Q&A from Author Susan Mallery + Giveaway

Today I’d like to welcome Susan Mallery, who recently published the 15th novel in her Fool’s Gold series, Until We Touch (reviewed here). Please enjoy this Q&A:

UntilWeTouch_BadgeFRONT

Question: In what ways do you think every woman can relate to Larissa Owens?

Larissa is a sweetie. She’s not rich; she’s working as a personal assistant and personal masseuse for Jack. She gets to go to work in yoga pants and touch sexy guys all over. (Dream job!) Until We Touch is my nod to the boss/secretary story, one of my favorite kinds of romance.

Larissa has a pure heart, and when she sees someone hurting, she doesn’t just think about helping. She does help, with whatever resources are available to her. Fortunately for her, since she’s been working for Jack, he has allowed her to use his wealth and connections in service to her causes. In fact, he likes it. With Larissa using his money to try to save the world, he can feel like a part of something without actually putting himself out there. It’s a very comfortable arrangement for them both… until Larissa’s mom tells Jack that Larissa is in love with him, and everything changes.

Question: What about Jack McGarry makes him like no leading man we’ve ever seen before in Fool’s Gold?

I think what makes people relatable—both in fiction and in life—are our imperfections and our vulnerabilities. From the outside, Jack’s life appears perfect. He’s rich, handsome, famous. He was a pro quarterback who retired on top and is now experiencing the same phenomenal success in the private sector with Score, the PR firm he co-owns.
But Jack has a secret pain that makes him protect himself from feeling too deeply, from caring too much. He lost someone dear to him when he was young, and he felt responsible. The lesson he took from that loss was that it’s safer on the surface.

Larissa works for him, so she knows he’s not a good bet when it comes to relationships. She has watched a string of temporary girlfriends come and go. She even bought the parting gifts. Despite that, despite her better judgment, she likes the man. He’s a good guy, a great friend, and he’s the sexiest man she’s ever met.

Question: If Until We Touch were made into a movie, who would you envision playing Jack and Larissa?

I’m going to go with Chris Pine with black hair and Amy Adams as a blonde. (We must keep the Hollywood hairstylists employed!) Both could handle the funny scenes and the moments of honest emotion.

Of course, one of the funniest scenes in the book would probably have to be cut in order to keep the R rating. No spoilers, but I will say that Larissa is a massage therapist, and as their feelings for each other change, new situations—ahem—arise.

Question: Larissa keeps her romantic attraction to Jack a secret at first, before her mother spills the beans. Do you think you should ever keep that secret from a friend you’re falling for, or is it better to confess your love?

In the case of Larissa, she didn’t realize she was keeping a secret… she kept her feelings a secret even from herself. Until her mother’s assertion, Larissa didn’t think she was in love with Jack. Just by saying those words, Larissa’s mom changed everything. These two friends and colleagues are suddenly thinking of each other in a whole new way. Which is inconvenient, to say the least.

As for whether someone in real life should keep her feelings for a friend secret or confess all, I’d have to say it really depends on the situation. Friendship is the best foundation for lifelong love, but not all friends-to-lovers stories end happily. I think you’d need to examine your heart and ask yourself, honestly, what is the best action for you to take.

Question: You have written well over 100 books. How do you keep developing such unique storylines and characters that keep your fans coming back for more?

It’s a challenge! The truth is, every love story is unique. We all know dozens of couples who met, fell in love, and married. The framework may be similar—first glance, first kiss, deepening feelings, declaration of love—but the nuances are different. Which means that as a writer, I need to start with the nuances and build from there. What makes these two individuals unique and uniquely suited for each other? What events in their past color their actions and emotions today? As I develop their characters, I look for aspects that put them in conflict with each other, but also for aspects that will make them a couple you can believe will make it for the long haul. The conflict has to last nearly the length of the book, but the things they have in common have to take them through the rest of their lives.

Question: What do you think is the recipe for a perfect romance novel?

A perfect romance should carry you away from your everyday world and fill you with emotions as you read. When you put down the book before you’re finished, it should call to you. Chores can wait, dinner can wait. It should be a challenge for you to turn off the light to go to sleep, even when it’s way past your bedtime. You should want to read just one more chapter, and then just one more after that, and then just one more until you’re done because you can’t bear to put it down until you know the characters are happy and in love. And when you do finish this perfect romance, you should feel happy, with a renewed feeling of faith in the power of love to overcome all obstacles.

Question: What’s next for Fool’s Gold?

Next up, Kenny and Bailey will fall in love in Yours For Christmas. Readers are in love with Kenny already, started asking for his story right away. He was introduced in When We Met, and readers could immediately sense that there are hidden depths beneath his happy-go-lucky façade. Kenny is one of Jack’s partners at Score PR. What he wants more than anything is a family, but he was burned badly by an ex. The one thing he won’t do, no matter what, is fall in love with a single mom. And then he meets Bailey…

Yours For Christmas was originally slated to be an ebook exclusive novella. However, Harlequin has decided to release it simultaneously in print on October 28. It will be printed at the back of the mass market paperback reissue of Christmas on 4th Street. Both Yours For Christmas (ebook) and Christmas on 4th Street combined with Yours For Christmas (print and ebook) are available for pre-order now.

