Knight of Runes

Knight of Runes by Ruth A. Casie is a time-travel romance that didn’t live up to my high hopes for it.

The story begins in two places, or should I say, two times. In 1605, Lord Arik is on his way back to his manor. He has recently picked up two travelers, old Doward the tinker, and Lady Rebeka. The way to the manor is blocked by some fallen trees, and he has to split his party. There’s an ambush, and he has to fight his way back to Rebeka. He watches her fight, and is amazed. She uses a staff as a weapon, along with kick and throwing her opponents in a manner he has never seen or heard of. Women don’t fight in his world, and yet this one does, not just effectively, but as if it is as easy for her as breathing, or dancing.

The story also begins in 2008 in a grand old English estate with an equally grand old lady who is desperately searching for some lost branch of her family. Or rather, her solicitor George Hughes is searching, since that’s how it’s usually done. Lady Emily is reading Doward’s chronicles of Lord Arik’s journal.

In 2011, Dr. Rebeka Tyler is notified that she is the only surviving heir to the estate of Lady Emily Parsons. The estate, Frayne Manor, is in Wiltshire, England. Rebeka Tyler, as far as she knows, is an orphan. Her mother died when she was a child, and her father just a few short years ago. Her dad never mentioned any relatives, certainly not any listed in Debrett’s Peerage. Dr. Rebeka Tyler is a university professor, an expert in Medieval and Renaissance Studies, and content to remain so. This legacy interests her primarily because it gives her access to the family’s private documents.

But when Rebeka travels to England to see her new estate, she is overwhelmed by the sense of feeling at home. It is more than deja vu, it is the feeling that she has dreamed of this place, many, many times. Even the faces in the family portraits seem familiar. She decides to escape from the sensation, and takes a tour bus to nearby Avebury, one of the famous sites of standing stones, like Stonehenge only older, slightly less immense and more accessible.

It is Beltane, one of the Druid high holidays. Rebeka steps near two of the standing stones. She hears chanting and steps closer. Something draws her between the stones, and she steps through–and into 1605.

Escape Rating C: Stories involving time travel have a high bar to get over, because whatever mechanism the author uses to make the time travel happen runs the great risk of tripping up the reader’s willing suspension of disbelief. For this reader, any author who uses the device of using standing stones to go back in time will be automatically compared to Diana Gabaldon’s use of the same device in Outlander. I’m sure it can be topped, and will be by some author some day, but it’s a tremendously high fence to get over.

Also, there was a big bad in this book, but we never met him. He operates from the shadows. The avatar of his that we do meet is a crazy woman who should have been unmasked much sooner so that the real big bad could come in and we could see the real epic battle of magic that this book should have ended with. Instead, it was kind of a fizzle.

Spoiler alert: There were so many good elements in this story. Rebeka turned out to belong in 1605. Her parents brought her forward to keep her safe, then blocked her memories. There was clearly some epic conflict going on between the Druid factions that had some great dramatic possibilities. Rebeka’s 21st century ideas made her a neat character, the changes she brought with her made the conversations very funny, she had a terrific dry sense of humor.

When the author brings us back to this world, I hope we see some epic battles with the big bad evil Druid. There are definitely possibilities here waiting to be explored.

Ebook Review Central for Amber Quill, Astraea Press and Liquid Silver for September 2011

Whew! This is the fourth installment of Ebook Review Central. It covers the last September 2011 titles I’m going to highlight. It also covers three different publishing houses; Amber Quill, Astraea Press and Liquid Silver Books. Like I said: Whew!

I had asked for suggestions for which ebook publishers to cover in this fourth week. I would like to thank everyone for their suggestions. I was looking for publishers, or a mixed of publishers, that covered a lot of genres, where at least some of the titles would be available to libraries on OverDrive, and where I wouldn’t end up with more than 25 titles to hunt for during the week.

I chose Amber Quill, Astraea Press, and Liquid Silver Books. I know there’s been a lot of interest in Riptide Publishing, and I’m interested in featuring their books. But since their launch was October 31, I’ll be looking at including them when I look at November books.

