Posts tagged book review

Read it Thursday

Nuala is descended from ancient witch folk, eternally bound to help others find love. But after the death of her husband, she harbors no such dreams for herself. Then she meets Sinjin, the Earl of Donnington, and feels something stir within her for the first time in centuries….

Handsome and scandalously tempting, Sinjin has never met a woman he couldn’t seduce. Yet from the moment he sees the stunning young widow, he knows he wants more than just one night of sin—and even the discovery of the dark secret they share won’t stop him from trying to possess her forever. But first he must free her from her immortal bondage, which means robbing her of her magic for all time….

She belongs to the Widow’s Club (a group of woman who have pledged never to remarry) and he belongs to the Forties, a confirmed bachelor’s club.  But that isn’t the only hurdle this hero and heroine face in Lord Of Sin, a paranormal historical.

 Our heroine, Nuala, is known Lady Charles in Society.  She is the wife of the late Lord Charles Parkhill and a descended from a long line of witches. Her powers are to be used to help others find love, but has been cursed since the day she used black magic.

Enter the Earl of Donnington.  When Sinjin shows up in her life again, a man capable of making her grow weak in the knees, her main goal is to avoid him.  Which Sinjin would okay with since he blames her for being a of his brother’s death.  But the Earl of Donnington finds this difficult since he wants her  - unlike any  woman before.

Things really heat up when in his pursuit of her, he learns dark secrets.  It soon becomes evident that Nuala can’t control her powers. Sinjin has made up his mind to vanquish her magical abilities so that they may have a chance at happiness, but doing so may cost more than he ever dreamed.

Susan Krinard developed a complete cast of secondary characters to aide Sinjin and Nuala in their love-hate relationship.  The plot is engaging filled with intrigue and enough rabbit holes to keep you guessing until the end where the whole truth is revealed.

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Read it Thursday

Burning Wild by Christine Feehan

Born into a world of twisted monsters, Jake Bannaconni is shaped and molded into a cold, revenge driven man.  Honed in the fires of hell, he controls his world and rules with an iron hand.  He has everything and anything money can buy.  He’s ruthless, merciless and considered a man to leave alone.  His hidden legacy, that of a shapeshifter, makes him doubly dangerous in the corporate world. 

Emma Reynolds is a woman who knows how to love and love well.  When their two worlds collide, Jake’s plans for a complete take over, may just come tumbling down. 
This book is one of Christine Feehan’s best efforts. While she skimmed over the first two years of the Emmy and Jake’s acquaintance, she still developed a strong non-sexual relationship.  This is the total opposite of her usual plot development which has the hero and heroine starting with sex and working from there. Actually, you’re over a 100 pages in before the first sex scene. 

In place of sex there was A LOT of action. Without all the filler sexual material, Ms. Feehan excels at describing the emotionalism in this book. A very refreshing change.

I did have a hard time accepting a pregnant woman would move in with a stranger, then allow him to be name father after knowing for only 8 months. But that was the only thing I lifted my eyebrows about.  

Emmy Reynolds, the heroine, was very passive in the beginning, although I believe that was adequately explained by the extreme trauma she had just experienced. She was essentially in shock. And she did eventually come out of it, although you have to understand she is the kind of woman who loves to cook and clean, etc. Definitely not a career woman by choice, which I liked, although if that were me (living in a mansion with two kids and somebody else paying the bills) I most certainly would NOT say I didn’t need a maid. If someone else wants to mop my floors – woo hoo!

The hero, Jake Bannaconni, is a tormented person who suffered disturbing abuse as a child. This isn’t implied but adequately explained and realistic in the first chapters so the fact he is extremely manipulative does make him a creep. The change in him was slow and very gradual-and I wouldn’t have accepted anything faster. At the beginning I supposed I both felt sorry for him and hated him, but by the middle it was wonderful to see him growing as a person. I thought his character development was perfect.

The reasons I liked this book so well were
1. good plot
2. lots of action
3. enjoyed the secondary characters
While it’s a hot read for the cold winter months, it offers so much more

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Read it Thursday

Walking the Dead by Kylie Brant

Former forensic anthropologist Caitlin Fleming knows bones. So the investigator is the first one called when seven sets of skeletal remains are found dumped in a makeshift graveyard in the Oregon wilderness. Each skeleton bears the same distinctive marks. And each is minus a skull.