Question: Any fun summer plans?

I’m going to soak in as much of this rare and precious Seattle sunshine as I can before the rainclouds descend again! Seattle in the summertime has to be one of the most beautiful places on the planet. I swear, there are a million shades of green, and every single one of them is on display as we walk the dog around the city.

SusanMallery_photoAbout Susan Mallery

Susan Mallery is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author who has entertained millions of readers with her witty and emotional stories about women and the relationships that define their lives. She has published more than 100 romance and women’s fiction novels beginning with two books the same month when she was just out of college. Susan has a bachelor’s degree in accounting and went on to get a master’s in writing popular fiction and has extensively studied story structure in screenwriting courses. Her goal, always, is to give readers a story that will move them, populated with characters who feel like real people. Born and raised in California, Susan now lives with her family in Seattle, where she survives the dreary days of winter with the help of a “happy lamp” and plenty of coffee.

~~~~~~GIVEAWAY~~~~~~

Susan is kindly giving away a couple of Until We Touch to one lucky winner. To enter, use the Rafflecopter below.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Review: Until We Touch by Susan Mallery

Until We Touch by Susan MalleryFormat read: paperback provided by the author
Formats available: ebook, hardcover, mass market paperback, audiobook
Genre: Contemporary romance
Series: Fool’s Gold, #15
Length: 384 pages
Publisher: Harlequin HQN
Date Released: June 24, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

After a family tragedy, former football hero Jack McGarry keeps the world at arm’s length—a challenge now that his PR firm has moved to neighborly Fool’s Gold, California.

Larissa Owens knows where she stands—Jack sees her as just another one of the guys. No matter what her heart wishes, Jack’s her boss, not her boyfriend. But then Larissa’s big secret is revealed…by her mother!

When Jack discovers the truth about Larissa’s feelings, her touch suddenly becomes tantalizing, and he’s not sure he wants to resist. But if he gives in to desire, heartache is sure to follow. Friendship or true love—will Jack go for the ultimate play?

My Review:

I’ll say upfront that I have not read the rest of the Fool’s Gold series, but I didn’t feel a bit lost. So if you’re looking at this and don’t have the time to invest in the first 14 books of the series, fear not. There is plenty of introduction to make you feel like Fool’s Gold is a terrific place to be, and that the people are ones you would want to have for dinner or out for drinks. The way that they catch up with each other gives new readers plenty of info to help you slip right into the story.

About the story…what we have here is a combination of the friends into lovers trope with a heaping helping of the assistant and the boss taking their relationship outside the office. I’m not calling it the assistant has a crush on the boss, because that’s not how this thing works.

Larissa and her boss Jack have a symbiotic relationship on pretty much every level, then her mother comes barging in and jerks the blindfold off of everyone’s eyes. And even though she’s right, I’d be mortified down to my soul (and soles) if my mom pulled a stunt like that. Although it’s what moms do.

Larissa and Jack have all the benefits of a committed relationship, but without the sex that either sends things to a higher level, or messes them up beyond repair. The problem is that this relationship provides for almost all of both of their emotional needs. Jack has other women for sex, and Larissa throws herself into her causes (tons of them) so that she keeps her life full and doesn’t even think about what she’s missing.

Her mother is right that being with Jack keeps Larissa from finding a real relationship and falling in love and getting married. (I’m not happy with mom’s stated goal and making sure that Larissa gives her more grandchildren. Having children to make someone else happy is bad for the children and the adults. My 2 cents.)

But once the blindfold is off about the way that their best-friends with everything but benefits relationship keeps them both fairly happy, Larissa and Jack both lose the ability to be “just friends”, although Larissa does a much better job managing things than Jack does.

Now that they know there might be something more between them, neither of them can stop thinking about the possibilities. And that’s where the trouble begins.

One of the things that Larissa does for Jack is get him involved with her causes, and with the community of Fool’s Gold, while letting him maintain the emotional distance he’s always had. She throws her heart over every fence, and he writes the check that takes care of the details. (Jack is a retired NFL quarterback with a successful PR firm. He can afford those checks.)

As Jack finds himself thinking about the possibility of more with Larissa, his famous distance erodes, completely. It feels as if suddenly everyone in town and in his life is after a piece of the heart he’s kept hidden. So he drives everyone away. He’s the biggest asshat he can be to everyone in his life, including Larissa.

And once he’s alone, just the way he asked, he discovers that being alone isn’t what he wants anymore. What he wants is Larissa, as close as he can get her. But did he go so far in driving her away that he can’t get her back?

Escape Rating B-: Fool’s Gold is a fantastic town to visit. I loved meeting everyone, especially Mayor Marsha. The partners at Jack’s PR firm, Taryn, Kenny and Sam, are great friends and it seems like a marvelous place to work.

220px-ChihuachshundI’m also still laughing about the rescue of the hoarded chiweenies.

Larissa and Jack’s relationship at the beginning is interesting to watch and seems totally plausible. They are friends. Best buds. They are each the person the other relies on most, and takes the most care of. Their friendship is so important to both of them, that it’s easy to understand why they wouldn’t want to risk it by adding sex into the mix.

