Stacking the Shelves (49)

Stacking the Shelves

Until Friday, it was starting to look like I wasn’t going to get any review books this week. Then the new Ether Chronicles book popped up in Edelweiss (YAY!) and the 3rd Sullivans book finally arrived in the mail (tour date is set, it’s always a relief when the book shows up)

Now I just need to plan my reading for my trip to the American Library Association conference next week. I try so hard not to pick up print ARCs. Plus there are all those long plane rides to consider. Lots of potential reading time!

Stacking the Shelves June 22 2013 Reading Reality

For Review:
Can’t Help Falling in Love (Sullivans #3) by Bella Andre
Skies of Gold (Ether Chronicles #5) by Zoe Archer
Unleash the Curse (Imnada Brotherhood #1.5) by Alexa Egan

Purchased:
Blood and Betrayal (Emperor’s Edge #5) by Lindsay Buroker
Forged in Blood I (Emperor’s Edge #6) by Lindsay Buroker
Trying to Score (Assassins #2) by Toni Aleo

Borrowed from the Library:
A Beautiful Friendship (Stephanie Harrington #1) by David Weber
Fire Season (Stephanie Harrington #2) by David Weber and Jane Lindskold
The Ides of April (Flavia Alba #1) by Lindsey Davis
Stoker’s Manuscript by Royce Prouty

2nd Annual SFR Brigade Midsummer Blog Hop

SFR Brigade Midsummer Blog Hop

Welcome to the Second Annual Midsummer Blog Hop, sponsored by the SFR Brigade. Woo-hoo!

The theme for this year’s Midsummer Blog Hop is out of this world. No really, this is a science fiction romance group, so that’s the theme. Which “out of this world” setting is your favorite? Or my favorite, as the case may be.

USS Enterprise NCC-1701If I had to pick an imagined future that I would want to live in, it would still, even all these years later, be Gene Roddenberry’s vision of the future from the original Star Trek series. By the time that Kirk & Co. flew the original Enterprise out of the San Francisco shipyards in 2245, the Federation seems to have solved most of the problems that we have today. It’s not just that it would take a “post-scarcity economy” to come up with something like the Prime Directive, but that everyone on the Enterprise, and her namesakes A, B, C, D and E all seem to enjoy their jobs and have such purpose. Somedays I envy them. The universe of the reboot seems to have gone to hell in handcart. I wouldn’t want to live there, even if it is entertaining to visit.

What fictional universe would you most want to live in? And which one do you think would be worth an adventure visit?

SFR Brigade Badge As a blogger-member of the SFR Brigade, my mission, and I have decided to accept it (no apologies for trope mixing) is to promote science fiction romance in general, and today, the Midsummer Blog Hop in particular.

~~Giveaway Details~~

On Friday 21st June (that’s TODAY!) the SFR Brigade is holding its Second Annual Blog Hop to celebrate Midsummer!

Here are the grand prizes (open to all!):

  • 1st Prize – $150 Amazon or B&N gift card (winner’s choice) and an ebook bundle (currently Ghost in the Machine, Bayne, Recast Book
    1:Wither, Recast Book 2:Clash, Alien Adoration, Switched, Reckless
    Rescue, Wreck of the Nebula Dream, Keir, Terms & Conditions Apply, The Key, Marya, The Iron Admiral, Sasha’s Calling, Trouble at the Hotel Baba Ghanoush, Winter in Paradise, Once Upon a Time in Space, The Telomere Trilogy, Winter Fusion, Blue Nebula, Demential, WytchfireMaven, Fires of Justice, Interface, Girl under Glass, Breakout, The Plan, Starburst and Stark Pleasure.
    Bonus books – Ghost Planet, The Iron Admiral: Conspiracy and
    Deception, and Games of Command)
  • 2nd Prize – $50 Amazon or B&N gift card (winner’s choice)
  • 3rd Prizes – four $25 Amazon or B&N gift cards (given to separate winners and their choice)

For a chance to win one of the grand prizes, use the Rafflecopter at the end of the post.