Amber Quill, when all three of its imprints are publishing, does cover pretty much all the genres between Amber Quill, Amber Heat and Amber Allure. In September (and October), only Amber Allure, their GLBT imprint, actually published any titles. It will be interesting to see their future publishing pattern.

Astraea Press is totally different. They only publish what they consider “wholesome reads”. They’re not an inspirational romance publisher. They’re following a trend that has been noticed in romance publishing, for a need for sweet romances in addition to the spicy and spicier romances. Because Astraea Press only published 3 titles in September, it was difficult for me to pick a featured title. They have more to choose from in October.

Liquid Silver Books, on the other hand, publishes much hotter romances. In every type, setting and variation.

Both Astraea and Liquid Silver titles are available to libraries through OverDrive. Amber Quill isn’t, but I wanted a mix.

Having gone “once around the block” with a variety of publishers, I will say that this issue was the most difficult to do. Not because of the three different publishers, the number of titles isn’t larger than any other week, although I worry about this time next month.  It was the subtle variations that gave me the most trouble.

Astraea does not assign ISBNs to their books, so creating the database with book covers was an issue. Neither Astraea nor Liquid Silver easily provides categories for each title, do deriving that data was difficult and required more than a little guess-work on my part.

And now for the featured titles!

The featured title from Amber Quill is Ex Equals by L.A. Witt. This was clearly the standout title for the month, with three very positive reviews. Although the story is specifically a military story (Dear Author reviewed it in honor of the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”) the substance of the tale is universal. In a couple, if one person does something seemingly unforgivable, can the other person give them a second chance? Is it possible to earn forgiveness?

From Liquid Silver, the first featured title is Marking Time by Sandra Sookoo. This is a time travel story with a shape-shifter twist. A woman with a faulty GPS goes to a town named Strange Hollow, and travels back in time to 1900. The twist is that she is a wolf-shifter, and the man she falls in love with after she goes through the “way back machine” is a dying phoenix. Good reviews and a very interesting premise make this title worth checking out.

And, the one I couldn’t resist featuring, Ragnar and Juliet by Lucy Woodhull. There is the obvious play on Shakespeare, but this one is strictly science fiction romance on the comic-relief side. According to the reviews, if you’re looking for something short and funny, with a little science fictional bounty-hunting and romance on the side, this is your book.

See you next week for Carina Press’ October books.

What’s on my (mostly virtual) nightstand? 11-13-11

The exercise of looking at what I’m planning to read in the upcoming week is fascinating, sort of like watching a train wreck. You know there’s a crash coming, but you just can’t make yourself turn your eyes away!

Thanksgiving is 11 days away. Yikes! We’re driving to Cincinnati to see my mom for the holiday weekend. I will either get a LOT of reading done, or not much at all.

I finished White Hot Christmas for Library Journal Xpress Reviews. It will be the first starred review for their ebook review program. This is a pretty big deal. I know what I wrote in the review, but I wonder what they’ll say about it being the first actual starred review?

Next week’s contenders come from three completely different sources. I received When a Man Loves a Woman from the author Alina Adams in return for an honest review. What’s unusual about this book is that it’s an enhanced ebook, with music included in order to add to the reading experience. I’ve never read an enhanced ebook, so this should be interesting. I’m looking forward to the experience.

Edge of Survival was also an author request, but it was one that came about because the Toni Anderson had seen Ebook Review Central and asked if I would review her November title through NetGalley. This is a romantic suspense title, and I’d looked at it longingly a couple of times anyway, so I requested it through NetGalley. Reading Reality is already listed as a Reviewing Organization with NetGalley.

Last, but most definitely and absolutely not least for this week, Three-Day Town by Margaret Maron, also something I requested from NetGalley.  This is the latest book in her continuing Judge Deborah Knott series. I love the series, and have read all the books from the very first, Bootlegger’s Daughter. I’ve been looking forward to this book because she ties this series in with her earlier, Lt. Sigrid Harald series.  It’s been a long time since she’s written anything in that particular series, and I’ve missed it.

