, 2018

Miss Frost Saves The Sandman (Jayne Frost, 3) by Kristen Painter

Miss Frost Saves The Sandman: A Nocturne Falls Mystery (Jayne Frost) (Volume 3)Miss Frost Saves The Sandman: A Nocturne Falls Mystery (Jayne Frost) by Kristen Painter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


The guy who is the Sandman – the dude who helps people sleep, and the gal who is the . . . um . . . Mistress of Nightmares visit Nocturne Falls. And Jayne, as manager of the local Santa store ‘hosts’ the Sandman. Who is there to release a book, one that causes children to fall asleep when the book is read to them. The Mistress of Nightmares gal is an unexpected visitor – and she’s also the ex-wife of the Sandman, there, so she says, to try to support her ex-husband. To round out the guests – Olive is also there, she’s Sandman’s assistant.

Stuff happens. Jayne (and most of the rest of the town) mysteriously all fall asleep for about 3 hours one night. Then . . . can’t fall asleep again. At least until the mystery is resolved.

Jayne continues to date two men – Cooper & Greyson. Her cat continues to talk to her (but only to her).

Good interesting book.

Rating: 3.75

February 14 2018




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Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Miss Frost Ices The Imp: A Nocturne Falls Mystery (Jayne Frost, #2) by Kristen Painter

Miss Frost Ices The Imp: A Nocturne Falls Mystery (Jayne Frost, #2)Miss Frost Ices The Imp: A Nocturne Falls Mystery by Kristen Painter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Jayne, now officially the manager of the Santa store in Nocturne Falls, goes wandering early one morning to find things to ‘personalize’ her apartment. Wandering that includes visiting estate sales. Where she buys a velvet Elvis painting (a cat dressed up like Elvis), another painting, salt shakers, a rug, and a decorative box that she can’t open. Which leads to . . . well, stuff, but I’ll skip that stuff to get to . . . leads to her cat, naturally, knocking the box off a table, which causes the top to pop open. Jayne wasn’t in the room at the time, though she heard it.

In rapid succession of weirdness, Jayne realizes that ‘stuff’ is happening. Numero Uno – someone is in her apartment talking! Jayne finally tracks down her unexpected visitor only to find that it’s Spider. Her cat. Who can now talk – English. Numero due involves Dr. Pepper, but let’s move on.

Weridness spreads through the small town – a woman who exits a shower to find that she has become a smurf (okay, just that her skin has been turned blue), a fire engine is on top of the firehouse, the town stinks of fish, etc. Naturally the entire town, and I mean the entire town, blames Jayne so she has to ‘solve the mystery’. Which involves an Imp. Which I mention, because that’s in the book title.

Good solid story.

Rating: 3.75

February 14 2018



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Tuesday, February 13, 2018

The Gargoyle Gets His Girl (Nocturne Falls, #3) by Kristen Painter

The Gargoyle Gets His Girl (Nocturne Falls, #3)The Gargoyle Gets His Girl by Kristen Painter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Wasn't sure how much I really wanted to read a story that starred the previously meet, in the series, Fae (Willa, town jeweler) and Gargoyle (security guard Nick). But the story turned out to be actually a lot more interesting, and humorous (lightly humorous) than expected.

Quite liked the tall rugged somewhat stiff (as stone) Nick, and the cat loving Willa.

Not sure what else to mention. Hmm. Part of the story takes place in a faerie kingdom in Arkansas. Yep, that's all I can think of to say.

Rating: 4.05

February 12 2018



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Monday, February 12, 2018

The Werewolf Meets His Match (Nocturne Falls #2) by Kristen Painter

The Werewolf Meets His Match (Nocturne Falls #2)The Werewolf Meets His Match by Kristen Painter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Hank Merrow is the eldest of the current alpha of the Georgia pack - as such he knows/knew that he might very easily find himself in some kind of arranged marriage situation due to various reasons, mainly related to werewolf politics. Knowing this, he has spent his life avoiding relationships, working in the military (Army Ranger), and is currently the Sheriff of Nocturne Falls.

