Review: The Newcomer by Robyn Carr

Thew Newcomer by Robyn CarrFormat read: ebook provided by NetGalley
Formats available: ebook, hardcover, paperback, audiobook
Genre: Contemporary romance
Series: Thunder Point, #2
Length: 364 pages
Publisher: Harlequin MIRA
Date Released: June 25, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Single dad and Thunder Point’s deputy sheriff “Mac” McCain has worked hard to keep his town safe and his daughter happy. Now he’s found his own happines with Gina James. The longtime friends have always shared the challenges and rewards of raising their adolescent daughters. With an unexpected romance growing between them, they’re feeling like teenagers themselves-suddenly they can’t get enough of one another.

And just when things are really taking off, their lives are suddenly thrown into chaos. When Mac’s long-lost ex-wife shows up in town, drama takes on a whole new meaning. Mac and Gina know they’re meant to be together, but can their newfound love withstand the pressure?

My Review:

In the first Thunder Point book, the “wanderer” of the title (see review) was definitely Hank Cooper. I’m not quite sure exactly who the titular “newcomer” is in this second book of the series, and I really don’t care; I was glad of the chance to visit Thunder Point again.

This is looking like one of those series where you fall in love with the town. Fine by me.

The story of The Newcomer is a direct continuation of The Wanderer, following the same two adult couples, Hank Cooper and Sarah Dupre, who both came to Thunder Point from someplace very else, and Gina James and Mac McCain, who have been in Thunder Point for years, and only came from nearby Coquille.

Their stories are so intertwined, it’s a little hard to tell where one leaves off and the other begins. But, for me it worked like this; in the first book, both couples figure out that they belong together, even though they reach that point from entirely different routes, and face completely different challenges.

In this second story, both couples are tested by outside forces, and have to figure out whether what they have found can withstand some pretty tough circumstances. In both cases, part of that test has to do with major life incidents rising out of the past and jumping up to bite, but there is an element of learning to compromise and communicate in there as well.

There is definitely an added element to the story that all the adults are single parents, and how much they factor their children’s adjustments and happiness into the equation.

Every one of the adults in this story doesn’t just have someone in their past, but they have someone with whom they have unfinished business. It all comes out at the same time, making this story more of a family drama than the regularly expected romance.

This is one family (maybe that’s a whole bunch of families) where you root for everyone to figure out the mess and reach for their happy ending, no matter how crazy things get along the way.

Escape Rating B+: The Thunder Point series is one where is just so much fun to see how everyone is doing and where things are going next. I loved going back to this town.

The Wanderer By Robyn CarThe Newcomer reads like a direct sequel to The Wanderer; the story doesn’t make sense without reading the first book, but that’s okay. The first book was good, too. The Newcomer is reads like the second crisis in both couple’s stories so that they earn their HEA.

Along with more than a bit of teenage angst concerning Mac and Gina’s daughters, both of whom have crises in their love lives in the middle of the parental drama. This isn’t just angsty but adds to the drama AND definitely makes for a big character arc for two of the teens. I don’t normally like teen angst but this time it enhanced the story quite a bit.

All the point-of-view characters in this story are likeable, you want to find out what’s going on with them, and you want them to get their HEA.

One of the most fun characters in the series so far is Mac’s Aunt Lou. She’s snarky and doesn’t suffer fools. She’s someone you want to sit down with for coffee…or a whole bottle of wine.

The Hero by Robyn CarrNow that Sarah and Hank and Mac and Gina have finally resolved their issues, the next book moves on to someone who was introduced from Hank’s past. I’m looking forward to more happiness in Thunder Point.

***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.

Guest Post: A Day in the Life of Kathryn Leigh Scott

Today I’m very happy to welcome Kathryn Leigh Scott, who recently published Down and Out in Beverly Heels (see my review here). Kathryn not only starred in one of my favorite shows, the classic Dark Shadows, but she also had a very memorable guest appearance on Star Trek Next Gen in the episode Who Watches the Watchers.  Down and Out in Beverly Heels (great title and lovely story) is a combination cozy mystery, women’s fiction novel with just a touch of romantic suspense.