Recapping from last week I finished SEAL of my Dreams (B+) in time for Veterans Day. And I’ve got Knight of Runes read, I just need to write it up.

I’m unfortunately in the middle of Dark Vow, and I haven’t started Hollow House. Hence my reference to the train wreck at the beginning. I finished Snuff (my husband wanted to borrow my iPad this week).

I started Fallen Embers. The author, Lauri J. Owen, says that I can get the review up when it’s ready. I appreciate her understanding.

And I have three books with due dates. Blood Rock and Frost Moon will still timebomb on my iPad, and Wings of Fire by Charles Todd is due back at the library, all on 11/26/11.

I don’t think I can let myself add anything new to the pile until I get something on the pile off the pile. What’s that game where you pull the blocks out of the tower? Jenga? I think this is book jenga. Only with ebooks.

Ironhaven

Ironhaven, by Misa Buckley, was a surprisingly good science fiction romance that I received unsolicited from the author.

The story starts as the last shuttle leaving a dying earth is about to take off from the spaceport. Lucian Hoyt believes he has a ticket on it. But he discovers when he attempts to board the ship that his ticket has been cancelled–by his parents! Since they refuse to answer his calls to clear up the mess, he is left with the conclusion that he is being disowned in a rather permanent fashion because he refused to marry the upper-crust debutante his rich parents had chosen for him.

It’s never specified, but our earth has gotten a lot colder, and things are getting worse. Whether this is a future where the sun is just getting old, or whether we’ve screwed up the planet, it doesn’t matter. The point of the story is that everyone knows the planet is dying, but that there is plenty of time to get some people off planet, just not everyone. And the ones remaining have plenty of time to worry about when death will come for them.

So Lucian gets left behind. He resents his parents for having left him, naturally enough. Lucian is used to being rich, to being part of the upper crust of society. Now, everyone he sees resents him for being one of the people who left them behind, even though he has been abandoned, too.

All is not lost, however. In the first bar he walks into, Lucian meets a pilot, Drew. Drew knows an engineer who might be able to built a ship, if Lucian is interested. Lucian goes looking, just thinking there might be a way out of the death-spiral. What he finds is his past.

Lucian didn’t marry Elspeth “flaming” Pennington, the rich debutante, because he never stopped loving the one woman his parents forbade him from marrying. When Lucian discovers that Genevieve Scott is the engineer, and is the only person who might possibly be able to built them all a way off their dying planet, he finds he wants to build a bridge back over the chasm separating them every bit as much as he wants to help her build that ship.

The question is whether either of them can get past the hurt and the scars, both emotional and physical, that five years of separation, pain and broken promises have left on their bodies and hearts.

Escape Rating B+: I enjoyed this story very much. I really wanted it to be longer! It’s only 49 pages, and there was a certain amount of background I wanted, like what was really going wrong with the Earth, that I just wanted to know.

Gen and Lucian and interesting characters. I wanted to spend more time with them. They deserved their happy ending, they worked very hard for it. Again, I would have liked just a little more background. But as the reader, I definitely felt their pain. There’s a specific instance about the lack of background that made this a B+ and not an A. Lucian is in his 30s. Without more background, it was difficult to understand why his parents still  had such an vise-like grip on his life. There’s something about the way that the society is structured that I didn’t get. Gen couldn’t figure out why Lucian didn’t contact her in the five years they were separated, if he loved her so much, and I couldn’t either.

This book is only 50 pages. The author did a remarkable job tying up all the loose ends. I simply wanted more!

SEAL of My Dreams

SEAL of My Dreams is a terrific anthology with a timely theme. Every story in this book features Navy SEALs as protective alpha males who are also tender romantic heroes. Each and every one is rewarded with their own, extra-special happy ever after, just in time for Veterans’ Day.

There are 18 stories in this collection. Some are short. Some are novella-length. Some of the stories stand completely on their own, and some are part of the author’s ongoing series about men in uniform. Of course, I have my favorites.