Cait needs outdoors guide Zach Sharper for one reason only—to help her find her way through the Willamette Forest as she pieces together clues. Despite the attraction that burns between them, nothing will be allowed to shake her focus. Until the killer closes in to terminate the investigation…and the ones on the verge of unmasking him…

This is the third book in Brant’s Mindhunters series and – in my opinion – the best.

Caitlin Fleming was a well known model and then becam a forensic anthropologist. It was only for a few brief years in her teenage years, but it was long enough Cait still has to prove herself more than a good looking mindless twit.

Zach Sharper is opinion of Caitlin is instant. He recognizes her the moment he lays eyes on her and judges her right then. Zach has no idea how she got into law enforcement and can’t imagine that she’s good at anything but being pretty. Cait proving him wrong is really enjoyable to read. 

Zach was the person that found the bones, the reason for Cait coming to Oregon. When the Mindhunter’s are called in, things get done. Cait is there to piece the bones together and try to figure out who they are and where they were killed. To do that, she has to scour miles of Oregon wilderness…with Zach as her guide.

The pacing was a little slow because Cait’s job was so tedious. The work of a forensic anthropologist is nothing glamorous. Taking soil samples, contacting detectives about missing person cases, and questioning people in town is necessary to get a profile of their killer.

Cait briefly considers Zach as a suspect, then dismisses it. She does believe that some serial killers need some sort of acknowledgment from their “work”, but doesn’t believe that is the case in this situation. The sheriff isn’t so quick to dismiss Zach as a suspect.

Zach and Cait both have their demons. Zach’s demon is his dad, Cait’s demon is her mom. While Zach has no contact with his dad, Cait’s mom constantly contacts her about returning to modeling. There was twist with Cait’s mom that was surprising and I didn’t quite understand why it was necessary to the story.

Of the three books, Waking the Dead was the best blend of romance and suspense. Zach and Cait were also two of the more likable characters in the series. Kylie Brant definitely has a hit with this series and I look forward to seeing where it goes.

This series begins with Walking Nightmare.  Walking Evil is the second in the series.

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Money Monday

A popular New Year’s resolution is often better money management and for those really radical creating a budget.  To be a part of the trendy crowd ;) , for the next nine weeks, I’ll be reviewing a chapter from Suze Orman’s book The 9 steps to Financial Freedom

Next week, I’ll review the first intro and Step 1.  Now from the chapter title, this topic is a major for me.   “Seeing how your past holds the key to your financial future.”  Being raised by two selfish parents, I swung to the opposite side when my kids were younger.  As they are now young adults, I still have trouble drawing boundaries there.  Also I have a deep sub need to ‘own’ trinkets.   Again, this stems from my childhood. 

I do want to say that I have major improvement in the money area.  I’m a testament ghost of the past can be buried.  But as a part of my new year personal assessment, I tracked my spending.  OUCH.  Things are again slipping in the murky waters.  So before I’m neck deep in muck, I’m slamming on the brakes.  This weeks vow – no spending unless it’s required food or a bill.  Nothing else – NOTHING.  Regardless of the great deal it is.  (I had this book for at least a year and have never read it.  I love to read but books telling me how to improve aren’t necessarily it.)

Here is the link to Suze Orman’s website: http://www.suzeorman.com/index.cfm

What’s the book about?  Here is the Amazon link: http://www.amazon.com/Steps-Financial-Freedom-Practical-Spiritual/dp/030734584X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1263205743&sr=1-1

An excerpt:

Read an Excerpt

What Do You Want from Your Money?
What do you want from your money? College tuition for your kids? A bigger house and a new car? Security when you retire?
Wouldn’t it be great simply to have enough money so you don’t have to worry?