Ivy Kincaid is a daughter of the current alpha of the ... um . . . [insert state name here] pack. I read this book something like three books ago - and there's been a bunch of 'origin' states of the characters so I can't really remember if the other wolfpack is in Arkansas, or Tennessee or . . . where exactly. No matter. She has many brothers, and a downright nasty father. She initially tried to break free from the family, at least in the sense of attempting to lead her own life, but it was not to be - that didn't mean that she necessarily assumed she'd end up in an arranged marriage type situation. But her father is her father, and she was given 15 minutes to start towards Georgia to meet and marry, in three days, a man she'd never meet.

Oh, and the Kincaid's and the Merrow's kind of have a currently inactive feud like vibe. The only reason why the Merrow's are accepting of this arranged marriage thingie with the Kincaid's is because they 'owe' the Kincaid's for helping when Hank's brother was in their territory.

The Kincaid's have a criminal vibe, the Merrow's have a law and order vibe (that brother mentioned above is the fire chief in Nocturne Falls). They kind of have an instant and instinctual dislike for each other. Naturally this leads to issues when romance is on the table. Or, actually, romance isn't on the table, an arranged marriage is.

Doesn't help matters that Ivy and Hank first meet with Ivy reclining on a bed in Hank's jail. Kind of reinforces that criminal vibe.

I rather liked both Ivy and Hank - unexpectedly. I had been somewhat vaguely reluctant to start this one - having previously meet Hank in the previous Nocturne Falls book, and in the first Frost mystery series book.

Rating: 4.33

February 12 2018



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Sunday, February 11, 2018

The Professor Woos The Witch (Nocturne Falls #4) by Kristen Painter

The Professor Woos The Witch (Nocturne Falls #4)The Professor Woos The Witch by Kristen Painter

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


One of the disadvantages of a romance book is that it is a character driven genre (also one of the advantages), since you kind of need to like the main characters to be able to enjoy the book. And, quite frankly, for many reasons I did not like Cole. He came off as a judgmental, pushy, asshole too much of the time.

I realize there was magic in the air, so to speak (literal or otherwise) but his inability to take no, his pushiness towards Pandora was frankly creepy. Every once in a while he'd suddenly be all 'oh, I have a daughter, she's my number one priority, I must think of her first when thinking of romantic relationships' (the impact on her and the like) - most of the time, though, he wouldn't stop touching, kissing, and being too close to Pandora - regardless of whether his daughter was in the room or not. If he wasn't exactly Pandora's type, if she didn't lust over him - his actions would be highlighted even more obviously as creepy.

I mean, the guy literally kept just turning up on her porch - even when he knew she wanted space. 'It's not creepy at all that I'm just hanging out on your porch while you're not around.' And/or just turning up with food without first checking to see if turning up with food would be okay or creepy. Heck, that's even mentioned by him and others as one of the 'creepy' signs that his ex-wife was evil.

Right - didn't like Cole. Made reading the book super hard. The end.

Rating: 2.66

February 12 2018



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Friday, February 9, 2018

Sumter Point by K.G. MacGregor

Sumter PointSumter Point by K.G. MacGregor

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This is the story of Audie, ~24/26, and Beth, 32, who meet through Audie’s grandmother. Beth, you see, is a nurse who works in a nursing home and Audie’s grandmother has recently suffered a stroke bad enough to require a stay in a nursing home. There’s a slight chance the grandmother could get better, but that’s more wishful thinking than anything else.

The two women know of each other before this meeting, but in the normal course of events, neither would likely have run into the other. It’s true that both are lesbians and both live in a small town, but Beth’s the home-body type, the kind who prefers quieter things, while Audie’s the kind who seems to spend every night, not really but close, in night clubs taking drugs, drinking to excess and going home with whichever willing woman catches her eye that night.

I could probably do a better job pinpointing Audie age but it’s something ‘nearish’ what I’ve put down. In addition to any issue that might come up based on the differences in ages, and there are stuff (mainly Beth’s several time comment about being maybe ‘too old’), is the part wherein Audie’s the same age as Beth’s sister – the same sister Beth raised. And when you get into a kind of mother/daughter type situation with someone, and someone else is in the same class/age as that ‘daughter’ . . . well, that complicates things further.