The two I enjoyed most are about wounded warriors, the women they left behind, and the brave soldier dogs who served with them. And, like so many of the stories in this collection, both mix a little bitter in with the sweet. And one story just gave me the chills.

Baby I’m Back by Stephanie Bond is about a wounded SEAL’s return to his old hometown of Sweetness, Georgia. Seaman Barry Ballantine returns after a long absence to find that the ugly-duckling that he and his high school friends teased has turned into a beautiful swan–and that she is the best physical therapist he has ever met. Which is an excellent thing, because he needs her to help him adjust to the prosthetic lower leg he acquired while on his last assignment. He’s only planning to be in town long enough to perform one last service for a comrade, then leave. But his attraction to that therapist, plus the connivance of his old friends, mean that fate has another plan for him. Did I mention there was a dog?

Dog Heart by Barbara Samuel is one of the short stories in the collection. Marcus Stone brings Staff Sgt. Thor to the best vet and animal therapist that he knows. Sgt. Thor had been a combat dog, attached to a SEAL unit on a top secret mission in Afghanistan that had gone very, very wrong. Thor was one of five SEALs badly injured on that mission, and Marcus was another. Thor’s handler was killed. But the best animal therapist that Marcus knows is also the only woman he ever really loved. The woman who turned away from him when he enlisted in the Navy after college graduation. Can healing Sgt. Thor heal all of their hearts?

Letters to Ellie, by Loreth Anne White, simply haunted me. The story starts with Ellie Winters, a radio host, conducting a call-in show on National POW/MIA Recognition Day. The callers normally remember their loved ones, but the last caller stuns her. Ellie has been waiting for 15 years for word of the man she loved. Max and Flynn were prisoners together, but only Max made it all the way back home. Max brings Ellie closure, and grief. But Flynn and Max spent 15 years as POWs, and the only thing keeping both of them alive was the thought and memory of Ellie. Now that only one of them has come home, can Ellie make a future with a man who remembers loving her, even if he’s not the man she once loved?

Letters to Ellie reminded me a lot of the poem from the Vietnam War. The one by that famous poet Anonymous. It ends like this:

There were lots of things I wanted to make up to you
when you returned from Vietnam.
But you didn’t.

Escape Rating B+: The stories I enjoyed, I liked a lot. The stories that were part of ongoing series were not as much fun because I just wasn’t into those series. But all in all, this is a collection that is well worth reading.

This book was clearly a labor of love. To quote from the foreword: “No one involved in this project will profit except the Veteran’s Research Corporation, a non-profit foundation supporting medical research for veterans.” The design work for the cover was donated, the copyeditor donated her time, even the licensing fee for the cover image was discounted.

I received my review copy of this book, as I do many of my review copies, from NetGalley. But on this particular occasion I’d like to give a special recognition to Bell Bridge Books for making this a “Read Now” title on NetGalley. This made SEAL of My Dreams immediately available to every single reviewer who requested. Thank you!

Amazon and the library redux

Not surprisingly, there has been a lot of commentary in the library world about Amazon’s Kindle Lending Library.

Most of the the library and ebook pundits go over the nitty-gritty details of the Kindle Lending Library, compare the extremely restrictive terms of Amazon’s initial foray into lending services with the vast array of library offerings, and pronounce that libraries have nothing to worry about.

ReadWriteWeb warns its readers “not to get too excited” about the prospect of rushing out to join Amazon Prime and tearing up their library cards.

My personal favorite is the post at Agnostic, Maybe that The Amazon Lending Library is NOT the Library Apocalypse. For one thing, the library apocalypse is more likely going to come as a result of shrinking budgets than anything else.

But to stretch the apocalypse metaphor further, is Amazon helping to feed the Four Horsemen’s horses? That strikes this particular pundit as a much more likely scenario.

The particulars of the Amazon deal as currently stated are very restrictive.  However, many patrons think that library policies are very restrictive. I’m not saying that they are, I am saying that everything is a matter of perspective. How many patrons have we lost for life over arguments about 15 cent or 25 cent overdue fines?