In addition to the grand prize, one lucky commenter at Reading Reality will be chosen by the ever popular Random.org to win a $10 Amazon Gift Card from yours truly. So be sure to leave a comment here before you hop around to the rest of the SFR Brigade.

a Rafflecopter giveaway
And please be sure to visit the other blog hop stops:

Review: The Armies of Heaven by Jane Kindred

The Armies of Heaven by Jane KindredFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher
Series: The House of Arkhangel’sk, #3
Genre: Fantasy
Release Date: June 25, 2013
Number of pages: 400 pages
Publisher: Entangled Select
Formats available: ebook, paperback
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website | Goodreads | Amazon | B&N | Kobo | Book Depository US | Book Depository (UK)

Full-scale war has broken out in Heaven, and Anazakia must embrace her destiny, leading an army of Virtues into battle against a Host of enemies to restore the House of Arkhangel’sk. Furious with her for putting her trust in the angel who has done them all irreparable harm, Vasily tries to ignore his growing resentment, while Belphagor returns to the world of Man with a cadre of beautiful androgynous Virtues to restore the sundered alliance between the Fallen and the gypsy underground. Without their help in enlisting the terrestrial forces of Grigori and Nephilim, Anazakia’s Virtues are hopelessly outnumbered. But there are more things in Heaven and Earth than any of them have dreamt of, and those they cannot see will mean the difference between victory and losing everything.

My Thoughts:

Fallen queen by Jane kindredWhat goes around, comes around. Not exactly profound, but there is definitely a sense that everything, good and bad, from The Fallen Queen (reviewed here at BLI) and The Midnight Court (reviewed at Reading Reality) comes back around in The Armies of Heaven.

The chickens all come home to roost. Chickens and angels both have feathers, right?

The House of Arkhangel’sk is the heavenly reflection of the House of Romanov. And both were manipulated by the Snow Queen, Aeval, because she didn’t get what she wanted when she wanted it. Yes, she was just that petty. Aeval is that cold.

Aeval set in motion a series of events with far-reaching consequences on earth and in the Courts of Heaven. Because she is the Snow Queen, she had no care for any of those consequences, as long as she got what she wanted.

But now there are three players on the board. Aeval is still the Usurper Queen of Heaven. Anazakia is fighting to regain her throne. And somewhere, Anazakia’s former nurse Helga is holding Anazakia’s daughter Ola prisoner in an oubliette while she puts forward a surprise candidate for the throne.

All this time, Anazakia believed that Aeval had ensorcelled her cousin Kae into murdering their family, including the child her sister Omelia was carrying. His own child. Now the truth is revealed, that Helga murdered Omelia by performing a butchery of a Cesarean birth and taking the child.

Helga says she wants social justice. Many in heaven who want to see the aristocracy thrown down are rallying to her banner. There have been too many inequities for too long, and reforms are needed, but Helga is only out for herself. At any price, including the sacrifice of both children.

As the armies gather, as allies become enemies become allies, Anazakia and her friends fight to find the children, and to attempt to save as much of both heaven and earth as they can. Every relationship and belief is strained to the breaking point.

But this story is ultimately about the importance of the family you make. On her 17th birthday, Anazakia went riding with her cousin Kae. On that ride, he was ensorcelled by Aeval. Everything else happened because of that ride. Kae was her best friend then, and Anazakia has to admit to herself that she still loves him, that he was not responsible for the things he did while he was under Aeval’s blood-spell.

Kae has to let himself believe that too.

And Anazakia has to make a deal with her worst enemy in order to achieve the best part of what she wants. It’s a damn hard lesson to learn.

Fate is cruel. Even for the Queen of Heaven.

Verdict: What makes this story so fascinating isn’t the battles, or even the politics (although the politics are incredibly intricate), it’s the people.

This is a series that has to be read as a whole, because the relationships are so complex. Even with the summary at the beginning of this volume, there’s no way to understand who these people are to each other without reading the whole series.

Midnight court by Jane KindredBecause Anazakia fell from heaven, she becomes more than a spoiled princess. She makes her own family with the demons Belphagor and Vasily, and eventually with Ola, and then Love, and Kirill. And finally, again, Kae. She opens up and grows because she got shaken from her setting, even if that shake was in the worst way possible.