Down and Out Tour Banner

A Day in the Life of Kathryn Leigh Scott

I rise early and my day always begins with a cup of English tea (P & G Tips) and a walk in my garden. I grew up a farm girl and remember my dad walking out the kitchen door in the morning with a cup of coffee to look out across the fields before starting the day.

My work as a writer is so much like farming was for my dad: sowing seed, cultivating through the long, hot growing season, harvesting and then going to market. My dad would stand on the kitchen steps drinking coffee, planning his day, just as I walk through my garden sipping tea and formulating the turns my story will take.

I’m usually at my desk around 7 am with my second cup of tea reading over my pages from the day before. I find it hard to continue unless I’m satisfied with the writing. I edit and rework before moving on to the day’s fresh output. I work from a synopsis and an outline, but I find that by chapter 6 or 7, the characters are guiding the story. I keep them in check, but still give them a lot of freedom. Somehow, everything usually ends much the way I conceived it.

I write seven days a week with a goal of 1000 words a day. There are times when it’s a struggle and I just can’t meet my goal… so I stop and give myself a break. After all, there were days on the farm when we had to stop work because of bad weather, but the sun always came out again. I’m usually finished by early afternoon when I either swim or take a long walk.

I love to cook and garden, and that’s what I turn to when my work is done. I love having friends for dinner, and flowers on the table are just as important to me as the meal. I absolutely cannot write after the sun goes down unless I’m at the tail end of my book… then I could write until dawn!

Kathryn Leigh ScottAbout Kathryn Leigh ScottKathryn Leigh Scott is an actress, probably best known for creating the roles of Josette DuPres and Maggie Evans, the love interests of vampire Barnabas Collins in the cult classic TV show “Dark Shadows.” Down and Out in Beverly Heels is her second work of fiction. Scott wrote Dark Passages, a paranormal romance, with more than a passing nod to the ‘60s soap and she appeared in the Johnny Depp/Tim Burton film Dark Shadows last year.

Scott is currently at work on a sequel to Down and Out in Beverly Heels.

To learn more about Kathyrn, please visit her website or connect with her on Facebook and Twitter.

Review: Down and Out in Beverly Heels by Kathryn Leigh Scott

Down and Out in Beverly Heels by Kathryn Leigh ScottFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher
Formats available: ebook, paperback, audiobook
Genre: Cozy Mystery, Women’s fiction
Length: 330 pages
Publisher: Montlake Romance
Date Released: March 26, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Book Depository

From brunch in Bel Air to homeless in Hollywood…

Former actress Meg Barnes used to have it all: tony Beverly Hills address, Amex Black card, Manolos for every day of the month. Not to mention a career as a popular TV detective that made her glittering life possible. But her lifestyle of the rich and famous has turned into a reality show for d-listed starlets. Lost in her Louboutins, she has one man to thank: her con man of a husband.

Handsome FBI agent Jack Mitchell knows a suspect when he sees one—even if she’s as beautiful and gutsy as Meg. Meg’s ex “made off” with half of Hollywood’s wealth in an epic real estate scam. And Jack thinks Meg may have been involved.

Determined to prove her innocence Meg teams up with her quirky, movie-mad best friend to track down her fugitive husband and exact justice. But getting her life, and her career, back on track is harder than auditioning for Spielberg. Especially when her life is threatened. Meg has to trust Jack, the man who may want her behind bars…or as his leading lady for life.

My Review:

Kathryn Leigh Scott on Dark ShadowsI picked this book because I watched Dark Shadows, even though I knew there wouldn’t be anything about vampires in Down and Out in Beverly Heels, because Kathryn Leigh Scott was part of the cast of my long ago favorite. The “what happens after” connection was enough to make me curious, and I’m glad it did.