Amazon will change the structure of the deal as soon as it decides it is beneficial for them to do so. I would be willing to bet that the one book per month limit is the first thing to go. One book at a time, like Netflix, will make more sense to most users. But Amazon had to start somewhere, and they can afford to think about the very long term. Their point is to sell Kindles and to get more Prime Members. (And now, to win the probable court case.)

What members of the general public have to say is quite informative. Amazon has a lot of mindshare and the lending program has generated a lot of interest. Lending books for no additional charge used to be one service that libraries offered that was not available on the net. It was a counter to the argument that “why do we need libraries, everything is on the net now?”

The Amazon Lending Library publicity means that people know there are other alternatives on the net for borrowing books. Just because that alternative is not available to everyone now, doesn’t mean that it can’t be expanded later. And people who are making the argument to cut library funding will NOT dive into that detail. The sound bite will be enough.

Libraries do lend ebooks, and thanks to services like OverDrive and Project Gutenberg, a library’s collection can be larger and more diverse than Amazon’s, especially since OverDrive was more careful about actually securing rights instead of just assuming it could do whatever it felt like.

But commenters on the Amazon kerfuffle make the point over and over that if a user wants anything popular from the library, they have to get on a long wait list. No one likes that. What Amazon is offering, limited as it appears to a librarian, is available to any qualified user who wants it, right now. The whole point of ebooks is that a reader can have what they want, when and where they want it.

Over on Librarian by Day, a lot of statistics are used to make the case Why Amazon’s Lending Library is Not a Threat to Public Libraries. The problem is that these kind of statistics don’t move people. Sound bites and stories move people. Every statistic is absolutely correct, and it all sounds like “preaching to the choir”. Anyone who is already convinced that libraries are necessary will be swayed by these facts. Anyone who wants to believe that we can all be replaced by an electronic device, or who just loves bright, shiny toys, or who is simply willing to be convinced because they want to lower their taxes, is going to follow the marketing, and Amazon does great marketing.

We can expect that Amazon will learn from the rollout of its lending program, make changes, and improve it, making it more attractive to its users.  But as was asked over at the E-Content blog at American Libraries, “Can we learn from it?

Amazon presents a challenge to libraries, not because this particular service is better than what libraries currently offer, but just because they generate a huge amount of press and they used the word “library” in their announcement. But what will we as librarians make of this challenge?

How many best books?

In time for everyone’s holiday shopping, the best books of 2011 lists are popping up everywhere. This is in spite of the fact that 2011 still has two whole publishing months yet to go!

And maybe it’s me, but I kind of expect best books lists to be organized in lists of “top tens”. You know what I mean, the top ten books of the year, and then the top ten fiction, the top ten mysteries, top ten science fiction, top ten romance, etc., etc., etc.

Amazon’s Top 100 Editor’s Picks went up on the Amazon site on November 8, but they also picked the top 10 books in each genre, grouping, or what-have-you. Admittedly, Amazon’s purpose is to sell books, but somebody still had to sit down and think about which ten books to highlight, even in such esoteric categories as “Quirky & Strange”, which is where they slipped in Go the F**k to Sleep and Pat the Zombie.

As far as I’m concerned, as long as they’re talking about reading, and about giving people books, whether print books or ebooks, for holiday presents, it’s all good.

But, but, but, you’re wondering why I took a look at this? I’m not going to critique the selections. As long as people are reading, it’s all good. Amazon treated every genre and every reading taste equally. If I looked hard enough, I’m sure they forgot someone, but at least they tried.  And if someone wants to debate Amazon’s choices, that person is still talking about reading!

The Publishers Weekly 2011 best books list was released on November 4. The web app to view the list is very cool.  But this time, I am going to debate the contents of the list. It’s not so much what’s on it, but how many. There are only 9 mystery and thriller titles. Just 9.  This is not about whether those 9 are or are not awesome (I know one of them is definitely awesome) but shouldn’t this be a top ten list? Really?