She’s a better person, and a better queen, because of what she experiences. Otherwise she would have been just another complacent, spoiled princess, and nothing would have ever changed.

If The Midnight Court was like Russian tea, The Armies of Heaven is more like baklava, made of of many, many individual layers, each of which has it’s own flavor (and is sometimes full of nuts) and is its own part of the whole melange.

Every single tiny piece of the story, from first to last, came back to haunt by the time this book ended. Every thread got tied off. And the weave of them all was complicated, and very much like the Kushiel series or Babylon 5, every detail mattered.

The end came around to the beginning, both with Aeval and with Kae, although with Aeval, I was left wondering what it was all for from the forest sprites’ point of view. Is there another tale yet untold?

The idea of using the Tarot to send messages to the internet from heaven was just plain cool.

4-one-half-stars

I give  The Armies of Heaven by Jane Kindred 4 and ½ heavenly stars!

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: The Cursed by Alyssa Day

The Cursed by Alyssa DayFormat read: print book borrowed from the library
Formats available: ebook, mass market paperback, audiobook
Genre: Paranormal romance
Series: League of the Black Swan, #1
Length: 305 pages
Publisher: Berkley
Date Released: May 7, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Bordertown private investigator Luke Oliver’s beat is the dimensional fold in Manhattan between the human and supernatural realms. But now a secret from his past—the League of the Black Swan—has surfaced. Because Luke isn’t any ordinary P.I. He’s the Dark Wizard of Bordertown, and he never backs down from a fight.

But this time the fight threatens his life and his heart. Rio Jones, the only woman he loved, needs his help against a deadly menace. Luke pushed her away once before, so she’d never fall prey to the curse that threatens to destroy him. He swore he’d never let her go again.

Luke and Rio, with the help of the newly reformed League, must keep evil forces from taking over Bordertown—all the while battling a passion on the razor’s edge between danger and desire. And going to take everything they have just to stay alive.

My Review:

The idea that there is a supernatural fold of the space-time continuum, or whatever you might want to call it, underneath or beside or behind New York City makes a whole lot of weird sense, at least in paranormal terms.

Neverwhere by Neil GaimanIf London can have two versions, Simon R. Green’s Nightside and Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere, it seems only fair that New York City has this one. NYC is certainly big and bad enough to support an oblong of goblins or two.

So Bordertown is the supernatural fold of New York City, where the demons and the elves live to look down upon the humans in their midst. Rio Jones believes she’s just one of those humans, even if she does have a little something extra: she’s a telepath. Her ability to tell when someone is too busy to care or if they really want to eat her for dinner has kept her alive as a bike messenger in this town where everyone is bigger and badder than she is.

One man tries to keep what passes for the peace in Bordertown. He goes by the name Luke Oliver, but he hasn’t always. He was born Lucian Olivieri, over 500 years ago, and his long life has been a curse and not a blessing. He’s known as the Dark Wizard of Bordertown, but if he ever really gives in to that dark, he’ll lose his soul.

Rio is the one woman who could tip him over to the dark side. Not because she’s evil, but because his overwhelming desire to protect her has the power to compel him to do seriously bad things. So Luke has kept himself far, far away from her.

Until his former colleagues, the League of the Black Swan, tell him to watch her. And their warning comes just in time. Because out of nowhere, both the Winter Fae and the Demon Rift target one unsuspecting human bike messenger named Rio Jones.

Who has no clue why every badass in Bordertown is out to get her before her 25th birthday. But then, Rio has no clue who she really is. She just needs to find out before that secret gets her killed. Or possessed. Or brings about the end of the world as everyone knows it.

Escape Rating B+: There are two stories in The Cursed; the love story between Luke and Rio, and the story about who Rio is and why is she being targeted.

The love story is a bit rocky. We never do find out why Luke was instantly attracted to Rio a year previously. It’s pretty easy to get what she sees in him, but not the reverse. Insta-love always makes me twitchy, and even though they do build a relationship in the book, it does start from there.

On that other hand, Rio’s origin story, the whole reason why she’s targeted, etc. is very cool and extremely well done. The case that Luke is pursuing at the beginning of the story, every mystery in the book, all the clues, even a couple of quite tasty red herrings, all lead to a fast and furious plot-twist at the end. I guessed some of it but not all of it.