The “enough money” part of that equation is easy. By the time you finish this book you will understand everything you need to know about managing and protecting your money and making it grow. The “so you don’t have to worry” part is much more complex. It actually has nothing to do with how much money you have or how little. You can balance your checkbook until you’re blue in the face, you can move money every day between your mutual funds, you can double your life insurance, you can buy lottery tickets–and none of it will do you any good until you get beyond the worry and fear. The fear of money, the fear of not having enough, the fear of having enough, the fear of taking action, the fear of inaction.

There isn’t a part of our lives that money doesn’t touch–it affects our relationships, the way we go about our everyday activities, our ability to make dreams reality, everything. Most of us, I think, have a core of anxiety that we carry around with us, though we may not admit it to ourselves. That is part of money’s power over us.

From years as a financial planner I have learned that true financial freedom doesn’t depend on how much money you have. Financial freedom is when you have power over your fears and anxieties instead of the other way around. That’s why, in this book, we’ll address first the fears, then the finances.

Whatever their circumstances–in debt, working, downsized, afraid of becomingdownsized, retired, having just inherited money, having just lost money–my clients invariably arrive with a handful of financial papers and a heart full of
anxieties. Like most certified financial planners, I started my practice to help other people with their money, but as time went on, I realized that it was far more than their money (or lack of it) that needed attention. Today new clients arrive expecting me to ask to see their papers. Instead I ask them first to share their fears.

It’s never too soon to begin, and it’s never too late, no matter how the bottom-line numbers read today on your particular handful of financial papers. This book presents a nine-step process that will take you back into the past, when your attitudes about money were born and began to grow. It will help you face the present honestly and clear the way for you to create a future you will love.
I know it works. As you read this book you will meet others who have taken the steps toward financial freedom–and finally made possible the lives they dreamed about.

You will also see that if I could do it against all odds, so can you. When I was very young I had already learned that the reason my parents seemed so unhappy wasn’t that they didn’t love each other; it was that they never had quite enough money even to pay the bills. In our house money meant tension, worry, and sorrow. When I was about thirteen my dad owned his own business, a tiny chicken shack where he sold take-out chicken, ribs, hamburgers, hot dogs, and fries. One day the oil that the chicken was fried in caught fire. In a few minutes the whole place exploded in flames. My dad bolted from the store before the flames could engulf him. This was when my mom and I happened to arrive on the scene, and we all stood outside watching the fire burn away my dad’s business.

All of a sudden my dad realized that he had left his money in the metal cash register inside the building, and I watched in disbelief as he ran back into the inferno, in the split second before anyone could stop him. He tried and tried to open the metal register, but the intense heat had already sealed the drawer shut. Knowing that every penny he had was locked in front of him, about to go up into flames, he literally picked up the scalding metal box and carried it outside. When he threw the register on the ground, the skin on his arms and chest came with it.

He had escaped the fire safely once, untouched. Then he voluntarily risked his life and was severely injured. The money was that important. That was when I learned that money is obviously more important than life itself.

From that point on, earning money, lots of money, not only became what drove me professionally, but also became my emotional priority. Money became, for me, not the means to a life rich in all kinds of ways; money became my singular goal.

Years later this kid from the South Side of Chicago was a broker with a huge investment firm. I was rich, richer than I could have imagined. And I realized I was profoundly unhappy; the money hadn’t bought or brought me happiness. So if money wasn’t the key to happiness, what was? It was then that I began a quest, which has taken me deep into the meaning of life–and the meaning of money.
I don’t know if I have discovered the meaning of life, but I have learned a great deal about what money can and cannot do. And it can do a lot. Your money will work for you, and you will always have enough–more than enough–when you give it energy, time, and understanding. I have come to think that money is very much like a person, and it will respond when you treat it as you would a cherished friend–never fearing it, pushing it away, pretending it doesn’t exist, or turning away from its needs, never clutching it so hard that it hurts. Sometimes it’s fatter, sometimes it’s skinnier, sometimes it doesn’t feel so good and needs special nurturing. But if you tend it like the living entity it is, then it will flourish, grow, take care of you for as long as you need it, and look after the loved ones you leave behind.

Most of us already know at least some of the steps we could take to free ourselves from money anxieties–we could manage our debt better, arrange for our children’s education, strategically plan now for later, protect what we’ve saved, save more. Yet most of us are paralyzed, too, when it comes to actually taking these steps, however wise they seem, however much we think we really want to take control.