Meg Barnes is an “actress of a certain age’ who is so far below barely scraping by in Hollywood that she is living in her classic Volvo. She had one terrific hit TV series, and still gets residuals from lots of shows she did, but her con man husband ran a real estate scheme that seems to have put Bernie Madoff to shame and left her holding the bag, and the blame.

The Volvo, and those residual checks, are all she has left. Too many people think that she knows where “Paul the scumbag” went with everyone’s money or that she was in on his shady deals. Meg doesn’t know anything, and she wasn’t in on it. She lost everything but her pride.

She ran away for a year, but now she’s back. And that’s where the fun begins. Because Meg’s back in Hollywood, where all her husband’s victims are, she starts getting threatening notes on her Volvo. She’s followed. And, of course, everyone whispers about the scandal.

She can’t even divorce the bastard, because he’s never been found. He’s presumed dead, but there’s no body. Not his body. Other bodies, people he knew, start turning up.

The FBI is back on the case. But Meg isn’t sure whether the lead FBI agent, Jack Mitchell, wants to investigate her or date her. She’s not quite sure what she wants to do about him, either.

One thing Meg is certain of, this time she isn’t running away. The more threats she gets, and the more times she gets told to back off, the more determined she is to find out what is really going on.

Meg Barnes wants her life back. No matter who, and how hard, she has to fight for it.

Escape Rating B: Down and Out in Beverly Heels is a solidly fun mystery with a lovely helping of a women’s friendship story in the mix.

Meg’s history in Hollywood was nostalgic and entertaining. The way she described the character in her old TV show, I kept visualizing her as Stephanie Powers in Hart to Hart, even though her Jinx character was a magician’s assistant. The image worked for me. I also just plain liked her memories of “Old Hollywood”.

As a character, Meg grows from sort of a wimp to a take-charge can-do person. She does take risks she shouldn’t, but she goes from scared rabbit to finally living her own life. It’s a good character arc and makes her story worth following. Her developing friendship with Donna is great to read about, especially as Donna also grows and comes out of her shell. They help each other!

The mystery had trawlers full of red herrings. Although it was kind of easy to guess that the bastard-hubby wasn’t dead, exactly how he wasn’t dead and why definitely took some figuring. Very slippery. And he was a slime so I’m glad Meg solved her life.

One of the things that made the story better was that the “good guy” the FBI agent, did not save the day. Meg solved her own problems in the end. Heading on the road toward a happily ever after is the reward for a job well done, but the guy doesn’t rescue her, she rescues herself with a little help from a true friend.

Down and Out Tour Banner

***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: Conspiracy by Lindsay Buroker

Conspiracy by Lindsay BurokerFormat read: ebook purchased from the author
Formats available: ebook, paperback
Genre: Fantasy, Steampunk
Series: The Emperor’s Edge, #4
Length: 359 pages
Publisher: Self-published
Date Released: April 25, 2012
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

When you’re an outlaw hoping for a pardon, and the emperor personally sends a note requesting that your team kidnap him, you make plans to comply…

Even if it’ll involve infiltrating a train full of soldiers, bodyguards, and spies loyal to a nefarious business coalition that has numerous reasons to hate you.

Even if it means leaving the city right after you’ve uncovered a secret weapons shipment that might be meant to start a war.

Even if it’s a trap…

My Review:

The Emperor’s Edge books are my current “book treats”. I read one when I get ahead in my reviews because Buroker’s combination of fantasy and steampunk is always delicious. There’s something particularly appealing about the team-building aspects of the story, as this rag-tag group shifts and constantly snarls at one another but still somehow manages to make a cohesive (okay, semi-cohesive) unit. That her hero is an unrepentant assassin reminds me of the best anti-heroes of fantasy, the series reads like excellent sword-and-sorcery, only with even more snark.

Conspiracy is Akstyr’s story, at least in the parts where it isn’t Amaranthe and Sicarius’ story. It’s always Amaranthe and Sicarius’ story. Amaranthe is the person who holds the whole mess together, more or less.