The League of the Black Swan’s motives were very mysterious. They used Rio (and Luke) and Rio used them. I’m terribly curious to see what they do next.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: Flirting With Disaster by Ruthie Knox

Flirting With Disaster by Ruthie KnoxFormat read: ebook provided by NetGalley
Formats available: ebook, mass market paperback
Genre: Contemporary romance
Series: Camelot, #3
Length: 448 pages
Publisher: Loveswept
Date Released: June 11, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Fresh out of a fiasco of a marriage, Katie Clark has retreated to her hometown to start over. The new Katie is sophisticated, cavalier, and hell-bent on kicking butt at her job in her brother’s security firm. But on her first assignment—digging up the truth about the stalker threatening a world-famous singer-songwriter—Katie must endure the silent treatment from a stern but sexy partner who doesn’t want her help . . . or her company.

Sean Owens knows that if he opens his mouth around Katie, she’ll instantly remember him as the geeky kid who sat behind her in high school. Silence is golden, but he can’t keep quiet forever, not with Katie stampeding through their investigation. It’s time for Sean to step up and take control of the case, and his decade-old crush. If he can break through Katie’s newfound independence, they just might find they make a perfect team—on the road, on the job, and in bed.

My Review:

Flirting with Disaster is the response to that age-old cliche that says you can’t go home again. Or maybe you can, but only by reverting to whoever you were in high school. Which explains a whole lot of what goes on at high school reunions, and the disaster that Sean Owens is flirting with.

Katie Clark came home pretty much with her tail between her legs. The marriage that took her to Alaska and stole a lot of her self-esteem left her sadder and wiser and needing to start over because her ex took their combined savings on her way out the door.

The new Katie is finally divorced and determined not to get caught up in fixing other people’s problems again. That’s how she got trapped the first time.

But Sean Owens needs Katie’s special brand of fixing. He came home to Camelot to wind up his mother’s estate, and just got stuck. He can’t get past all the reasons he left Camelot and his mother behind ten years ago, but he also can’t make himself leave. So he’s keeping himself busy by working for Caleb Clark’s personal security company in Camelot.

Meanwhile, his own high-tech security company in Silicon Valley is crashing without him.

In California, Sean Owens is self-confident and in control of everything around him. In Camelot, he’s the stuttering mess he was back in school, all over again. Not just because Camelot brings out all the worst crap his mother put him through, but because he’s had a crush on Katie since, well, forever.

Working together is torture. Not working together is even worse. Because Katie wants to become an investigator, and Sean needs to keep her safe. Even from himself.

Escape Rating A-: At first, the story seems so simple, Katie is finally getting her act together after the divorce from her loser ex. I’m amazed her brother doesn’t go find him and punch his lights out, but that’s just a daydream scene.

Katie needs a self-confidence boost, and after you read about her ex, it’s understandable. So when she wants to be more than just her brother’s office manager, it makes sense. But the case pretty much goes pear-shaped in a crazy way, and that’s where the story really kicks in.

The case is to protect a rock singer with a career that isn’t what it used to be. But he’s got a stalker. And a weird thing about Katie’s aura. Sean comes along to protect Katie more than the rock singer, and that’s where the fun starts. Rock singer making a play for Katie is the kick in the pants that Sean needs to go after the woman he’s always wanted.

But what makes this story shine is the depth of the characters. Sean and Katie are hot together, Ruthie Knox writes great sexual tension leading to marvelously yummy sex scenes, but that’s never all there is.

Katie has to figure out who she wants to be when she grows up. And that she is going to help Sean deal with the reason he can’t manage to make himself leave Camelot, even if it means letting him go. Because helping people to fix themselves is her best self.

She even figures out who the stalker is, with a little bit of techno razzle-dazzle from Sean. The characters make this story sing, even when the rock star isn’t on stage.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: The Look of Love by Bella Andre

look of love by bella andreFormat read: ebook provided by NetGalley
Formats available: ebook, paperback, mass market paperback, audiobook
Genre: Contemporary romance
Series: The Sullivans, #1
Length: 184 pages
Publisher: Originally self-published; expanded edition published by Harlequin MIRA
Date Released: June 13, 2011 (original); May 28, 2013 (expanded edition)
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Sometimes one look is all it takes

Chloe Peterson has vowed never to make the mistake of trusting a man again. Her reasons are as vivid as the bruises on her cheek. So when her car skids off a wet country road straight into a ditch, she’s convinced the gorgeous guy who rescues her must be too good to be true.