What good will it do you to know what you should do, if you can’t do it?

The Nine Steps to Financial Freedom: A Preview
The first steps of this book take you back to discover why you don’t do the things you know you should do and bring you beyond that–to where you can take action. These steps will free you to open up a dialogue about money with your parents, your children, and, most important, yourself. The next three steps are the laws of managing money. These laws are must-do’s. They cover everything from wills and trusts and what insurance you need (and don’t need) to new ways to think about debt and your 401(k) or retirement plan to how to invest and what to invest in. They teach you why you must trust yourself more than you trust anyone else with your money.
The goal of these particular steps is to make you as independent from financial advisers as possible. Over the years, I have learned that it is in my clients’ best interest for them to take control over their money, not to relinquish it, even to me. If, later on, they choose to entrust their money to someone else, with these steps they would no longer be able to be taken advantage of by an unscrupulous adviser–or by their unwillingness to face up to the facts and figures of their own finances. Once you take these steps, you will discover the exhilaration that comes from wanting to deal with your money, not just having to deal with it.
The last three steps take you beyond the realm of finances, to the wealth that money can’t buy.

When it comes to money, freedom starts to happen when what you do, think, and say are one. You’ll never be free if you say that you have more than enough, then act as if and think you don’t. You’ll never be free if you think you don’t have enough, then act as if and say you do. You will have enough when you believe you will and take the actions to express that belief. And you’ll have more than enough when you realize that you can be rich at any income because you are more than your money, you are more than your job or title, than the car you drive or the clothing you wear. Your own power and worth are not judged by what money can sell and what money can buy; true freedom cannot be bought or sold at any price. True freedom, true wealth, is that which can never be lost.

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Read it Thursday

For the next few weeks I’ll be reviewing series….(this was meant to go with yesterday’s post on writing and planning a series which for some reason ended up being deleted – hummm). 

This week’s feature is the Ghostwalker series or ‘mind’ books by Christine Feehan who has three other series also.  In the Ghostwalker series, each book features a different walker as the hero.  Mind Game is Nicolas’ story, Night Game is Gator Fontenot story, and Jack Norton is the hero of Conspiracy Game. There are currently seven books in the series with Street Game number eight due out in 2010. 

The tie that binds this series is the heroes are all a genetically enhanced and the heroines are orphans raised by a ruthless man named Whitney.  Each book has carry over characters, for example Gator was in Murder Game but the hero was Kadan.  Most of the time it’s the male characters that crosses over in the books, except Lily, Whitney’s daughter, has appeared in most.  

The element of suspense is woven tightly through each book and is intense.  It has to be to keep from being drowned out by the hot romance between the hero/heroine.  Ms. Feehan provides each H/H with their own individual courtship.  Kadan and Tansy from Murder Game were instant lovers, never denied their feelings or desires.   Gator and Iris in Night Game spent most of the book building their relationship.  Nicholas and Dahlia’s of the Mind Game have a relationship that is ‘hot’ –  literary.  Flames flicker with a kiss and threaten to burn the cabin down when they make love.  

The Ghostwalker books are the best of both worlds of series.  New characters and familiar ones are provided.   While the hero is different in each book, I’ve met him in one of the other books.  Now is the chance to take our casual relationship to a entirely new level.  The heroines are introduced for the first time in the book they are to star in so that provides me with a lead character to come to love and care about. 

And truth be told, I wasn’t sure how Murder Game was going to be.  Kadan is so hard in all the other books, I just couldn’t picture him as the romantic lead.  But Ms. Feehan kept his character intact and provided us with a great read. 

Another thing, I enjoy about the Ghostwalker series is the fact each book can stand alone.  They don’t have to read in order to enjoy.

If you’re writer and planning a series where secondary characters from one book become your h/h in another, Ms. Feehan’s  Ghostwalker series provides as excellent example. 

If you’re a reader that enjoys book of old and new, then this series is a winner.  Each book gives you a chance to reunite with old favorites and get to know some new characters.

What are some of the series you’ve read and enjoyed?