In this case, and Akstyr’s case, it’s very nearly less. The kid, and he’s just 18, is their magic practitioner. Problem of the first part, the empire officially does not believe magic exists. Problem of the second part, anyone found practicing magic gets killed. Leading to problem of the third part, Akstyr is self-taught, and really wants to leave the empire for someplace where he can learn how to use his powers.

The poor fool thinks he can fake betraying Sicarius in order to pick up enough of the reward on that head. Sicarius is the best assassin in the world. No one will touch that reward. Instead they betray Akstyr to Sicarius. His own long-lost mother turns up and betrays Akstyr for the reward on his head. The kid is having that kind of life.

Meanwhile, there’s a much bigger conspiracy going on. The emperor, in a very roundabout sort of way, requested that Amaranthe and her gang kidnap him from the mercantile warlords who are holding him prisoner in his own palace. It’s a tough job, but Amaranthe and company can just about manage it, using an airship to steal the emperor away from a moving train.

But while they’re conspiring to kidnap their willing victim, there seem to be at least three sets of dastardly villains on their way to murder or capture them, or the emperor, or both.

How many traps are involved? Who wants whom, and what is the big, black, scary airship looking for?

Escape Rating A: Conspiracy gets off to a fast start, and never lets up. A lot of the action takes place as the group tries to take over a moving train, and the story has the speed of a runaway locomotive. Everything happens at breakneck speed and under the gun (several guns). The pressure is constantly building.

Akstyr figures out who he wants to be in this story. He’s been drifting along with the group, while trying to pretend he’s not really part of it. In Conspiracy, he half-attempts one purposeful betrayal, and accidentally succeeds at another. But he learns what his place is, and shows real growth as a character.

Watching the dance between Sicarius and Amaranthe is always fascinating. It’s one step forward and half a step to the side in a lot of ways. They both want a future, but he doesn’t know how to be anything but an assassin and she knows he’s a loaded weapon. But they can’t help caring for each other, even though he doesn’t quite understand what that means for real people.

Blood and Betrayal by Lindsay BurokerConspiracy ended in an “out of the frying pan into the fire” type cliffhanger. The situation was not resolved and there is no let up in the tension whatsoever. I can’t wait to see where Blood and Betrayal takes our heroes 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: Bronze Gods by A.A. Aguirre

Bronze Gods by A.A. AguirreFormat read: print book borrowed from the Library
Formats available: ebook, mass market paperback
Genre: Steampunk fantasy
Series: Apparatus Infernum, #1
Length: 336 pages
Publisher: Ace
Date Released: April 30, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Danger stalks the city of steam and shadows.

Janus Mikani and Celeste Ritsuko work all hours in the Criminal Investigation Division, keeping citizens safe. He’s a charming rogue with an uncanny sixth sense; she’s all logic–and the first female inspector. Between his instincts and her brains, they collar more criminals than any other partnership in the CID.

Then they’re assigned a potentially volatile case where one misstep could end their careers. At first, the search for a missing heiress seems straightforward, but when the girl is found murdered–her body charred to cinders–Mikani and Ritsuko’s modus operandi will be challenged as never before. Before long, it’s clear the bogeyman has stepped out of nightmares to stalk gaslit streets, and it’s up to them to hunt him down. There’s a madman on the loose, weaving blood and magic in an intricate, lethal ritual that could mean the end of everything…

My Review:

Cops, machinery, and old fey magic make for a stunning combination in this first story in A.A. Aguirre’s Apparatus Infernum series.

When someone says “Bronze Gods”, it’s a curse. Mikani and Ritsuko, well, Mikani anyway, say it rather a lot in the course of the investigations that make up this story. They have a lot to curse about, and not just because they’re detective partners on the night shift at the Criminal Investigation Division.

Janus Mikani does too much of his investigation by magic for it be comfortable. Literally. When he opens himself up to the energies in a crime scene, he leaves with plenty of evidence, but also a killer migraine and bleeding from some orifice. Celeste Ritsuko sifts the tangible evidence, and deals with the details and the witnesses Mikani pisses off.