But they can’t navigate the new territory that Larissa’s mom’s meddling has thrown them into. Larissa figures out how to handle things, but Jack doesn’t. He’s spent most of his life being afraid to be involved, because caring makes you vulnerable. Too many people that he has loved have died, and he is unwilling to risk any kind of closeness.

When everything gets too much, he withdraws and makes an ass of himself. With everyone possible and then some. I think that most readers will be cheering for his friends when they punch him. There’s a reason he doesn’t defend himself–he deserves every shot.

He wallows in self-pity.

Larissa, on the other hand, as much pain as she is in (and it’s a lot) picks herself up and moves on with her career. Her heart may not be healing, but she soldiers on, knowing that someday things will get better. She takes care of herself. I liked the way she handled things.

Jack does eventually get his head out of his ass, and apologizes profusely to everyone he has hurt. Some of those apologies work better than others, but by the end, I still wondered if Larissa couldn’t do better.

***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 or borrowed from a public library 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: Country Roads by Nancy Herkness

country roads by nancy herknessFormat read: print book provided by the author
Formats available: ebook, paperback, audiobook
Genre: Contemporary romance
Series: Whisper Horse, #2
Length: 375 pages
Publisher: Montlake Romance
Date Released: September 17, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Book Depository

When sheltered artist Julia Castillo flees her hometown, she has just one goal: to prove to her overbearing family once and for all that she can make it on her own. After she moves to Sanctuary, West Virginia, her horse paintings take the art world by storm. Yet Julia finds her courage tested as never before—by her love for a handsome country lawyer, by her bond with a dangerous black stallion, and by the secret she is so desperate to keep…

Paul Taggart abandoned his high-powered legal career to return to Sanctuary, giving up his own dreams to care for his troubled brother. But the day he rescues Julia Castillo from the side of the highway, his staid, responsible life changes forever. Irresistibly drawn to the fiery but unsophisticated beauty, Paul will do anything to protect her—even sacrifice his own happiness to guarantee hers.

My Review:

As the story opened, I thought that Julia was going to turn out to be running from the Mafia. As the story progressed, I discovered that who she is really running from is herself. And that she is searching for herself, both at the same time.

The town of Sanctuary, West Virginia turned out to be a great place for her to do both.

Julia Castillo is an artist with a secret. But mostly, she’s an artist with a serious self-confidence problem. Her early work was commercially successful, but her agent keeps telling her that her new direction, representing two years’ worth of work, is crap. Not in so many words, but then, her agent is also her uncle. Which makes his words a bit nicer, but his message twice as devastating.

Paul Taggart is a small-town lawyer and former mayor with a big idea and an even bigger family responsibility. He was on the fast-track to partner in a hot-shot Atlanta law firm, until his little brother’s self-destructive problems dragged him back home to Sanctuary for good. And for increasing levels of frustration.

There are a couple of stories built into this book. The big story is Julia’s journey to independence. She has been sheltered her entire life by a family that loves her but is scared to death that the bumps and bruises of the real world will precipitate another health scare. Their protection comes at a price; Julia is never allowed to live, and when her family stops believing in her art, she has nothing left.

The art dealer who was the first to believe in Julia has come to Sanctuary, so Julia sets out on a cross-country odyssey to find out if her work is still any good. While she sets out looking for validation, what she discovers is that she can make it on her own, outside of the cocoon her family has smothered her in.

She has barely two weeks to find out who she can be before her uncle comes to West Virginia to haul her home.

Paul Taggart isn’t sure whether her uncle is merely being protective, or whether this issue is really a fight over control of Julia’s earnings, which are surprisingly substantial. What he is sure about is that a relationship with Julia comes with an automatic expiration date. She has to return to her career, and he is stuck in Sanctuary.

It takes a lot of growing up on both their parts to figure out that neither of those assumptions is remotely true.

Escape Rating B+: This one made me think after I read it. The relationship that develops between Julia and Paul is marvelous, but the core of the story was Julia’s discovery of her real self. She had let others control her life, admittedly with the best of intentions, but once she breaks away she learns to stand on her own two feet.

The fascination was with the parallel of Paul’s need to let his brother stand or fall on his own two feet, too. The way that Julia was over-protected by her family was paralleled by Paul’s over-compensation for his brother’s admitted weaknesses. Just as it was crucial for Julia to take responsibility for her own actions, it was equally critical that Paul stop swooping in to save his brother from the consequences of his actions.

Once Paul finally sees that his constant support is undermining his brother’s journey, he’s able to stop making decisions for Julia, too. She’s stopped needing anyone else to decide for her, including about where she will be based or what her priorities are.

And if the love story and the independence stories don’t carry you away, there is a horse named Darth perfectly willing to gallop off with your heart!

***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 or borrowed from a public library 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: Honor’s Knight by Rachel Bach

honors knight by rachel bachFormat read: ebook purchased from Amazon
Formats available: ebook, paperback, audiobook
Genre: Space opera
Series: Paradox, #2
Length: 374 pages