PW lumps Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror into one big basket. One big and relatively empty basket. There are only six books mentioned, and all are from small publishers. While highlighting small publishers is terrific, it does make me wonder that none of the big SF or Fantasy titles were good enough to be on their best books list? Not Magician King or Wise-Man’s Fear or Embassytown? Or Ready Player One, which everyone has raved about. Even more interesting, the science fiction blogger named her four honorable mention titles; The Heroes by Joe Abercrombie, Broken by Susan Jane Bigelow, The Dragon’s Path by Daniel Abraham, Dead Iron by Devon Monk. Why not just give SF/F/Horror a top ten list in the first place?

There are only 5 romance titles listed. This is something I find just plain impossible to believe. There weren’t 10 best romances? Why not? Where does paranormal fit into this mix, because there wasn’t a paranormal title among the five chosen. And Archangel’s Blade, Heart of Steel, and Dragon Bound show up on an awful lot of lists this year.

But it’s not about which particular titles I would personally choose or not choose. It’s about the fact that, even taken as a whole, none of the major fiction genres were considered worth 10 “best books” recommendations on a list with an seemingly elastic number of slots.

For the kids who read the recommended books like A Monster Calls and Legend and Daughter of Smoke and Bone, where are the similar numbers of fantastic genre recommendations for when they grow up?

Slip Point

The most fun part about Slip Point by Karalynn Lee can be described in two words: “Space Pirates!” It makes me grin every time I even think about it. And I defy anyone to not be reminded of Firefly, just a teeny little bit. Very shiny.

But the roots of Slip Point rest in an entirely different science fiction epic. At the opening of the story, Jayce and Shay are just a boy and a girl growing up on a backwater planet, dreaming of going into space. Pretty much like Luke Skywalker dreamed of getting off Tatooine. Or, come to think of it, the way that James T. Kirk dreamed of leaving that Iowa cornfield, and Jean-Luc Picard dreamed of leaving his family’s winery in France. All of them were once-upon-a-time planetbound children dreaming of space. But then, aren’t we all?

Jayce and Shay watch the ships coming to their “Steader” world, a planet that has deliberately chosen to use as little technology as possible. They are waiting until Shay is old enough to go off-planet and take the Academy entrance exams without her mother’s permission. Jayce is a few months older, and his family is less rigid about him remaining at the family “Hearth”. But then, Jayce has siblings and Shay is an only child, her father is long dead. Or so she has been told.

But when they finally take that exam, and Jayce and Shay are within moments of seeing all their dreams come true, Shay’s dreams shatter into pieces. Her father is not dead. Daddy Dearest is an infamous space pirate. And the Space Corps didn’t want any applicants whose parents were infamous, and infamously successful, pirates. Shay left her dreams behind in the recruitment office. Along with Jayce. She abandoned her best friend, her first and only lover, without a single word of explanation, because Jayce was able to fulfill their dream, and Shay couldn’t.

Shay took a completely different course. If her father kept her from joining the Space Corps, then she figured that he owed her a pilot’s berth. So Shay went looking for pirates.

Ten years later, Shay has become her father’s second-in-command. Not because she’s his daughter, but because she’s earned it. Not by being ruthless, but by being discriminating, and still profitable. Now he has a special job for her–a job that will involve government bureaucrats, newly discovered aliens, xenophobic terrorists, the Space Corps–and Jayce.

What Jayce can do to her heart is way more dangerous than anything the terrorists or even the military might possibly want to shoot her with.

Escape Rating B: I enjoyed the world-building, and I liked the character of Shay quite a bit. She’s definitely a strong enough character to be in charge of her own ship. I found it refreshing that she didn’t wait around for someone to rescue her when her dreams fell apart, she created her own “plan B” and carried it out. At the same time, she did it with the kind of thoughtlessness that would be typical of someone that age, filled with anger that Jayce got the dream and she didn’t.

There are elements of other female space opera heroines in Shay, I saw a lot of Ky Vatta from Elizabeth Moon’s Vatta’s War series. That’s a good comparison, I loved the Vatta’s War series and wish there were more. There is also a space piracy element in Vatta.