Mikani occasionally roughs up any detectives who believe that women like Ritsuko don’t belong in the CID. Their partnership works pretty well. After three years, they communicate without saying a word. I don’t mean telepathy, not exactly, more the nuances of body language between two people who work together extremely well.

Then someone starts murdering young women. Women from upper-class families who have chosen to step outside their family protection and family compounds for a little freedom. Women who are breaking pattern just a bit, but nothing wild or criminal. Women with very influential families.

They are being murdered by means of incredibly complicated ritualistic magic. The questions are legion. Why these particular women? What connects them? What does the murderer hope to gain?

And can Mikani and Ritsuko catch the killer before he claims another victim? And before he completes whatever and wherever his infernal devices and desires are leading?

Escape Rating A: There were layers within layers within layers, and every single one was necessary to make this magical steampunk clockwork run. It is a grimly beautiful piece of worldbuilding.

Dorstaad’s ancient backstory is glimpsed in the prologue, and that depth is important. It also invokes a marvelous piece of myth. Hy Breasil is from Irish folklore, so we feel this place is familiar, even as the story moves to the more contemporary setting. We know in our hearts who the Ferisher and the Iron Folk will be, even if we don’t know where this story will take us.

Dorstaad is a world where big magic has been made to go away, although some people still have enough Ferisher in them to be able to do some smaller magic. Magic, and magical people, are fading.

On top of that, we have machinery. Guns and gears and trams and trains. As the magic fades, steampower is taking over. But the rich still have elementals to perform magical tasks.

And in the middle of it all, we have the story of a partnership. Two cops needing to solve a terrible crime. Mikani and Ritsuko are utterly fascinating. She’s the one who is by-the-book, because she’s living in a time/place where a woman has to be twice as good as a man to be thought his equal. Mikani does it all by his sixth-sense. A part of that sense tells him he needs Ritsuko in his life. Her cop instincts tell her she needs him in hers, but that she’ll keep him there a lot longer if she makes sure their relationship stays on the work side of the line.

But they aren’t complete without each other, and they are at their best together. They have to be their best to catch this killer, because he is way more than human. And also much less.

Bronze Gods was one of those books that I was sorry to see end. Like the best urban fantasy, although the case was resolved, there are loose ends, and I’m grateful. I want to read more of Mikani and Ritsuko’s adventures. There are definitely more stories to tell.

***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 7-7-13

Sunday PostDorothy from Wizard of OzDorothy was right. There’s no place like home. In spite of my vacation being over and having to go back to work in the morning, there is still no place like home.

Or, as my husband said, “Home is where the cats are.” The cats are here in Seattle, and they missed us. They tried to pretend otherwise, but it didn’t last very long. We missed them too!

But I’m not sorry we were in Chicago for a chilly snap while Seatttle was having a rare heat wave.

Now let’s heat up the weekly recaps and previews, shall we?

Winner Announcements:

The winner of the ebook copy of Along the Watchtower by David Litwack is Shelley S.

The winner of the Doctor Who book giveaway is Lauren B. Lauren needs to let me know whether she will be receiving a copy of the Ten Little Aliens, Festival of Death, or the encyclopedic Who-ology.

Garden of Stones by Mark T BarnesBlog Recap:

B+ Review: Along the Watchtower by David Litwack
Guest Post by Author David Litwack on The virtual world of gaming and the plight of war veterans + giveaway
A Review: The Garden of Stones by Mark T. Barnes
B Review: A Night to Surrender by Tessa Dare
July 4 2013
B- Review: The Dragon Healer by Bianca D’Arc
Stacking the Shelves (50)

Coming Up This Week:

Bronze Gods by A.A. AguirreBronze Gods by A.A. Aguirre (review)
Conspiracy by Lindsay Buroker (review)
Down and Out in Beverly Heels (blog tour review and author guest post)
The Newcomer by Robyn Carr (blog tour review and giveaway)
A Dangerous Liaison with Detective Lewis by Jillian Stone (review)
Apocalypse Blog Hop

Don’t forget the Apocalypse Blog Hop starts next Saturday, July 13. Unless the end of the world comes first!