Publisher: Orbit
Date Released: February 25, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Devi Morris has a lot of problems. And not the fun, easy-to-shoot kind either.

After a mysterious attack left her short several memories and one partner, she’s determined to keep her head down, do her job, and get on with her life. But even though Devi’s not actually looking for it — trouble keeps finding her. She sees things no one else can, the black stain on her hands is growing, and she is entangled with the cook she’s supposed to hate.

But when a deadly crisis exposes far more of the truth than she bargained for, Devi discovers there’s worse fates than being shot, and sometimes the only people you can trust are the ones who want you dead.

My Review:

The Paradox series is all about secrets. Bigger and badder secrets, and more and more desperate means of preserving them.

And although Mr. Spock famously said that “the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or of the one”, the big secrets in the Paradox series are wrapped around the questions of “who decides” which needs are which.

Fortune's Pawn by Rachel BachAt the end of Fortune’s Pawn (reviewed here), Devi Morris had her memories altered because some of the powers that be decided that she knew things about the way the world worked that were way too dangerous to be let out of the bag.

Just because Devi’s memories of certain events were wiped did not mean that several other people/entities were not aware that she was a participant in those events. Too many people and factions either want what she knows, or want to kill her to keep that knowledge secret.

Memory rearrangement is not perfect, especially when part of the wipe is an attempt to make someone forget the love of their life. Those kinds of memories are too integrated into too many senses and emotions, and are triggered too easily.

Also, part of the purpose of the memory wipe is so that Devi will continue to be used by those same powers that be. If there is one thing that Devi Morris will not let continue, it is being kept in the dark and used.

She needs all the information she can grab just to survive.

None of the self-described “good guys” in this story actually are good. They all believe that they have chosen the lesser of evils, in order to protect the general population. But the evil that they have chosen is to sacrifice young women with the ability to manipulate the element plasmex, enslaving them to an insane woman so that they can plug a leak between the universes.

It works, sort of, but after 70 years of fighting, an endless number of these young women have been forced into mindless slavery, and murdered when they themselves go insane.

And that crack between the universes, well, what’s that all about? An opening has let “phantoms’ into our side, beings that destabilize whole planets. But what are the phantoms? Why are they doing it? What do they want?

No one knows. No one has even tried to know. The sentient races just keep destroying them, and chewing up young women in the process.

There has to be a better way, but no one seems to be interested in finding it. Until Devi gets involved. Devi’s been infected with a virus that can kill all the phantoms. The problem for Devi is that it can kill all of everything, including her, unless she gets it under control.

Half the universe wants to control her, and the other half wants to kill her on sight.

Little does she know, the situation is only going to get worse.

Escape Rating A: While part of me wants to say “Romeo and Juliet on steriods” as a description of the love story part, that isn’t strictly true. It’s more like “Beauty and the Beast”, although both Devi and Rupert would describe themselves as the beast, and the other as the beauty. There are multiple forbidden aspects to their romance, not the least of which if either of them loses control, they can unknowingly kill the other.

The problem with that, is that in order to fall in love, a person does need to lose some control. Both Devi and Rupert are capable of being living weapons if they let that happen. Talk about frustration!

This series, as a whole, is Devi’s search for the truth, a truth that everyone wants to keep from her, and that many want to kill to keep in general. On the other hand, Devi is pretty deadly herself.

Devi sees firsthand the destruction that can be wrought by the plasmex phantoms. However, she has also seen firsthand the deterioration and destruction caused by the “good guys” kidnapping and forcing into mental slavery the girls who are holding back the tide. Devi is certain that if people in general knew about the girls, the “daughters of Maat”, they would move entire planets, or at least entire planets’ worth of money, into researching a better solution.

But there are too many interests vested in keeping things the way they are, and not all of them are human.

The virus that Devi was accidentally infected with is one such possible solution, although one with a massively deadly side effect. A lot of the story is Devi on the run, trying to find the best way to use what she has, before it kills her.

heavens queen by rachel bachOne of the terrific things about Devi as a character, is that no matter how many times someone manages to capture her, she never gives in to victimhood, and she never waits for rescue. She’s a merc and it’s her job to rescue herself.

Honor’s Knight is definitely the middle book in the Paradox trilogy. While the plot keeps moving ahead at lightspeed, you can tell at the end of the book that there is definitely more story to be told. It’s a good thing that Heaven’s Queen is already out, because I didn’t stop two seconds between finishing Honor’s Knight and diving into Heaven’s Queen.

***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 or borrowed from a public library 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: Claws of the Cat by Susan Spann

claws of the cat by susan spannFormat read: ebook provided by NetGalley
Formats available: ebook, hardcover
Genre: historical mystery
Series: Shinobi Mystery, #1
Length: 288 pages
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Date Released: July 16, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

