Friday Bargains: A mix of good books

Dixie Rebel by Patricia Rice is free at Amazon and BN right now.  ( Yes, I already have it, but I downloaded it again since I wanted the new, spiffy cover. 🙂 )

Matchbox Girls by Chrysoula Tzavelas is 1.99 right now ( What are you waiting for? It is a bargain price for an awesome book. No idea how long it will last.)

Samhain has re-issued several of Shiloh Walker’s  backlist stories with spiffy new covers, and to celebrate they are 30 % off this week.

Breaking point by Pamela Clare is on sale for 1.99 right now. I haven’t read anything by Pamela Clare, but I have heard good things about her books. *ponders* Although, I think I have one of her historicals in the TBR pile. ( Or maybe I am mixing her up with Tiffany Clare..)

Harlequin offers a bundle of B J Daniels Cardwell novels for 0.99 right now. I read the first one 2-3 years ago, and liked it but I never got around to buy the next two books in the series.

Harlequin also offers a bunch of books for free ( this is more or less permanent free reads. But I recommend the Raeanne Thayne book, it was very good.)

This week, Harlequin have changed their Freebie Friday offer, and now you choose which books you want to add. Which makes it a much better deal, in my opinion.

 

Review: Opposite Forces by Adrienne Giordano

{1266EB16-5D9F-4EE9-94A3-AFD49C60F13B}Img100
The Particulars: Romantic Suspense, Carina Press, available as e-book.

The Grade: C+

The Source: Purchased at Kobo
The Blurb:

Jackson Lynx always has a plan. He wouldn’t be Vice President at Taylor Security if he wasn’t steady, smart and reliable. But as capable as he is, he’s not perfect. Approaching the one-year anniversary of kicking his prescription-drug habit, the last thing Lynx needs is temptation. Celibacy is part of his recovery plan. But then Jillian Murdoch asks for his help…

Jillian loves her job–managing pharmaceutical distribution–and she’s suspicious when an unscheduled delivery shows up late on a Friday night. Then someone breaks into her home and, terrified, she asks Lynx to install a security system. Grateful for his help, she’s wary of her attraction to him… She recognizes the Serenity Prayer on his mirror and can’t get involved with an addict.

But when they uncover dangerous secrets they’ll have to trust one another. Their lives, and their hearts, depend on it.

The review:

The two Adrienne Giordano novels I have read so far, have been a hit and miss for me. I loved Relentless Pursuit, and struggled with Man Law, but when Carina Press offered this for 2.99 I decided to buy it. And even if not everything in the book worked for me, I am glad I did.

Lynx and Jillian were both down to earth persons. I liked that their journey from casual friends to something more showed both their internal struggle and why they struggled. I liked that Lynx was determinded to not fall of the wagon, even if he struggled every day with his addiction. Jillian on the other hand knew the dangers of living with an addicted person. I’ll admit that there were times when I wondered if they would end up together or not.

The suspense part was what kept me reading, long into the night. The stakes gradually increased, as they figured out what was going on. As they tried to figure out what happened, the bad guys became more and more desperate to stop them. One thing I liked, was that both Jillian and Lynx played an important part in discovering what was going on. Sometimes when I read Romantic Suspense, it feels like that the heroine’s sole purpose in the book is to be pretty. Not in this book. Jillian was stubborn, and refused to let the bad guys win. And I cheered her on for that decision.

The biggest problem I had with this book was that while I liked the characters, I didn’t feel any romantic spark between them. To be fair, this isn’t necessarily the book’s fault but something I often struggle with when it comes to Romantic Suspense.

Hidden Gems: The Blood of the Southland novels by David B Coe

Technically, I suppose I should have highlighted his  Winds of the Forelands, but I haven’t read them yet. Although they are on my wishlist.  This is a deliciously complex trilogy. It is about love, about revenge, about prejudices, about courage. Among other things. The plot is well crafted, the world intriguing, and the characters flawed.