Apocalypse Blog hop

Stacking the Shelves (50)

Stacking the Shelves

At the ALA Conference, I restrained myself. Even more than I usually do. After my surgery, I really wasn’t supposed to be carrying anything, and it just didn’t seem fair to make Galen tote around loads of books for me. So I tried to be good.

Dust and Shadow by Lyndsay FayeOn the other hand, I loved Lyndsay Faye’s Dust and Shadow so much that when I saw her signing books I jumped into the line, even though I was pretty sure I had a copy of The Gods of Gotham lying around someplace and I had just gotten Seven for a Secret from NetGalley. I wanted a chance to tell her that I’m still recommending Dust and Shadow (Sherlock Holmes investigates Jack the Ripper!) to anyone who will listen.

And the fall books are starting to show up on NetGalley and Edelweiss. I’m afraid. I’m very afraid.

Stacking the Shelves July 6 2013 Reading Reality

For Review:
Behind the Shattered Glass (Lady Emily #8) by Tasha Alexander
The Best of Daughters by Dilly Court
Big Sky Wedding (Parable, Montana #5) by Linda Lael Miller
Black Dog Blues (Kai Gracen #1) by Rhys Ford
Blood Warrior (Dragon Kings #2) by Lindsey Piper
Breaking (Escorted #1.5) by Claire Kent
Cast in Sorrow (Chronicles of Elantra #9) by Michelle Sagara
Charming (Pax Arcana #1) by Elliott James
Happy Hour in Hell (Bobby Dollar #2) by Tad Williams
Heart of Briar (Portals #1) by Laura Anne Gilman
The Hero (Thunder Point #3) by Robyn Carr
Kiss the Night Goodbye (Nikki & Michael #4) by Keri Arthur
Love Overdue by Pamela Morsi
My Big Fat Demon Slayer Wedding (Demon Slayer #5) by Angie Fox
The Republic of Thieves (Gentleman Bastard #3) by Scott Lynch
Seven for a Secret (Timothy Wilde #2) by Lyndsay Faye
Shadow of the Alchemist (Crispin Guest #5) by Jeri Westerson
Slow Summer Burn (Star Harbor #4) by Elisabeth Barrett
The Stranger You Know (Forensic Instincts #3) by Andrea Kane
A Study in Darkness (Baskerville Affair #2) by Emma Jane Holloway
Touch Me (Underbelly Chronicles #2.5) by Tamara Hogan
Troll-y Yours (Centaurs #2) by Sheri Fredricks

Purchased:
Tales from the SFR Brigade edited by JC Cassels (free from Smashwords)
Uncharted (On the Island #1.5) by Tracey Garvis-Graves

Picked up at the ALA Conference:
The Gods of Gotham (Timothy Wilde #1) by Lyndsay Faye (signed by the author)
Hawkwood (Matthew Hawkwood #1) by James McGee
The Rune Stone Murders by Mary Welk (signed by the author)
Seven for a Secret (Timothy Wilde #2) by Lyndsay Faye (signed by the author)

Review: The Dragon Healer by Bianca D’Arc

Dragon Healer by Bianca D'ArcFormat read:  ebook provided by the publisher
Formats available: ebook
Genre: Fantasy romance
Series: Dragon Knights #1.5
Length: 63 pages
Publisher: Samhain Publishing
Date Released: July 2, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble

What’s better than a knight sweeping you off your feet? Two knights.

Silla is a healer riding circuit on the border, helping those in need. When she hears the pained cries of a dragon in distress, she comes to his aid, using most of her precious supplies to help the badly injured creature.