May 1564: When a samurai is brutally murdered in a Kyoto teahouse, master ninja Hiro has no desire to get involved. But the beautiful entertainer accused of the crime enlists the help of Father Mateo, the Portuguese Jesuit Hiro is sworn to protect, leaving the master shinobi with just three days to find the killer in order to save the girl and the priest from execution.

The investigation plunges Hiro and Father Mateo into the dangerous waters of Kyoto’s floating world, where they learn that everyone from the elusive teahouse owner to the dead man’s dishonored brother has a motive to keep the samurai’s death a mystery. A rare murder weapon favored by ninja assassins, a female samurai warrior, and a hidden affair leave Hiro with too many suspects and far too little time. Worse, the ninja’s investigation uncovers a host of secrets that threaten not only Father Mateo and the teahouse, but the very future of Japan.

My Review:

This was awesome. Full stop. The setting is unusual and the detectives are surprising and possibly unique. The mystery is intricate and it is marvelous to play along with a mystery that doesn’t (and can’t) rely on modern forensics. It’s all down to human ingenuity and human intelligence.

Also, of course, human greed.

The story takes place in 16th Japan, during the years known as the Warring States period. This was a period when rival clans were attempting, and often succeeding, in capturing the Shogunate by military might as well as subterfuge.

It was also the period when Japan was only open to Westerners on a relatively limited and controlled basis. The Japanese were not certain of the traders, and especially the Catholic missionaries, motives for wanting to be in Japan.

So our protagonists in this mystery are a Catholic priest and missionary, Father Mateo, and his bodyguard Hiro. At first, it seems as if Father Mateo is the leader in this surprising partnership, but in fact, it is Hiro who moves the investigation. While Father Mateo is exactly as he seems, Hiro is very little of who he appears to be, by intention and not accident.

Hiro is a shinobi, what we would call a ninja. He is a master of shadows. But his life is bound to protect Father Mateo, which drags him along when the priest deliberately or accidently puts his foot into it.

Mysteries are often investigated by outsiders, and in this case, we have two; the Catholic priest living both in and outside the strict Japanese culture, and the shinobi, who is always an outsider in his own land, seeking out every enemy and searching for every exit.

The crime seems simple at first. A retired general is murdered in a respectable teahouse, and an entertainer is found by his side, covered in his blood. It’s an open and shut case, until the entertainer asks for Father Mateo. She is a Christian convert and wants the priest to pray for her. Or with her.

But Mateo believes that she is innocent of the crime, and interferes with the general’s son’s right to have revenge on his father’s murderer. The son, being a hot-headed and privileged idiot, makes Father Mateo responsible for finding the real killer, or dying with young woman he defends.

Hiro is forced into the investigation, as he is bound by his own honor to keep Father Mateo alive, even at the cost of his own life. If Mateo is killed, Hiro will be required to die with him.

And so the reader is immersed in the “Floating World” of the Japanese teahouses, the simmering pot of medieval Japanese politics, and the strict code of honor that is Bushido, the way of the warrior.

As Father Mateo blunders through the thickets of a society that he has been on the fringes of and is still trying to understand, Mateo navigates deeper waters, while following the oldest clue of mysteries everywhere, “who benefits?”

The answer will surprise you, but the journey will bring delights and insights in equally marvelous measure.

Escape Rating A: In a surprising way, Claws of the Cat reminded me of Ellis Peters’ Brother Cadfael mysteries. As we read, we are steeped in a world that has small shocks of familiarity in the midst of astonishing differences. We think we understand, and then the way the world works surprises us.

There is also the similarity in that Cadfael, like Hiro, has to solve the crime based on his knowledge of the world, his understanding of human nature, but without forensics beyond those observable to the naked eye. The solution is in the intelligence of the detective, and the human failures of the criminals and those around them.

Hiro makes a fascinating detective. His outer appearance is an intentional act, so we discover the bits of himself he chooses to reveal as we walk with him through the story. He, in turn, reveals the world in which he lives, especially as he is an observer no matter where he goes, and does not intend to be a prime mover. In fact, he wants to conceal that he is even capable of being that prime mover. His job is to remain in the shadows.

The plots and counterplots will keep you guessing until the very end. There are political motives, personal motives and purely monetary reasons why this general is dead. The question that Hiro has to answer is which, if any, are the causes for this murder. And whether he can find the answer in time to save Mateo, and himself.

Somewhere, there must be a story about how Mateo and Hiro first meet, and why Hiro is bound to protect Mateo. The hints that Hiro makes regarding his initial contact (and contract) to guard Mateo are quite a tease.

***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 or borrowed from a public library 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 Tea Shop on Lavender Lane by Sheila Roberts

tea shop on lavender lane by sheila robertsFormat read: ebook provided by NetGalley
Formats available: ebook, mass market paperback
Genre: Contemporary romance
Series: Life in Icicle Falls, #5
Length: 352 pages
Publisher: Harlequin MIRA
Date Released: July 1, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

When it comes to men, sisters don’t share!

After a fake food poisoning incident in L.A., Bailey Sterling’s dreams of becoming a caterer to the stars collapse faster than a soufflé. Now Bailey’s face is in all the gossip rags and her business is in ruins. But the Sterling women close ranks and bring her back to Icicle Falls, where she’ll stay with her sister Cecily.