As a successful international photographer, Chase Sullivan has his pick of beautiful women. He’s satisfied with his life—until he finds Chloe and her totaled car on the side of the road in Napa Valley.

With every loving look—and every sinfully sweet caress—the attraction between them sizzles, and Chloe can’t help but wonder if she’s met the man who may be the exception to her rule…

My Review:

The Sullivans are a family that readers will want to fall in love with. So it’s a good thing that there are so many of them! Six handsome brothers and two beautiful sisters, plus mom is a widow (I confess to wondering if mom will get her own story somehow).

This first story is brother Chase’s story, and contrary to convention, Chase is not the oldest brother, he’s number three in the family. He’s also a playboy but falls into the trope of suddenly ready to settle down when he meets the right woman. That’s okay, it works when he meets Chloe.

I think all the Sullivans are going to turn out to have a “knight in shining armor” streak. Their mom definitely raised them right. Chase rescues Chloe from a car wreck in the middle of a major storm. She’s also sporting a killer bruise on her face, so it’s pretty obvious that she needs some other kind of rescue, but that’s more than she can accept.

Automobile service in the middle of nowhere is pure necessity. Her cell phone is dead and it’s freezing. What she doesn’t count on is getting swept into Chase’s world of fashion photography, because that’s what he does.

Chloe doesn’t trust the instant attraction between them, because she’s made that kind of mistake before. But she needs a place to retreat, and Sullivan Winery turns out to be the perfect place. By slow degrees, Chloe becomes an integral part of Chase’s photo shoot at his brother Marcus’ winery.

She doesn’t want to explore the feelings that Chase arouses in her, either the physical sensations or the emotions, but the more time they spend together, the harder it is for her to resist.

Chase is nothing like the ex-husband who abused her. It just takes a few days for her head to catch up with her heart to tell her what she really feels.

While Chase spends all his time making sure that Chloe understands that he wants the best of whatever part of her he can have…on her terms.

Escape Rating B: The Look of Love is a fun, hot, sweet romance. The relationship between Chase and Chloe starts out slow and then builds a lot of heat pretty quickly. Emotionally, it’s a sweet roller-coaster ride. Chloe is naturally reluctant to get emotionally involved, but Chase is hooked from the beginning. Their push-pull is well-done.

The family is terrific! Chloe at the Sullivan family dinner brought out all the family dynamics and made me eager to find out what happens to everyone else. (I admit I really want to see the librarian daughter get a fantastic HEA!) But brother Marcus is suffering at the moment, so I hope his story resolves soon. The sibling banter was loads of fun. This is a tremendously likeable family and it will be great to read each story and keep up with everyone as their lives unfold.

From this moment on by bella andreBut I’m glad From This Moment On is Marcus’ story. From the backstory of the family, he’s suffered long enough!

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: The Original 1982 by Lori Carson

The Original 1982 by Lori CarsonFormat read: ebook provided by the author
Formats available: ebook, paperback
Genre: Women’s fiction
Length: 243 pages
Publisher: William Morrow Paperbacks
Date Released: May 28, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

It’s 1982, and Lisa is a 24-year-old waitress in New York City, an aspiring singer/songwriter, and girlfriend to a famous musician. That year, she makes a decision, almost without thinking about it.

But what if what if her decision had been different?

In a new 1982, Lisa chooses differently. Her career takes another direction. She becomes a mother. She loves differently—yet some things remain the same.

Alternating between two very different possibilities, The Original 1982 is a novel about how the choices we make affect the people we become—and about how the people we are affect the choices we make.

My Review:

If things were different, everything would be different. In Terry Pratchett’s Discworld, it’s called the other leg of the trousers of time.

If you could choose one decision in your life, and go down the other path, what would you do?