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Read it Thursday

City of Bones (The Mortal

Instruments Series #1) by

Cassandra Clare

 

Their hidden world is about to be revealed….

When fifteen-year-old Clary Fray heads out to the Pandemonium Club in New York City, she hardly expects to witness a murder — much less a murder committed by three teenagers covered with strange tattoos and brandishing bizarre weapons. Clary knows she should call the police, but it’s hard to explain a murder when the body disappears into thin air and the murderers are invisible to everyone but Clary.

Equally startled by her ability to see them, the murderers explain themselves as Shadowhunters: a secret tribe of warriors dedicated to ridding the earth of demons. Within twenty-four hours, Clary’s mother disappears and Clary herself is almost killed by a grotesque demon. But why would demons be interested in ordinary mundanes like Clary and her mother? And how did Clary suddenly get the Sight? The Shadowhunters would like to know….

 Excerpt:  http://search.barnesandnoble.com/City-of-Bones/Cassandra-Clare/e/9781416914280/?itm=1#EXC

 

city

Cassandra Clare is a brilliant story teller. This is a young adult novel that my daughter started the day before she left for Japan.  I picked it up and scanned it.  With nothing to do while waiting for my pasta to boil (and everyone knows a watch pot doesn’t boil) I started the first chapter.  It instantly drew me in.  Sadly, daughter reclaimed the book after dinner (penne with alfredo sauce & meatballs – her favorite before leaving) and then took it to Japan with her. 

So I purchased another…I had to know who Clary saw murdered.   City of Bones is the first book in a trilogy about the Clary Fray and the shadowhunters.  Right from the start, I felt like I was a part of this story. 

The cast of characters including Clary, Jace, Hodge, and Simon are magnificent.  Each are fully developed with personalities that include issues and corks.  Clary is a likeable teenage girl that will appeal to several different age groups.  Jace and Simon are the two hero’s.  While Jace is the rough killing demon sort of guy, Simon is the caring willing adventure into unknown and unbelievable for Clary. 

Clary and Jace experience the most noticeable character growth but Simon is right there.  I personally like the sweet guy.  Those bad boys are fun to look at and hang out with for about an hour, but give me a Simon any day.  Ms. Clare does a superb job of making sure Simon doesn’t get lost in Jace’s shadow – thank you!  Alec also experiences a major character growth especially for a secondary character.  When you have a developed cast they all grow and Ms. Clare makes sure that happens.

The only thing really missing in this book is a villain in person.  The bad guy Valentine is talked about, feared, and sends all kinds of gross and disgusting ‘things’(like a Ravener and a Forsaken) but it isn’t the very end we briefly met him.  AND I mean briefly.  I like a villain I can come to know and hate….but I got over it. 

Great job, Cassandra!!!

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Read it Thursday

Agnes & the Hitman  by Jennifer Crusie and Bob Mayer

agnes1

Take one food writer named Cranky Agnes, add a hitman named Shane, mix them together with a Southern mob wedding, a missing necklace, two annoyed flamingos, and a dog named Rhett and you’ve got a recipe for a sexy, hilarious novel about the disastrous side of true love…
Agnes Crandall’s life goes awry when a dognapper invades her kitchen one night, seriously hampering her attempts to put on a wedding that she’s staked her entire net worth on.  Then a hero climbs through her bedroom window.  His name is Shane, no last name, just Shane, and he has his own problems:  he’s got a big hit scheduled, a rival trying to take him out, and an ex-mobster uncle asking him to protect some little kid named Agnes.  When he finds out that Agnes isn’t so little, his uncle has forgotten to mention a missing five million bucks he might have lost in Agnes’s house, and his last hit was a miss, Shane’s life isn’t looking so good, either.  Then a bunch of lowlifes come looking for the money, a string of hit men show up for Agnes, and some wedding guests gather with intent to throw more than rice.  Agnes and Shane have their hands full with greed, florists, treachery, flamingos, mayhem, mothers of the bride, and—most dangerous of all—each other.  Agnes and the Hitman is the perfect combination of sugar and spice, sweet and salty—a novel of delicious proportions

If I was on twitter and wanted to review this book…

                Humorous beyond belief, great story, and keep for reread on blue days.