There’s something about Audie’s character I wish to comment on, but I can’t think how to do so. Something about how parts of her character I’ve encountered before, but not all together in one person. A wild party-animal who also has responsibilities that she takes on and fulfills and . . . stuff.

Bah, this, I can tell, is going to be two reviews in a row wherein I’ve very much said nothing and written uninteresting stuff.

Right, forgetaboutit.

I liked Audie and Beth’s intermingling. The slow build up to friendship that morphs into something more. I especially like Beth’s new cat, Black Demon. And that’s all. I should probably cut everything else and just have this one paragraph be the review.

Rating: 4.33

February 9 2018



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Thursday, February 8, 2018

The Heiress Effect (Brothers Sinister, #2) by Courtney Milan

The Heiress Effect (Brothers Sinister, #2)The Heiress Effect by Courtney Milan

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


This work is my fourth that I’ve read by this author, though only second full length novel. It is also the fourth in the same series – Brothers Sinister.

For those who like the concept of reading ‘commoners’ with commoners in historical fiction . . . well, I’d need to know your specific definition of commoner. Otherwise – the lead male character is the son of a farmer and a governess; while the lead female character . . . it is not clear where her parents fell in society as both were dead before the start of this story – though I believe neither were of the titled set. 1) there were/are titled people in this book, though the ones with the most scenes are more ‘enemies’ than friends or ally’s (the lead male character, Oliver Marshall, is related to a Duke, but he’s barely in this book – seen once or twice in passing; and, well that’s two); 2) while the son of commoners, the kind without the right to vote, Oliver also is a ‘Duke’s bastard’ – his biological father was a Duke, though he never thought of that guy as his father, instead thinking of Hugo Marshal, the man who raised him, as his father.

The story takes place in 1867, and Oliver’s chief mission in this book, or at least his stated mission, is to expand the voting franchise. While Jane’s stated mission (Jane being the, as yet unnamed, lead female character) in the book is to be as annoying as possible so that people would be less desirous of asking for her hand in marriage – as her uncle wishes (awkwardly stated – he wishes for her to marry)). Jane’s managed to keep getting invited to parties, fewer than might otherwise be the case, because she’s the ‘heiress’ of 100,000 pounds. (Pounds of what? That’s what they call the currency).

Just like in the first full length work I read by this author – the main and secondary characters were quite well created and interesting to be around. The story mostly takes place in Cambridge, but does feature a few scenes in London and Nottingham.

Oh, and there’s a ‘neat’ little side story involving Jane’s sister and her, Emily’s, own romance. With a man not normally encountered in Historical Fiction set in England in the late 1860s. I mention both to make note of it, and because I’d failed to mention that Emily is the reason that Jane’s trying to ‘ruin’ her chances at marriage. For, you see, Emily has a guardian who allows Jane to be around, with the understanding that she’s to find a husband and presumably then move off with the husband. Jane needs to be near Emily because she has a condition that inspires ‘quacks’ to do horrible things to her like burn her or send electric charges through her body – and Jane wishes to be near to bribe them to leave Emily alone (the guardian, Uncle Titus, is ‘all for’ anything to get Emily better – including burning and the like).

Um. Hmms. Romance, humor, politics . . . hmms. Stuff occurs, it’s entertaining to watch the ‘stuff’ occur.

Rating: 4.75

February 9 2018



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Wednesday, February 7, 2018

All the Little Moments by G. Benson

All the Little MomentsAll the Little Moments by G. Benson

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


*I received this book from Ylva Publishing for an honest review*

This is one of those difficult books to read. Oddly ‘unputdownable’, yet still angsty. Well, I say that because I do not normally find angst among the things I normally find with books I can’t stop reading.