Telling this version of her story, Lisa chooses differently. In her alternate version of 1982, she chooses to become a single mother to her baby, instead of having an abortion. In the other 1982, Lisa has the little girl she names Minnow, instead of a semi-celebrated musical career.

In neither version of her life does she have a happily ever after with Minnow’s father, a slightly older and somewhat more famous Latin-American singer. Gabriel Luna wasn’t capable of making a family, or even being faithful. In the original 1982, he was simply the first of several addictions. In the Minnow-future, Lisa did a better job of leaving him behind sooner, if only for the sake of her daughter.

But what this story does is imagine, not just one simple change, but how that one instant affects an entire life. Lisa has a child instead of an abortion. With Minnow in her life, every single thing that happens after is altered, and so is every person who walks part of her journey with her.

She continues as a waitress instead of making a career on the road as a singer-songwriter. The people who would have been her bandmates forge their careers with other bands. But the music is part of her soul. It sometimes takes a backseat to making a living, motherhood, or simple exhaustion. But she never gives up.

In the end, she is still a singer-songwriter, but it all happens differently. And she has Minnow. It might have been. But it didn’t.

Escape Rating B+: One of my favorite poems is Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken”. The Original 1982 is Lisa’s re-imagining her whole life as that road. Reaching mid-life, we all struggle with these kinds of questions, wondering what would have happened if we’d taken the other fork at too many important bends in the road, dealing with regrets about what might have been.

Instead Lisa writes them out as a story for herself, and for her niece, comparing her two lives. She doesn’t pull too many punches. She doesn’t think that her life would have been easier if she’d chosen to keep Minnow, only that it would have been vastly different.

It’s telling that in neither future does she get the guy. He’s not the dream. Her daughter was the dream.

Because this book was written by Lori Carson of the Golden Palominos, there’s a meta question about how much of the story is autobiographical. It reminded me of Carly Simon’s famous song, “You’re So Vain”, and the persistent rumor that the subject was Warren Beatty. Or Mick Jagger.

I wonder who Gabriel Luna was in Lori Carson’s life. If there was such a person, or persons.

But we’ve all faced choices where we wonder what might have happened if we’d picked the other road. This story, this other 1982, makes you stop and think about those choices.

If you knew then what you know now, what would you do? The problem is, you never know then what you know now. We choose, we live the lives that stem from that choice. No going back, except through works of imagination. But those other lives, they haunt us just the same.

TLC
This post is part of a TLC book tour. Click on the logo for more reviews.
***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

The Sunday Post AKA What’s On My (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 6-16-13

Sunday Post

If you ever have the chance to go to a live performance of Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion, go! It’s a load of fun. Yesterday was our second time, and it was just as much fun, although entirely different. The show was being broadcast as we were listening, so it was strange but neat hearing the NPR intro kind of while being inside it.

Winner Announcements:

Gaming for Keeps Blog TourThe winner of the copy of Big Sky Summer by Linda Lael Miller is Natasha D.
The winner of the copy of Gaming for Keeps by Seleste deLaney is Erin F.
The winners of the 3 copies of Jack Absolute by C.C. Humphreys are Sam S, Justin M. and Shelley S.

 

A Beautiful Heist by Kim Foster

Current Giveaways:

A Beautiful Heist by Kim Foster (ebook, INT)
$5 Gift card (Reading Reality giveaway) 3 $100 Gift Cards and Signed set of all 3 Hearts of Anemoi books from Laura Kaye (Tourwide giveaway) Both INT
SEAL of Honor swag plus character named after them in Tonya Burrows future book (Tourwide giveaway)

Blog Recap:

Heart of Obsidian by Nalini SinghB Review: Against the Wind by Regan Walker
B Review: A Beautiful Heist by Kim Foster
Guest Post by Author Kim Foster on the Irrestible Appeal of a Good Heist + Giveaway
A- Review: Heart of Obsidian by Nalini Singh
B Review: South of Surrender by Laura Kaye
Guest Post by Author Laura Kaye on Contemplating Zombies — The Walking Dead + Giveaway
B- Review: SEAL of Honor by Tonya Burrows
Guest Post: Author Tonya Burrows on Alpha Heroes + Giveaway
Stacking the Shelves (48)

 

SFR Brigade Midsummer Blog HopComing Up This Week:

The Original 1982 by Lori Carson (blog tour review)
The Look of Love by Bella Andre (blog tour review)
Flirting with Disaster by Ruthie Knox (review)
The Cursed by Alyssa Day (review)
The 2nd Annual SFR Brigade Mid-Summer Blog Hop!!!!!