I know I’m late getting to this one.  And I regret it.  I laughed out loud several times while reading this book. When you factor in it was snowing in at the end of April, and I still laughed you know it was funny. Agnes is anything but your normal run of the mill heroine.  She is a woman of many layers; determination, resourcefulness and clever which provided me with hours of entertainment.  I never knew just how deadly kitchen utensils could be until I meet Agnes.   It doesn’t matter if she is dealing with betrayal from a woman she viewed as a substitute mother or a fiancé or a flamingo pink wedding, dead people, or nosy cops, Agnes rolls along delivering humor and swings of her frying pan.

Of course, a woman of this dimension needs a special hero to balance her out, enter Shane, a government hitman.  He too breaks the rules for a standard hero, but it works, and works great.   He’s the ultimate dark hero.  I mean the man is a killer, not a reformed one but a still employed one.  When we first met him, he’s killing someone, that’s hard to beat in dark hero definition.  Not a lot about Shane is soft, but I liked him ~ a lot.  And at the end of the book, his couple of lines, that are basically non-romantic but they seal the deal for me.

Agnes and Shane are surrounded by a lively cast of secondary characters.  Uncle Joey,  Lisa Livia and Carpenter are those times of friends that are loyal but sometimes you wonder if life wouldn’t be easier without them.   And then there is the entire ‘wheel’ clan, Four-wheels, Two-wheels, and Three-wheels who can’t really decide if they are good or bad.

The plot is filled with many twists and turns but is masterfully executed so the reader is never lost.  The pace is break neck so buckle up. 

This is a wonderful read and will provide a great spring get away. 

Enjoy a expert:  http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Agnes-and-the-Hitman/Jennifer-Crusie/e/9780641990168/?itm=8#EXC

What book are you reading?  What do you like about it?

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Read It Thursday

Welcome Amber Schmock, my daughter and a MASA in the United States Navy.  I can vouch for the fact that she is an avid reader.  She nearly bankrupted us before she could afford her own habit. 

Lyncee:  So Amber what is the first book you remember falling in love with?

Amber:  Boxcar Children….the first chapter book I read.   You were so proud of me you gave me glass horse.  

Lyncee:  What is it you enjoy about reading?

Amber:  I find it relaxing after a day of being OC  spayedJ  - really it’s an escape.

Lyncee:  So we know you started out with the Boxcar Children, but what is your current taste in books, besides what your mom writes?

Amber:  Anything I can get my hands on.  If it sounds good, I’ll give it a try.  But romance and fantasy are my base line.   

Lyncee:  Who is your current favorite paranormal author & book?

Amber:  Sherrilyn Kenyon and Acheron.  Plot development and the dry humor ~ gotta love.

Lyncee:  Who is your favorite romance author & book?

Amber:  Lori Wick and a toss up between Pretense & The Hawk & the Jewel.  The realness of them, characters I relate with, I could see me shopping with.  But I have to mention Susan Elizabeth Philips for her great sense of humor.  I laugh out loud – a lot.  I also enjoy reading historical.

Lyncee:  Who is your favorite fantasy author & book?

Amber:  Tamora Pierce – The Tricksters Choice.   The originality of it.

Lyncee:  I just finished a three part series on the ultimate hero.  If you could build an ultimate hero what would he be like?

Amber:  I don’t need to create one, Acheron.

Lyncee:  What makes him the ultimate?

Amber:  Yes, he is a dark hero , but all his scars were revealed not through a dream where the heroine over hears but in his actions and words making him more ‘human.’  I was instantly drawn to him.  

Lyncee:  Who is your favorite heroine?

Amber:   Sunny Galiero – from the Hawk & the Jewel

Lyncee:  What book would you like to warp into?

Amber:  Probably in one of the Dark Hunter series because I would get to kick some butt.

Lyncee:   What is on your current read list?

Amber:  The Trickster’s Queen by Tamora Pierce is first on deck.  Then Breaking Dawn.

Lyncee:  What book are you eagerly waiting for again, besides your mom’s?

Amber:  The newest dark hunter book due out in August.  It’s Nick’s story.

Lyncee: What make an ideal romance?