Which brings me to the thing that bothered me. Because Shay’s planet has such restricted access, Space Corps must know that Shay hasn’t seen or heard from her father. Why does his existence bar her from entry into the Corps? Something wasn’t explained there, or I’m just used to the average Space Corps being way more omnipotent, or at least omni-aware, than this one.

Shay and Jayce haven’t seen each other in ten years, but they were each other’s first love, first kiss, first everything. She left a gaping hole in his heart when she ran out. They need some serious healing to find their way back to each other, and the story works through that. They don’t pick up where they left off, and it shouldn’t.

One last thing, this book is too short! I want more of this world.  The story needed more details and background than the author had time to tell. And there are all sorts of interesting things going on, including first contact. Let’s come back here again.

The Lady’s Secret

The Lady’s Secret, by Joanna Chambers is a sexy and suspenseful Regency-era romance slightly reminiscent of that wonderful movie, Victor/Victoria. And just as in the movie, the lady has more than one secret, people see what they expect to see, and the clothes make the man, or woman.

Georgiana Knight and her brother Harry are part-owners of London’s Camelot Theatre. But in 1810 London, working in the theatre, even owning one, is not exactly respectable. And that’s the story of their lives. Georgy and Harry know that their father was the second son of the Duke of Dunsmore, but their mother was an actress. Their parents were married, they just can’t prove it–and the Duke disowned their father when he married their mother. As long as their father was the second son, it didn’t matter quite so much, and their parents had a very happy and loving marriage.

But the oldest son died without an heir. Which makes Harry the Duke of Dunsmore–except he can’t prove it. Their parents are dead, and their marriage lines seem to have disappeared without a trace. Harry wants to search the Dunsmore country estate, but he’s been there, and been thrown out.

Georgy decides to help Harry, one last time, on this mad quest to secure their birthright. She tries to get hired as a servant in the Dunsmore household, but they’re not hiring. Then her friend Lily discovers that one of the current Duke’s friends needs a valet, and that said friend is invited to a houseparty at the Duke’s estate in six weeks time. All Georgy has to do is get herself hired as Lord Nathaniel Harland’s valet, and survive in that position for six whole weeks. And to be a valet, she has to transform herself into a man.

Georgy has spent most of her life in the theatre. Not as a actress, but behind the scenes, doing props, scenery and makeup. She has also been blessed with a relatively slim and boyish figure. She sacrifices her hair, binds her breasts, and dresses herself from the costumes available. She doesn’t try to stand out, she tries to fade into the woodwork, she makes herself invisible. Capable, but otherwise nondescript. It works. She’s hired.

There’s only one thing that Georgy doesn’t count on. She finds Nathan Harland devastatingly attractive. And he thinks she’s just his valet. Not merely just another man, but part of the furniture, at that. She has to watch him bathe, help him dress, even shave him, all while pretending that she doesn’t see him as anything other than her employer, instead of as the first man to make her heart beat faster.

Nathan sees Georgy as a young man named George Fellowes. He likes George, finds him soothing to be around. George is always efficient, always careful, and knows exactly what to do to make his life easier. Until one incident when Nathan realizes that he might possibly be attracted to his young valet, and is totally unnerved by the realization.

Then one evening when he returns unexpectedly from an evening out, and discovers George in his, Nathan’s rooms, taking a bath, and finally realizes that the young man he has been attracted to is not a young man after all.

Escape Rating B+: There were two plots going on in this book; the romance between Nathan and Georgy, and the recovery of Harry and Georgy’s inheritance and the villain’s quite nasty attempts to prevent that recovery. Both come to a lovely happily ever after at the end. The irony of the villain providing the solution to the puzzle was quite delicious.

There are multiple points of view about gender identity and homophobia or the lack thereof in this society. For what would otherwise be a pretty light story, there’s a fairly serious discussion going on here.