In my second book by this author that I’ve read, the main and only point of view character, Anna, opens the book in a car on the way to her parents place . . . cutting short a longish vacation with her long-term girlfriend, Hayley. Cut short because her best friend – her brother Jake, and her other friend, his wife Sally, were killed in a car accident. Losing either/both immediately and permanently alters Anna’s life. Then the will is read and her life is altered even more – for the woman who never planned nor wanted children, is now the guardian to her brother’s two children – six year old Ella and 18 month old Toby. Anna is rather reluctant to take on this burden.

By the half way mark I was vaguely confused and worried, there was a bunch of angst and drama up to this point – the book is filled with it – but everything seemed ‘set’ now. Kids, support system that includes Anna, Anna’s mother (father’s still around but hiding), and Anna’s two new friends Kym and Lane (with Lane being more than just a new friend). Then Cathy, Sally’s mother, suddenly turned up. And there were like huge blinking lights foreshadowing the horrors that would be unleashed by this evil horrible women. And, sadly, I was right in my perception.

I’d a loose idea that the book was a medical fiction involving lesbians, one of whom had dark skin, and that the book was by an author I’d recently read and rather enjoyed. Beyond that I hadn’t read too closely about the book to know what I was getting myself into when I opened it up and dove in.

There’s the trauma of death, relocation, relationships collapsing, forming, new responsibilities, and all that to navigate. Since there’s just the one point of view, everyone but her is something of a side character . . . or something like that. Which I mention more because I wanted to express my admiration for how deeply and well-constructed the many different characters were in this book. From the main – Anna, to Lane (girlfriend), to Kym (new friend), to Sandra (Anna and jake’s mother), to even Toby & Ella (Jake & Sally’s kids). None of these characters, at least, were stand-ins, paper thin. They all had stories and structure to them. In the beginning there was even enough there to build up an idea of both Jake and Sally, who were never, at any point in this novel, alive to present themselves to the reader.

Others, it is true, were more ‘as needed’ type characters, but there were enough well-formed characters to fill up a book. As needed as in – Andrew, Jake and Anna’s father, had something of his character presented through the almost constant refrain of how Anna and/or others were like or not like him in certain ways (like how he dove into his study and into a bottle of whiskey after his son died – hiding his emotions), though he was more someone to work around than someone to rely upon – which was the point – in its way.

Long and short of it is that this was a rather good and interesting book. Somewhat hard to read from the lingering after effects of death (both Jake & Sally, and, in addition, Kym’s husband as well).

It was interesting to watch Anna morph from the woman who opened the book – the woman who was super career focused and dead set against children to the woman she became by the end of the book.

Well, I’ve run out of things to say, at least out of things I can squeeze out and sprinkle over the screen to reflect my thoughts. Ah, I know – I’ve reached the point where I’m talking nonsense, yeah, that’s it, so I’ll depart.

Rating: 5.25

February 7 2018




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Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Just for Show by Jae

Just for ShowJust for Show by Jae

My rating: 4.89 of 5 stars


*I received this book from Ylva Publishing for an honest review*

An exciting event occurred last night – I glanced at my Kindle and saw a new Jae book sitting there (this isn’t magic or unexpected, I had requested the book). And, as luck would time it, I’d just finished a different story right before I noticed. Naturally, though, I couldn’t begin right then and there, for reasons, except I did and found it hard to pull myself away, as I really did need to go off and do something else at the time. Course I was unnecessarily teasing myself, since that ‘something’ was walk to a train station and commute, so my departure from the book was brief. I then proceeded to gobble 81% in almost one go (if you count 7 hours as one go; one go, is that actually a phrase or am I just randomly putting words together again?). But then needed to sleep. As previously noted, though, hard to stop reading.

Simple enough reason why it was difficult to pull the book from my hands – I really like both main characters - Claire Renshaw, psychologist, and Lana Henderson, struggling actress & barista. Both of whom are allowed their own point of views to be seen. Oh, and when I say I liked both main characters, I mean separately as their own people, and together. Though the two first meet under odd circumstances – at an audition. Lana was there thinking she was there for a film audition (though thought it odd she was the only one in the waiting area); Claire was there because her agent (literary) talked her into it. It wasn’t a film audition, though, but an audition to be Claire’s fake fiancée. But then, I’m off chronologically, as the reader already knows why Claire might need a fake fiancée. Since the book opens with the real one taking off.