All goes well between the sisters until Bailey comes up with a new business idea—a tea shop on a charming street called Lavender Lane. She’s going into partnership with Todd Black, who—it turns out—is the man Cecily’s started dating. It looks to Cecily as if there’s more than tea brewing in that cute little shop. And she’s not pleased.

Wait! Isn’t Cecily seeing Luke Goodman? He’s a widower with an adorable little girl, and yes, Cecily does care about him. But Todd’s the one who sends her zing-o-meter off the charts. So now what? Should you have to choose between your sister and the man you love (or think you love)?

My Review:

I always enjoy visiting Icicle Falls, no matter who is being romanced. This small-town feels like a great place to visit, and the town it’s based on, Leavenworth, Washington, is not just real but really close to Seattle.

In addition to the chance to go back to Icicle Falls, The Tea Shop on Lavender Lane also provides the opportunity to catch up with the Sterling women. Samantha Sterling and the Sweet Dreams Chocolate Factory got their HEA in Better Than Chocolate (reviewed here), but now it’s her younger sisters Cecily and Bailey’s turns to find their own happiness.

Better than Chocolate by Sheila RobertsCecily has been working at Sweet Dreams since the first story; she’s found her niche as head of the marketing department. Her successful campaigns have helped to put Sweet Dreams and Icicle Falls back on the map, and into the black, in spite of the recession.

The one part of her life that Cecily hasn’t found a plan for is her love life. She’s attracted to two eligible men in town, Luke Goodman and Todd Black. Luke really is a good man, he’s the factory manager at Sweet Dreams and a loving single father. His first marriage was a success, but enough time has passed since his wife’s death that he is ready to try again, and he wants to try again with Cecily.

But as much as Cecily likes Luke, she can’t help but be attracted to bad-boy Todd Black, owner of the testosterone soaked local bar, the Man Cave. Todd’s been chasing Cecily ever since he hit town, and he’s decided that it’s time to make his move.

Cecily (and Samantha’s) younger sister Bailey throws a spanner into everyone’s plans. Bailey returns to Icicle Falls with her tail between her legs, after her attempt to run a catering company in LA is wrecked by one starlet’s food-poisoning publicity stunt.

Bailey needs a job. She needs more than that, she needs a way to get her confidence back. And she needs to work with food again, to get back on the horse that threw her.

It just so happens that Todd Black is much more of an entrepreneur than anyone, especially Cecily, gives him credit for. And he just so happens to own a property in central Icicle Falls that would be perfect for a Tea Room, with just a bit of sweat equity and repair.

Todd has just what Bailey needs. Except that Cecily has decided that he has just what she needs, admittedly in a much more personal way. So while Todd and Cecily are trying to take their relationship to the next level, Todd and Bailey are discovering just how much fun they can have building a business together.

Meanwhile, Luke Goodman is watching from the sidelines, hoping for his chance to convince Cecily that they belong together after all.

Escape Rating B: As is usual in the Icicle Falls series, the romance (or romances) take a backseat to the small town/family story.

We have more than a love triangle in this one, we have a love quadrangle. Luke loves Cecily. Cecily can’t make up her mind between Luke and Todd, to the point where everyone in town is confused about which one she’s dating. Then Todd starts falling for Bailey, and vice-versa.

Part of Cecily’s romantic confusion is that Luke is the steady and sensible man she should want, while Todd is the bad-boy that every girl wants to reform. Or at least that’s Cecily’s perception.

The reality is that Todd isn’t nearly as bad a boy as he seems. That Cecily can’t figure that out is proof positive that they aren’t meant for each other. However, Todd and Bailey’s mutual attraction brings out the possessive bitch in Cecily. Cecily has so many insecurities, particularly about Bailey, that she doomed the relationship before it had a chance to begin. Which it shouldn’t have.

The fallout makes the town choose sides, and causes a family rift. It isn’t until Luke finally sweeps Cecily off her feet that the sisters are able to make peace. The romance in this one is very messy.

There’s an intended message here, that men may or may not stick around, but sisters are forever. I think there was a second one about listening to that little voice that tells you something is not a good idea. Cecily knows that Todd isn’t right for her, but she can’t resist the lure. At the same time, she won’t let herself move the relationship forward, because there are just so many things about him she wants to change.

Bailey likes Todd just as he is. It helps that she sees all of him, the entrepreneur and the hard worker, and not just the bad boy image he projects. Which may be another message about falling in love with the real person, and not thinking you’re going to change them.

It was great to see the Sterling sisters get their own HEAs, and it’s always a treat to visit Icicle Falls. I can’t wait to go back in The Lodge on Holly Road!

The Tea Shop on Lavender Lane banner 2 (1)

***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 or borrowed from a public library 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 7-6-14

Sunday Post

The cats still have not completely forgiven us for being away last week. Mellie is perched on top of Galen’s computer tower, pretending I’m not here. I’m waiting for her to pratfall off.

I managed to read a lot of books over the holiday. I’ve discovered that 4 books is my limit. By limit, I mean the limit of reviews I can hold in my head before I have to do a brain dump. That’s today. Along with the laundry and the grocery shopping and the other life chores that don’t get done when you’re out of town.

Freedom-to-Read-HopThere’s still time to get in on the Freedom to Read Giveaway Hop. And if you took a reading hiatus over the weekend, Galen did a wonderful reading list on July 4 of books that are somewhat related to the idea of Independence.