Georgy spends most of the book successfully pretending to be a man. There will be questions about whether that would have been possible. There are a lot of historic precedents, not in upper class service, but in wartime, in the American Revolution and the U.S. Civil War on both the Union and Confederate sides. So before and after this time period. It clearly could be done  if the person could avoid needing medical attention, which Georgy does.

Once Nathan reveals that he knows what Georgy is, his every action reveals the secret to the entire universe. The charade should have fallen apart at the point, but somehow it doesn’t. But I was enjoying the story enough that I didn’t let it bother me too much.

Victor/Victoria is about a female singer who can’t get work as a woman, so she pretends to be a man who works as a female impersonator. In other words, a woman pretending to be a man pretending to be a woman. However, the scene where the man who is attracted to “him” and has never been attracted to men before, discovers that Victor is really Victoria is when he spies Victoria taking a bath. The scene is a classic. So is the movie.

Ebook Review Central for Samhain Publishing September 2011

This is the third issue of Ebook Review Central. And it is your guide to the Samhain Publishing titles for September 2011.

If you are interested in how this feature came about, or earlier issues, please check out the posts on Carina Press and Dreamspinner for the gory and not-so-gory details. But this week, the focus is on Samhain.

Samhain published 19 ebook titles in September. One of the surprising things about this list is how many Western titles there are. Three Westerns! Maybe there still is a wild, wild West out there someplace.

I always like to make a special note of which books got the most “buzz”, which ones were talked about the most on the list. The Samhain titles were really fascinating in this regard, because there were some huge review numbers racked up by a couple of titles.

Some of that is because there’s a time lapse, these are the September books, and it’s now early November, some of it is undoubtedly good marketing (more on that in a minute) and some is because there were some really great books in this bunch.

Samhain Publishing has done something that I find intriguing, both as a book reviewer and as a librarian. Samhain is participating in Library Journal’s ebook only review program, along with Carina Press. What is unusual about Samhain’s participation is that Samhain ebooks, unlike Carina’s, are not available to libraries on OverDrive. So why does Samhain participate? I confess to being terribly curious. (Full disclosure, I am one of the reviewers for Library Journal)

They certainly get some great reviews from librarians, published in Library Journal Xpress Reviews, and they get name recognition for both their ebooks and the print books. Why Samhain does not participate in OverDrive, I don’t know but I sure do wonder about. It must be a marketing thing.

But speaking of marketing, the first book with a lot of positive buzz this month is Cipher, by Moira Rogers. Not only did Cipher get 10 reviews, all very positive, but there was a lot more. In September, a Cipher giveaway, release party and chat session was held at Fiction Vixen. This was part of a big Southern Arcana Readalong conducted all summer long and cross promoted at Fiction Vixen, Smexy Books and The Book Pushers. It created a lot of anticipation and positive buzz for what looks like a terrific paranormal romance series.

Shiloh Walker’s Locked in Silence is book 5 in her Grimm’s Circle series. I chose it as my second featured book because Ms. Walker is an author who chooses to publish some of her work through traditional print publishers, and some, like her Grimm’s Circle series, through ebook publishers. The author, and the quality of the work, is the same. The popularity, and Ms. Walker’s work is very, very popular, is exactly the same. If hot paranormal romances with demons and angels are what you’re looking for, this series by Shiloh Walker might be a good place to start.

Last, but absolutely not least according to the review, is The Last Detail by Melissa Schroeder. 12 reviews, and all positive. If you like science fiction romance, that’s probably a buy recommendation right there. I’m also overjoyed to see this much interest in SFR! There was also a movie titled The Last Detail with Jack Nicholson from 1973. It’s also about getting someone back to prison, but I think the resemblances probably end there.

Next week’s Ebook Review Central will be the last one to cover September books. Up until now, I’ve been saying that “week 4” would feature a “player-to-be-named-later”. It’s time to name that featured publisher–except it’s going to be publishers, plural. Next week, Ebook Review Central will feature the September books from Astraea Publishing, Liquid Silver Books, and Amber Quill/Amber Heat/Amber Allure.

Tune in next week for another exciting episode.