Amber:  A heroine that knows how important the hero is to her.  I’m not talking about a woman that can’t open a bag of chips by herself, that’s annoying.  But a heroine that storms through the book without needing the hero besides for sex isn’t romantic.  Neither is a jerking hero.  Now, I do like a hero that starts off a jerk and comes to admit he loves the heroine.  And the work as a team….good stuff.

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Read It Thursday

Whisper of Evil by Kay Hooper

Someone is stalking the little town of Silence. Three victims have fallen to a killer’s savage vengeance. Each of the dead men was a successful and respected member of the community—yet each also harbored a dark secret discovered only after his murder. Were their deaths the ultimate punishment for those secrets? Or something even more sinister? Nell Gallagher has come home to Silence more than a decade after leaving one dark night with her own painful secrets. Forced now by family duty to return, she has also come home to settle with the past. But past and present tangle in a murderer’s vicious attacks, and to find the answers she needs, Nell must call on the psychic skills that drove her away years before. She must risk her own life and sanity, and regain the trust of the man she left behind so long ago. For the killer she seeks is seeking her, watching her every move, preying upon her every vulnerability—and already so close she’ll never see death coming . . .

 

As winter has it final blast here in the north.  I found the fifth installment in the Bishops//Special Crime Unit a great escape. I love to write suspense with a touch of romance.  Now I usually like my stories to have a touch more romance than Whisper of Evil did, but the suspense was top rate.  I love the characters.

Nell is a delightful heroine.  Her sense of humor provoked smiles, she was tough without being ‘super human’ and most of all she was sincere.  Max was a hero that pulled my heart strings from the start.   The perfect Alpha-male. 

The secondary characters are so well written; I found them just as likeable as Nell and Max or as dislikable as the nasty villain. 

The plot was a unique twist on the tried and true ‘going home’ premise.  I love the element of the supernatural, not enough to cross the line into paranormal but a strong thread.  So while Mother Nature dumped six inches of snow on my back porch that had been bare just hours before, I lost myself in the town of Silence.  Ms. Hooper does an excellent job in creating a town fill of people and shops so vivid that I swore I had coffee there. 

For an excerpt: http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Whisper-of-Evil/Kay-Hooper/e/9780553583465/?itm=1

Next week ~ a fantasy.  I truly need to escape the cold so a land of dragons, elves, and dwarfs is the perfect vacation spot.

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I’ve read it Thursday…

I’ve read it.  Blackmailed into a Fake Engagement by Leanne Banks.  

Years after she’d fled Hollywood, former actress Gwen McCord now faced her toughest role. Film industry big shot Luc Hudson—a man she had never met before—had announced to the world that they were engaged! What was worse, he was moving in. Forced into the charade to protect her troubled sister, Gwen was quickly swept back into Luc’s world of movie premieres and celebrity power plays. But the real danger lay in being swept away by her passionate, persistent PR man.…

 

To quote Gwen, this is ‘total and complete bliss.’  The winters are long, dark, and boring in Michigan, so whenever I can find a book that offers sunshine I grab it with both hands.   Blackmailed into a Fake Engagement is such a book.  The first on in the new series, the Hudsons of Beverly Hills, this is Lucien’s story.   And what a hot story it is.    

Banks creates a wonderful hero/heroine that I fell in love immediately.  While Luc is a little underhanded in the beginning his true nature is quickly revealed.   He is a strong take charge guy that has a big secret.  He truly cares about people. When he first comes close to expanding their relationship to the sexual level, he remains the gentleman with a reply so sweet and sincere it made my throat tighten. 

Gwen is a strong female that is a wonderful match for Luc. It’s their devotion to their family that I loved.  Not a resentful obligation but something that is rooted in their hearts. 

It’s also a book rich in wonderful secondary characters and setting.  It brought me to the California sunshine while I sat in wrapped in a blanket in the cold Northern Michigan.

 

For an excerpt:

http://www.amazon.com/Blackmailed-Into-Engagement-Silhouette-Desire/dp/0373769164/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234465615&sr=1-1

I also review books on www.longandshortreviews.com a website with positive review on HEA books. 

Next week, I’ll doing a suspense thriller.

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