The dragon’s knight, Brodie, is fascinated by the woman – the miracle worker – who has come to help his friend. She is both beautiful and kind hearted and he quickly realizes she is his destined mate. And if she is Brodie’s mate, she is Geoff’s as well, for Brodie’s dragon was mated to Geoff’s dragon many years ago.

Geoff doesn’t believe in the tales of love at first sight among knights, but he knows that when either he or Brodie finds a wife, they will share her. Hearing about the dragon’s injury, Geoff and his dragon race to help, only to find the dragon on the mend and Brodie in bed with the most stunning woman Geoff has ever seen.

Love at first sight turns out to be real and it strikes them all as they come together and realize that no matter what the obstacles, they are meant to be together. Silla is the missing link that will join their lives and make them a true Lair family.

My Review:

Silla is a journeyman healer. Her life is on the road. She hopes that in another five years she will have accumulated enough experience credit with the healer’s guild to allow her to return to the city to practice her craft in a little more comfort than the wagon she currently drives around the countryside.

Fate has other plans.

At her next stop, she finds herself treating an injured dragon instead of her more usual human patient. It doesn’t matter to her, the dragon needs healing and she is a healer. She works through the night, using up most of her supply of healing herbs, to bring ease to the wounded creature. Working with her is the dragon’s knight, Brodie, helping her at every step to save his companion.

As they strive together, Brodie becomes certain that Silla is his destined mate. She is not only healing his friend, she is talking with him, soothing him. That mind-talk is the sign of a woman who is born to be part of a lair.

Silla may be more than willing to heal the dragon, but she doesn’t trust Brodie, or any other man. She’s been down that road before, and it only ended in pain. But after a night working beside him, watching him with the dragon, she feels like she deserves something for herself, just once.

Once the dragon is out of danger, Silla and Brodie spend what remains of the night together. And wake to find another man in the room.

Geoff is the knight to Brodie’s dragon Phelan’s mate. If Brodie has found a mate, then their dragons can mate again. Only the dragons of mated knights can mate. Brodie and Geoff’s dragons have been waiting for decades.

But Silla, who thought to indulge herself for a night and then be on her way, is suddenly faced with the choice of lifetime. Should she leave her life behind and go with Brodie and Geoff to the lair? Can she trust them? Can she love them? Can they love her? Should she try?

Can she make a better life for herself this time?

Maiden Flight by Bianca D'ArcEscape Rating B-: This story was more of a single piece than Maiden Flight, but it was very short. Also, I was disappointed because I wanted the next story to be Adora and Jaden’s story and this wasn’t. (That story turned out to be in Border Lair reviewed here.)

I liked Silla better than Belora in Maiden Flight (see review for details). She was more in control of her own life. She’d initially made a bad choice, but after a lot of hard times, had dusted herself and made a new life for herself. It made it difficult for her to trust Brodie or her own decisions about men, but that wasn’t unreasonable under the circumstances.

However, because Silla was so distrusting of men, it was kind of surprising that she would be willing to change so easily from a completely celibate life to a menage. Brodie was her first foray back into sexuality in a very long time. While it was much more successful (and hot!) than anything in her previous experience, she accepts the drastic change in her life incredibly easily.

 

***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: An Affair with Mr. Kennedy by Jillian Stone

An Affair with Mr. Kennedy by Jillian StoneFormat read: ebook purchased from Amazon
Series: The Gentlemen of Scotland Yard, #1
Genre: Historical Romance
Release Date: Jan. 31, 2012
Number of pages: 400 pages
Publisher: Pocket Books
Formats available: ebook, mass market paperback
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website | Goodreads | Amazon | B&N | Kobo | Book Depository US | Book Depository (UK) | Publisher’s Website

London, 1887. Part stoic gentleman, part fearless Scotland Yard man, Zeno “Zak” Kennedy is an enigma of the first order. For years, the memory of a deadly bombing at King’s Cross has haunted the brilliant Scotland Yard detective. His investigation has zeroed in on a ring of aristocratic rebels whose bloody campaign for Irish revolution is terrorizing the city. When he discovers one of the treacherous lords is acquainted with his free-spirited new tenant, Cassandra St. Cloud, his inquiry pulled him unexpectedly close to the hear of the conspiracy — and into the arms of a most intriguing lady.