 

1120984 Grinsa, who nearly single-handedly won the war of the Forelands, has been banished because he is a Weaver, a Qirsi who can wield many magics. He and his family seek only peace and a place to settle down. But even on the distant southern continent, they can’t escape the tension between his magical folk and the non-magical Eandi. Instead of peace, they find a war-ravaged land awash in racial tension and clan conflicts. Worse yet, his own people try to harness his great power and destroy his family.

Amid the high tension of clan rivalry comes a plague that preys on Qirsi power across the Southlands with deadly results. When the disease is linked to an itinerant woman peddling baskets, one old man takes it upon himself to find answers in the secrets of her veiled past.

With wonderfully creative magic, dark secrets, and engaging characters faced with a world of trouble, Coe deftly weaves an epic tapestry that launches a richly-entertaining new saga in an unknown land.

 

3675851David B. Coe created a richly textured, unique world in his Winds of the Forelands, and topped himself with The Sorcerer’s Plague, his first novel set in the Southlands of the same world. Divided by clan rivalries and ancient feuds, suspicious of magics wielded by longtime enemies, the folk of the South have lived in a state of truce for generations. But peace is shattered when a woman looses a deadly plague on the magical Qirsi people.

While some people seek to prevent the spread of the plague, others see in this disaster a unique opportunity. With the magical folk weakened by the decimation of the plague, their unmagical enemies might be able to defeat them and take back lands lost in an ancient war. Haunted by the specter of what would be a tragic and devastating new war, the Southlands are aflame with rumors of violence, pestilence, and treachery.

Coe weaves together engagingly complex characters, unique, unusual magic, political intrigue and a compelling, unpredictable story into a captivating epic that will enthrall fantasy readers. A potent brew conjured by a masterful storyteller

 

A bitter old6916069 woman’s curse has set in motion events that have felled innocent lives across an already war-weary land. She has paid the ultimate price, and an end to the curse is at hand, but her evil has created chaos and destruction.

Qirsi all across the Southlands are dying from a plague that turns their own magic against them, allowing an Eandi army from Stelpana to boldly march into their territory. But magic has many faces, and the Qirsi aren’t the only ones cursed; even as Stelpana’s force wins battles, an insidious magic has corrupted the spells of their sorcerers, and what began as a military triumph is suddenly jeopardized. The future of the Southlands hangs in the balance, as the deeds of previous generations wreak terrible consequences on both sides in this misbegotten war

Review: Turning up the heat by Laura Florand

TheHeat_Cover_400x250-187x300 particulars: Contemporary Romance, AOS Publishing, available as e-book

The Source: Purchased at Kobo

The Grade: B

The Blurb:

After eleven years of marriage, Léa Laurier knew her husband.  Knew how he could take on responsibility for a world-famous restaurant, a wife, and her two teenage siblings at nineteen years old and never falter, never tire.  Knew his drive and his ambition, that took him to the stars.  Knew how briliant his gray eyes looked when they met hers for just one moment across a host of cameras.  She didn’t know why she was so tired.  She didn’t know why she needed to just get away.  For a while.  Maybe a week or two.  A month.  She’d be back.

After eleven years of marriage, international superstar chef Daniel Laurier knew his wife.  Knew how she could lavish caring on everyone, her siblings, his staff, and most especially him.  Knew the way her face lit up when he won yet another television contest, and the way she hugged him for it.  Knew how her hair smelled when he sank into bed exhausted at one in the morning.  He didn’t know what to do when he came home from a consulting trip to find she’d disappeared to remote South Pacific island:  I just needed to get away for a little while.  A week or two.  I’ll call you.

As the whole solid world under his feet turned into a sandcastle in the tide, Daniel knew only one thing:  whatever was wrong with his marriage or his wife, he wasn’t losing her.  So as a top chef, he did the one thing he always knew how to do:  turn up the heat.

 

The Review:

Laura Florand have been on my TBR list for a long time, but I was a bit reluctant to buy her Kensington novels, since they cost 11 dollar ( And yes, I know they have been on sale, but the sales have been US only). So when I saw this novella, I snapped it up. After reading it, I am glad I did.