Strangely enough, despite going out of their way (agent and Claire) to find a fake girlfriend for Claire, they came up with someone completely different than her norm. This is where I was going to slide in things like ‘not super thin’; ‘not a lawyer or the like’; and the like, but I got distracted and when I came back I lost the thread. Long and short – there’s a certain cultural clash on obvious display in this book, and part of that, and part of why Lana is a struggling actress instead of a leading actress, is the part in which Lana isn’t ‘standard’ actress thin, instead being curvy and comfortable in her larger than normal body. Bah, I keep getting distracted with scenes from the book flashing in my brain, messing up my ability to write.

I move to how I almost started this little write up – the game of connecting the dots. Or, more accurately, connecting books to this one. Through side characters. But let’s see if I can do that without just bluntly stating book titles.

I’ve mentioned the main characters, very briefly (read, learn for yourself, they good people), so something about the side characters now, as noted in that mini-paragraph above. The previously encountered via other stories side characters are almost entirely meet through Lana Henderson’s side of things. I’m fumbling around in my brain, thinking hard, but I can’t think of anyone on Lana’s side who isn’t a previously meet character (other than her mother, but never meet), and finally remember her step-sister, Avery. Interesting, thinking to myself, there’s one character on Lana’s side not previously meet; and one character one Clarie’s side previously meet. Right, so – Lana’s mother, despite never actually appearing in the book, plays a somewhat important role in the book, as an example of someone addicted to self-help books, and as someone who pulled psychologists into Lana’s orbit (and made her wish to avoid them as much as possible – see, more conflict, since that’s Claire’s life). Avery is actually seen, somewhat barely (well more than barely but near that), as Lana’s boss at the coffee shop Lana works at (though they act more like sisters there than employee/employer). And then there are all those previously meet characters – not previously meet in this book, but in previously works.

Lana learned about the audition through her friend Jill, who in turn was informed of it by, I think, her friend Mercedes Soto. Jill and her girlfriend, Crash, pop up several times in the book. When some pictures are needed to be taken, Lana turns to her friend Michele to take them, being as she’s a professional photographer. And Lana both eats at another friend’s family restaurant, then later in a different meal, eats with that friend, Laleh, and her girlfriend Hope. I might be forgetting someone but I think I got every character who has previously appeared, at least those meet through Lana. Jill and Crash are from Just Physical (and other books, but that’s the one they star in); Laleh and Hope are from Heart Trouble; and Michele is the Hollywood series character who normally doesn’t get to do more than occasionally be mentioned or spotted, and is from Departure from the Script (Amanda, from that same book, is, as far as I recall, not seen or mentioned). (Somewhat strangely, Claire makes a joke in the book about maybe needing an actress for a job, then jokingly says Grace’s name, despite Grace never being mentioned to Claire (Grace is mentioned as someone invited to a party that Lana can’t go to, told to Lana without Claire present (Grace’s Lauren was also mentioned in that same conversation (Grace and Lauren from Damage Control), as were Jordan and Emma from Falling Hard)).

On Claire’s side of things, several side characters also wander throughout the book. That would include that literary agent, already mentioned (Mercedes Soto), both of Claire’s parents are meet several times, as is her sister Stephanie. And ex-girlfriend Abby. And the various people from Claire’s work like Renata and Vanessa. Oh, and that character previously meet? Barely in the book, is mentioned and is meet – the radio psychologist Dr. Christine Graham from Midnight Couch who interviews Claire. Though, as far as I could tell, there is no previous connection between Claire and Christine.