Current Giveaways:

$10 Amazon or B&N gift card in the Freedom to Read Giveaway Hop

Winner Announcements:

The winner of the $10 Amazon Gift Card in the Midsummer’s Eve Giveaway Hop is Jannetta.
The winner of Supreme Justice by Max Allan Collins is Brian O.
The winner of Love & Treasure by Ayelet Waldman is Jeffrey T.

witchlight by sonya clarkBlog Recap:

A+ Review: Witchlight by Sonya Clark
Guest Post by Author Sonya Clark + Giveaway
A+ Review: Harder by Robin York
Freedom to Read Giveaway Hop
B+ Review: C791 by Eve Langlais
The Fourth of July, 2014: a Reading List
Stacking the Shelves (95)

 

 

claws of the cat by susan spannComing Next Week:

The Tea Shop on Lavender Lane by Sheila Roberts (review)
Claws of the Cat by Susan Spann (review)
Honor’s Knight by Rachel Bach (review)
Country Roads by Nancy Herkness (review)
Until We Touch by Susan Mallery (review + Q&A + giveaway)

Stacking the Shelves (95)

Stacking the Shelves

I was a very good girl at the ALA Conference last week. The only print book I picked up beekeepers apprenticewas a signed copy of Laurie R. King’s The Beekeeper’s Apprentice, and I read that long ago (and more than once). There was an author event at the conference I went to JUST so I could get her to sign a copy of whatever she was handing out.

This doesn’t mean that I didn’t get a few tempting books from NetGalley and Edelweiss, just that I didn’t haul away a bunch of print ARCs from the conference floor. If I’d picked up anything, we’d have had to have bought another suitcase or shipped them. And the line for the on-conference post office was ginormous!

For Review:
Forged by Desire (London Steampunk #4) by Bec McMaster
Generation 18 (Spook Squad #2) by Keri Arthur
Ghost Layer (Ghost Seer #2) by Robin D. Owens
Gutenberg’s Apprentice by Alix Christie
A Hero for the Empire (Dragon’s Bidding #1) by Christina Westcott
The Hot Zone (Harmony #11) by Jayne Castle
Light Up the Night (Night Stalkers #5) by M.L. Buchman
Maplecroft (Borden Dispatches #1) by Cherie Priest
The Miniaturist by Jessie Burton
The Moment of Everything by Shelly King
Nice Dragons Finish Last (Heartstrikers #1) by Rachel Aaron
Night of a Thousand Stars by Deanna Raybourn
The Secret History of Wonder Woman by Jill Lepore
Sky Pirates (Chronicles of Light and Shadow #3) by Liesel Schwarz
Soulminder by Timothy Zahn
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

Purchased:
Heaven’s Queen (Paradox #3) by Rachel Bach
Honor’s Knight (Paradox #2) by Rachel Bach
Summer Rain by Ruthie Knox, Molly O’Keefe, Cecilia Tan, Charlotte Stein, Mary Ann Rivers, Amy Jo Cousins, Audra North, Shari Slade, Alexandra Haughton. Edited by Sarah Frantz.

Borrowed from the Library:
The Devil’s Workshop (Murder Squad #3) by Alex Grecian

The Fourth of July, 2014: a Reading List

by Galen

American Flag books

I’m borrowing Marlene’s blog today to celebrate the 238th anniversary of U.S. independence. How to celebrate? We’ll be grilling steaks and corn on the cob, but we’ll also be reading. Here’s a list of books and essays I’ve read the touch on the complicated matter of American independence.

The Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon.  This is one suggested by Marlene; during the course of the series, our time-traveling couple ends up living in the American colonies in the years leading up to the American Revolution.  Of course, Claire knows how the revolution ends, but what she and Jaime don’t know is what happens in the specific area where they live — which makes picking a side difficult.

Johnny Tremain by Esther ForbesJohnny Tremain by Esther Forbes.  A classic from 1944 and winner of the Newberry Award. It’s been a long time since I read it, but I think my love of historical fiction may have started with this one.

The musical 1776. Of course, it deviates from the true history of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, but it’s a great deal of fun while presenting a serious event in our history.  The song “Mama Look Sharp” still gives me chills.

Carry On, Mr. Bowditch by Jean Lee Latham.  Another Newberry winner, in 1956.  The period after the American Revolution was such an energetic time — folks working, for better and worse, to spread out and to extend knowledge.

Frederick DouglassWhat to the Slave is the Fourth of July? by Frederick Douglass.  The independence announced in 1776 was not for everybody; we are still fighting for the full freedom of every last personal who lives on U.S. soil.  Some fought with words.

Personal Memoirs of U.S Grant.  And some fought with arms.  Grant is a fascinating figure in history, and knows how to wield a pen.

The Case for Reparations by Ta-Nehisi Coates (an essay in the Atlantic).  I did not say that this was going to be an easy reading list, but I think it is a necessary one.  I have been reading Coates for years, and it’s becoming more and more clear that he will be remembered as one of the foremost public intellectuals of this century.

Grace Hopper by Kurt W. BeyerGrace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age by Kurt W. Beyer. The call to arms after Pearl Harbor was not answered just by men destined for the front lines, but by people of every sort in every place.  Grace Hopper served in the Navy at Harvard as part of a team working with the Mark I computer to perform various calculations, including a simulation used by the Manhattan project.  She was one of the pioneers in computer science, contributing important papers, developing the COBOL language, and inspiring many.  She retired from the Navy Reserves as a rear admiral.

What is Free Software? by Richard Stallman and the Free Software Foundation. There are many types of freedom; one area of freedom that I have a professional interest in is free, libre, or open source software.  Free software is a way of working in the open — if software makes up many of the tools that we rely on in this modern age, having those tools be available for all to use and improve on can help with other kinds of freedom: think of dissidents who rely on free cryptography software to protect themselves.

The Library Bill of Rights by the American Library Association.  This touches on another area of professional interest to me.  The freedom to read and to learn is essential for securing other types of freedoms; there was a reason why many slave-holding states had laws forbidding teaching slaves how to read and write.