Cassie is no Victorian prude. An impressionist painter with very modern ideas about life and love, she is eager for a romantic escapade that is daring and discreet. She sets her sights on her dour but handsome landlord, but after she learns their meeting was not purely accidental, she hardly has a chance to forgive her lover before their passionate affair catapults them both into a perilous adventure.

My Thoughts:

Somewhere in my apartment there’s a print ARC of this book. That’s not the copy I read.

Miss Education of Dr Exeter by Jillian StoneI finished Ms. Stone’s Miss Education of Dr. Exeter, and wasn’t quite ready to let go of the author. Because that particular entry in her paranormal/steampunk Phaeton Black series clung somewhat more closely to the definitely romantic than earlier entries in the series, I wanted to see what she did with something less eerie and more strictly gaslight-Victorian, and remembered The Gentlemen of Scotland Yard.

Enter Mr. Kennedy, and the copy fortuitously on my Kindle app.

The fascinating thing about the The Gentlemen of Scotland Yard series in general is that Ms. Stone is featuring an agency that presages James Bond and his famous license to kill. The men of Mr. Kennedy’s Special Branch hunt for bombers, traitors, spies and agents provocateurs. Because of the era they live in, the agents in this particular story are fomenting both sides of the Irish Home Rule issue. With incendiary, or shall we say  explosive, results.

Mr. Kennedy himself, Zeno Augustus Kennedy, Zak to his friends, is the number two man in Special Branch. He is a younger son of the aristocracy, but as he has to make his own living, he’s simply chosen a somewhat unorthodox way of doing so.

His investigations of an upper-crust ring of possible Irish radicals, or maybe upper-class lords willing to take advantage of the resulting panic from Irish radicals, leads him to a beautiful artist with ties to two potential suspects. Unfortunately for Zak, once he meets Cassie St. Cloud, suspecting her of anything other than distracting him from his goals is the last thing on his mind.

Unfortunately for Cassie, she is already a pawn in the game. Involvement with Zak merely raises her position on the board from pawn to queen.

Verdict: An Affair with Mr. Kennedy is a terrific start to The Gentlemen of Scotland Yard series. It sets up the Special Branch as a whole, and provides a great introduction to the men who become the heroes of the next several books. Which I was swept into one after another.

Zak and Cassie are a great pair, because they are equals. One of the fun things about this book, and the series as a whole, is that the heroes and heroines are not dukes and earls or lords and ladies, although Cassie has a title by marriage. Everyone works, and it makes the characters, both the men and the women, easy for us readers to empathize with.

Dangerous Liaison with Detective Lewis by Jillian StoneCassie is a professional artist. She’s no lady of leisure. She has a career that is every bit as important to her (although not normally as bloody) as Zak’s. Her expertise helps him save the day. They are, in very real ways, partners.

The history blending into the story was also a hoot. Cassie has very real parallels in Mary Cassatt, and, of course, Irish Home Rule was very hotly debated during this period. The idea that there would be unscrupulous people attempting to both create chaos and take advantage of it makes too much sense.

Mixing this with the birth of criminal forensics makes things a load of fun. I’m so glad there are more in the series. (I’ll confess that I immediately dove right into the next book, A Dangerous Liaison with Detective Lewis, with barely time for breath in between.)

4-Stars

I give  An Affair with Mr. Kennedy by Jillian Stone 4 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.

July 4 2013

Fireworks Over San Diego
Fireworks Over San Diego, July 4
Fireworks over London!
Fireworks over London

Happy Fourth of July! The photo on top is from San Diego, and it is, appropriately a Fourth of July picture from Wikipedia. The pic on the bottom, irony of ironies, is from the losing side of the American Revolution. A Wikipedia picture of fireworks in London with the London Eye in the background. Still beautiful.

Go out an have a blast!