Well, I just spent way too much time playing connect the books. Pfft. Long and short – loved the scenery, images, characters, and story I encountered in this book. I had two specific problems with the book, but I worked past them. How to word it, hmms. First problem consists of a sequence of scenes that seemed forced and weirdly out of character – not that the action itself was, just how everything was being presented, as if the characters needed to go from here to there, so . . . they did. Wow this is vague. Less vague for those who have read the book – it’s the scene that involves Claire and Lana going to the top of the hotel to drink – which weirdly seemed forced. The second problem I had involved how the book ended in longish sex. I watched as the percentages increased, as the book got closer and closer to 100% and continued reading what I didn’t particularly want to read right then and there though knew there were those who would, feeling vaguely cheated, for reasons, then, finally, action moved to a few tiny moments out of the bedroom before concluding. Funny thing to have a problem, of course, but, meh, was something I personally had a problem with since I wanted to spend more time with the two in the real part of their relationship.

Rating: 4.89

February 6 2018



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Monday, February 5, 2018

Into the Fire by Elizabeth Moon

Into the Fire (Vatta's Peace, #2)Into the Fire by Elizabeth Moon

My rating: 3.68 of 5 stars


Book received from both Netgalley and Random House/Del Rey for an honest review

Two things to be noted immediately: 1) this is the second book in the Vatta Peace series, which follows the Vatta War series (with about a 5 year chronological gap between the last book in War, and first in Peace) – and yes, at the very least, book one in the Peace series needs to be read before reading this book here, and, preferably the War series; 2) only the action that started to build up near mid-point, well, more around 70% plus, kept this book from receiving a lower rating than it did.

Another thing to be noted slightly less immediately: people’s personalities change over time, that’s reasonable and expected, and several characters in this specific book showed personality changes from the prior series. One, though, seemed to have changed more than time would allow. To explain what I mean would be too spoiler-y; I’ll attempt to give a hint without spoiling stuff – there’s a scene during which Stella Vetta very reluctantly puts on body armor, she’s quite prissy about it and thinks it’s stupid to do so, then is all panic-y and oddly confused about guns (momentarily) – the problem? You know the first time Stella was meet? It probably wasn’t then, but the first time Stella and Rafe shared a scene together in this multiple series thing had Stella wearing body armor and being quite masterful with a gun and showing a weird lack of panic in a dangerous situation ((view spoiler)).

Right, so, after all these ‘immediately’s are out of the way, what can I say about the book? *thinks*

I do not wish to give a recap of the book or anything like that, especially as this book is the second book in one series, and the . . . 8th, I think, in the extended Vatta series (combining War and Peace). So I won’t.

There are books that start strong, edge of the seat type stuff, kind of fumble around in the middle, then either have a great ending or stumble trying to find an ending. This book? Started slowly, and was somewhat tough to get into. Middle was frustrating legal and political stuff; while the end (well before the end, the end of the middle) turned up the action (which literally just means that Ky finally left the house she was in, that kind of action), and built up to an exciting near climax. Then we, the readers, had to get to Rafe and Ky stuff to close off the book. So I guess the book ended somewhat annoyingly there as well (okay, I never liked the Rafe & Ky stuff at any point in this multiple series situation and so that probably helps increase my negative feelings about this book here).

So long and short: once I got past a certain odd reluctance to dive into this book brought on by how the prior book ended (there was a glimpse of how the series might turn from there, an exploration, adventure type of glimpse, which was immediately shut down by weird legal and political stuff – picked up by the beginning of this book here), the book turned out decent, then got quite interesting and even, pardon the phrase, ‘not-put-down-able’.

Rating: 3.68

February 5 2018




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Friday, February 2, 2018

Fury's Death by Brey Willows

Fury's Death (Afterlife Inc., #3)Fury's Death by Brey Willows

My rating: 4.26 of 5 stars


Book received from both Netgalley and Bold Strokes Books for an honest review

This is the third book in this Afterlife series. I shall immediately note: yes, you should read books 1 and 2 before reading this book here. All three books tell the story that unfolded after a scholar is confronted with the truth about Gods, Goddesses, and the like. All three books feature one of three ‘Fury’ sisters. First book starred Avenging fury Alectho (Alec) Graves and Selene Perkton (that scholar); book 2 starred Alec’s sister Tisera Graves (and Kera Espinosa). And book three? Why, that stars that third fury sister, Megara Graves.