What are doing with these fantastic long days of summer?

 

Stacking the Shelves (48)

Stacking the Shelves

I don’t say this often enough, but the Stacking the Shelves meme is hosted by Tynga’s Reviews as a way of sharing the enthusiasm about new books that were just received but that a blogger might or might not review for a bit.

This week I didn’t get too many books (for a change) and a couple of them aren’t coming out until September or October. (Hey, wait a minute, summer is just starting!)

Stacking the Shelves Reading Reality June 15 2013

For Review:
The Arrangement by Mary Balogh
The Broken Rules of Ten (Tenzing Norbu #0.5) by Gay Hendricks and Tinker Lindsay
Down and Out in Beverly Heels by Kathryn Leigh Scott
Making It Last (Camelot #4) by Ruthie Knox
Treecat Wars (Stephanie Harrington #3) by David Weber and Jane M. Lindskold

 

Guest Post: Author Tonya Burrows on Alpha Heroes + Giveaway

My guest today is Tonya Burrows, the author of the new romantic suspense/military romance SEAL of Honor (review here). Since the hostage rescue team in her new HORNET series features a whole bunch of guys trying to figure out who is the alpha-est, it’s terrific that she’s going to tell us all about her own “Alpha Tolerance Level”. Take it away Tonya!

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Alpha Heroes by Tonya Burrows

I love me an alpha male in my romances, but the recent trend of super dominant and controlling heroes got me wondering how much alpha is too much? Where do you draw the line between charmingly alpha and a-hole?

For me, my alpha tolerance level depends on three things:

  1. Genre. I’m much more open to an uber-dominant hero in a paranormal than in a contemporary or romantic suspense.
  2. Motivation. If the hero starts to tell the heroine how or where to fulfill any of her basic needs such as eating, sleeping, living or working, that’s too much. More slavery than romance. And if I come across a hero doing any of that in a book, he better have a damn good reason behind his dominance—e.g. an FBI agent trying to protect the heroine because if she doesn’t do exactly what he says, the baddies will get her. If he’s dominating the heroine just because he can or because he wants to, that doesn’t work for me.
  3. The heroine. If she submissively goes along with him as he orders her around, I’ll probably throw the book against a wall. I like heroines with spine that will stand up to the hero when he crosses the line and tell him exactly what he can do with his alpha-ness.
    Honestly, in my new release, SEAL of Honor, Gabe skates close to my alpha limit. As a Navy SEAL Lieutenant Commander, he expects people to just fall in line and follow him without question—so of course I had to throw him into a life-or-death situation with a team that doesn’t follow orders and a heroine who won’t stand for his bossiness.

What can I say? I’m mean like that.

Do you like Alpha heroes? How much alpha is too much for you?

Tonya BurrowsAbout Tonya BurrowsWriting has always been my one true love. I wrote my first novel-length story in 8th grade and haven’t stopped since. I received a B.A. in creative writing from SUNY Oswego and I’m now working on a MFA in popular fiction at Seton Hill University.

When I’m not writing, I spend my time reading, painting (badly), exploring new places, and enjoying time with my family. Give me a good horror movie over a chick flick any day. (And, let’s be honest, I’ll take a bad horror movie too!) I’m a geek at heart and pledge my avid TV fandom to Supernatural and Doctor Who. I’m also a big fan of The Voice. What can I say? Guilty pleasure.​​

I share my life with two dogs and a ginormous cat. We live in a small town in PA, but I suffer from a bad case of wanderlust and usually end up moving someplace new every few years. Luckily, my animals are all excellent travel buddies.

To learn more about Tonya, visit her website or follow her on
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One lucky winner will receive a signed copy of SEAL of Honor, swag, and will even have a character in one of Tonya’s future releases named after them! For a chance to win, use this Rafflecopter:

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