I hope you enjoy this list.  What books and other works do you have on your fourth of July reading list?

Review: C791 by Eve Langlais

C791 by Eve LanglaisFormat read: ebook purchased from Amazon
Formats available: ebook, paperback
Genre: science fiction romance
Series: Cyborgs: More than Machines, #1
Length: 146 pages
Publisher: Self-published
Date Released: January 20, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Machines aren’t supposed to feel, but this cyborg can’t help falling in love.

Assigned as a specimen collector for a captured cyborg, Chloe is intrigued by the machine disguised as a man. Kidnapped during his daring escape, he shows her that despite the chip in his brain, his humanity is not completely lost.

Formerly known as unit X109GI, Joe is on a quest to discover his origin. While he doesn’t find the answers he’s looking for, he does discover that affection and lust aren’t just for humans. But when it comes to a battle between logic and love, which side will the cybernetic organism–once a man–choose?

Evaluating his feelings will have to wait though because the military isn’t done with Joe. But their threats against him pale in comparison before the shocking discovery of project C791, the revelation of which stuns the rebel cyborgs–and ignites a fury for vengeance.

It takes the touch of the right woman to remind this cyborg of his humanity.

My Review:

Two of the things I love about Eve Langlais’ books are her snarkier than snark dialog (which usually makes me laugh) and that her heroines are not cookie-cutter Barbie size 2’s. Even in a science fictional type story like C791, her heroines always feel more real because they aren’t supposedly perfect, just perfect for the hero.

C791 is the first book in her Cyborgs series, so it needs to both introduce the world she has created and fulfill Langlais’ trademark of being one hot love story. It works on both counts.

There have been lots of ways for futuristic stories to develop cyborgs, but it’s usually done by either converting a human with the addition of a few cybernetic parts (think Six Million Dollar Man) or by bringing an injured person back from the brink of death (or after) by taking away their previous identity when they are completely reprogrammed (think Robocop). In the latter situation, the military is almost always involved in some skullduggery.

The cyborgs in this series were created by the military, and they seem to have started with unwilling participants and then reprogrammed and brainwashed them. They know that they were once men, but not who they were.

However, like the Cylons in BSG, the cyborgs rebel. Not for any mysterious motives, but simply because the military decides to exterminate them all. A few of them have broken their programming, and don’t merely refuse to walk out the airlock, but reprogram their brethren to turn on their former “masters”.

I keep using words like “men” and “brethren” not because I’m using “men” as the universal word for “people”, but because as far as anyone knows, there are no female cyborgs. Of course, not everything that “everyone knows” is always the truth. The military has lied about absolutely everything involved with the cyborgs.

The cyborgs are hunting the galaxy for those involved with the program. Not just for revenge, but primarily for information. They don’t know how they were created, and they can’t reproduce biologically. (Like Data, they are fully functional, but they’re all shooting blanks)

Just as the cyborgs are creating their own culture, their leadership is all too aware that they are a dying race. And that’s where Joe’s story begins. He’s on a mission to find some of that information, and has allowed himself to be captured so that he can infiltrate the systems in this one particular lab while the military thinks they are torturing him. (How this works is very cool).

But as part of their testing, the military bring in a lab technician to take “samples”. Chloe is slightly clumsy and not the willowy type that is considered beautiful, but she is one of very few women on the military base. Her compassion for the cyborg as well as her own sweet nature break through the impassive shell that Joe has formed around himself.
So even though his wooing redefines rough (the cyborgs are not all that socially ept) his desire to protect Chloe, and simply his unrelenting desire for him, wins Chloe’s heart. Chloe lets herself be swept along, even though she doesn’t believe that Joe can return all of her feelings.

Then her secret is revealed, and she’s not sure she can survive all the negative feelings that she has engendered among the entire cyborg colony. Or if she is worth loving at all.

Escape Rating B+: If you are looking for a short and very sexy sci-fi romance to sweep you away, then C791 just might fill the bill. Or any other craving that happens to be in need of filling.

Just like all of Eve Langlais’ books, this one is absolutely fry your circuits hot. But there is also a very cool sci-fi story mingled with the sex.

The story of the cyborg rebellion, how it started and where they are in the development of their own society, would make for good SF with or without the romance. There have been other series where the military has been overcome or outwitted by people they have made other than human and enslaved (Lora Leigh’s Breeds series comes to mind), but the worldbuilding that creates these more than humans is off to a great start.

Chloe, the heroine, often seems like a bit too much of a victim, but when all is revealed, her reasoning, and her courage in the face of overwhelming circumstances, shines through. Joe, as the leader of the cyborgs, makes a terrific hero. He’s not just brave and self-sacrificing, but he’s also endearingly awkward as he falls in love. He’s the ultimate geek hero.

So far, there are four more books in this series, and I can’t wait to scoop up each and every yummy bite.

SFRQ-button-150x100This review originally appeared in Sci-Fi Romance Quarterly.

***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 or borrowed from a public library 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.