It’s interesting the things that you spot when you do a tiny bit of research. Like, this series is about the three fury sisters. Does that align with the mythology? Are Furies three sisters?

Greek Mythology
a spirit of punishment, often represented as one of three goddesses who executed the curses pronounced upon criminals, tortured the guilty with stings of conscience, and inflicted famines and pestilences. The Furies were identified at an early date with the Eumenides.


Well. That answered that question. ‘one of three goddesses’ (though this series keeps noting that the furies are different and not gods or goddesses but something else. Course, before I spotted that ‘three goddesses’ thing, I spotted the synonyms: ‘virago (domineering, violent, or bad-tempered woman), hellcat (spiteful violent woman), termagant (harsh tempered or overbearing woman), spitfire, vixen, shrew, harridan, dragon, gorgon; Eumenides’. Dragon, eh?


Well, that’s fun, let’s move on.


As noted, well two things to bring things back into focus: read the prior books before reading this book; this book stars two characters previously seen in this series - Megara Graves (the fun loving one who would prefer fucking to . . . um, no, she also likes fighting, prefers fucking to reading a book – throws a lot of parties that break down into orgies), and Dani Morana, aka death.


The actions, events, results of the prior book continue to unfold here (as in, the Gods continue to attempt to ‘walk among humans’ while the Afterlife company (which most Gods/Goddesses are members of) attempts to deal with ‘complications’ like Humanity First (anti-gods/goddesses), and people randomly ending up slaughtered. This paragraph was specifically going to be about how Dis, that Chaos goddess, was running around doing discordant stuff, but paragraph got away from me.


Like her sisters, Megara is having something like a crisis enveloping her, unlike her sisters, it isn’t about her work as a Fury, but her . . . stuff she does when not a fury. The constant partying and stuff. Mixed in is the part where she a) doesn’t want a committed relationship; b) wants Dani but doesn’t think Dani would go for a non-committed type fling.


Dani, meanwhile, is dealing with weird changes she’s noticing like with certain souls, and her own weird tinge of something or other I can’t be more elaborate about without spoiling. Also – she’s lusted after (loved?) Megara for centuries but isn’t the kind of person to make her thoughts known. Or something like that. Well, no, there are instances when I spotted an ‘issue’ a mile off that would be based on miscommunication but . . . didn’t happen because people communicated with each other.

Right, I probably have a temperature of around 105 degrees, or something like that, so my brain is boiling. Hopefully whatever I’ve written here is coherent enough to be read.


Did I like the story? Yes. Did I like the characters? Yes. Was I blown away by the graphic depictions of sex? No.

One last thought that I had while playing with my shelves/tags for the book: While Meg has been with women, she's not a lesbian, but more of a . . . well no word was used. I imagine something like 'Pansexual' would apply. It is not clear if Dani is a lesbian or not, though her one mentioned relationship, prior to Meg, was with a woman.

Rating: 4.26

February 1 2018




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Thursday, February 1, 2018

The Governess Affair by Courtney Milan

The Governess Affair (Brothers Sinister, #0.5)The Governess Affair by Courtney Milan

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


It is quite possible that my rating for this book was impacted by the fact that I read it while entirely ill. Gah, I mean, I read the entirety of the book while ill. Still ill.

Characters seen in the first book I read by this author turn up again in this short story here - as the leads. Specifically referring to Oliver's mother and Hugo Marshall.

While sleeping in her chambers, Serena Barton is attacked and raped. By a Duke. The duke told her not to scream or it would wake the household. Since she didn't fight back, Serena thinks that it wasn't force and/or rape.

That event, the rape, occurred before the start of this story. This story starts with that same Duke talking with his man of business, Hugo Marshall, about how there's this woman who he offered a position but said position doesn't really exist. So - can Hugo get rid of her? Hugo's suspicious, but that's his job, take care of problems (actually his job consists of attempting to improve the financial position of the Duke).

That young woman? Is visible below them through a window. She's sitting and letting people see her. To shame the Duke.

Hugo and Serena circle each other, and, stuff.

Rating: 3.45

February 1 2018



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