No matter what subgenre, the healing of a strained marriage is one of my favorite tropes. So maybe I was pre-disposed to like this story. I enjoyed Lea and Daniel’s story. From the moment Lea just feel she has to get away from her hectic life, to Daniel’s reaction to her sudden decision to go on a vacation. The bulk of this story took place at Tahiti, and it felt like the perfect place for the story. Just the two of them on a tropical island, spending time together, talking, making love. What I liked was that their relationship wasn’t healed over night, that Lea recognized the danger it posed. By taking time, they had time to sort out their misconceptions.

At the end of the book, it felt like both of them had healed, and were devoted to what was important.

The biggest problem I had with this book was Daniel. He felt a bit cold and distant in the beginning of the book, even if I  never doubted that he loved his wife.

WWW Wednesday Oct 16

www_wednesdays4

 

To play along, just answer the following three (3) questions…


• What are you currently reading?
• What did you recently finish reading?
• What do you think you’ll read next?

Currently reading:

BitingNixie3x4.5_medium

I am enjoying this, even if I have problem with romance novels told from 1st POV. But I like Nixie’s snark, the setting, and her interactions with her friends.

 

 

 

jenny_450

This is the last in The Windham series, and while it is sweet and touching, I don’t feel a spark between Jenny and Elijah. But then I have that problem with most of Grace Burrowes Christmas novels. Don’t ask me why.

 

 

 

Recently Finished:

Print

This have been on my wishlist for awhile, and I am glad that read it. Overall, I liked it, even if some of the author’s phrasings rubbed me the wrong way.

 

 

Reading next:

I am not sure. I am in the mood for erotic romance, but I am not sure what to read from the TBR pile. But I have a lot to choose from!

Review: Lousiana Longshot by Jana DeLeon

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000031_00001]The Particulars: Mystery, selfpublished, available as e-book and in print
The Source: Purchased at Kobo
The Grade: C
The blurb:

It was a hell of a longshot…

CIA Assassin Fortune Redding is about to undertake her most difficult mission ever–in Sinful, Louisiana.

With a leak at the CIA and a price on her head by one of the world’s largest arms dealers, Fortune has to go off grid, but she never expected to be this far out of her element. Posing as a former beauty queen turned librarian in a small, bayou town seems worse than death to Fortune, but she’s determined to fly below the radar until her boss finds the leak and puts the arms dealer out of play.

Unfortunately, she hasn’t even unpacked a suitcase before her newly-inherited dog digs up a human bone in her backyard. Thrust into the middle of a bayou murder mystery, Fortune teams up with a couple of seemingly-sweet old ladies whose looks completely belie their hold on the little town. To top things off, the handsome local deputy is asking her too many questions. If she’s not careful, this investigation may blow her cover and get her killed.

Armed with her considerable skills and a group of old ladies referred to by locals as The Geritol Mafia, Fortune has no choice but to solve the murder before it’s too late

 

The Review:

I like Jana Deleon’s mystery novels, so when this one was on sale recently. I bought it. After reading it, it was just like I expected a Jana Deleon book to be. A small town in the bayou, filled to the brim with quirky characters.

I liked Fortune, and her struggle to adjust to small town life, and hiding the fact that she wasn’t Sandy-Sue Morrow. The characters she met was interesting, from Ida Belle and Gertie,who knew exactly what they wanted, to Carter Leblanc, the sheriff Deputy that she butted heads with through the book.

Fortune’s, Gertie’s and Ida Belle’s search for Marie was interesting. As the search was thorough, and I’ll admit that there was times that my mind boggled over the casual way Ida Belle and Gertie had towards the law. But it also gave a glimpse of the power the Sinful Ladies Society had in the town. I really appreciated how the history and the secrets was slowly revealed, and how they created an additional depth in the characters.

The biggest problem I had with this book was that I felt I had read it before. In the end, there is only so many times you can write about small Bayou towns, filled with zany characters who have a flexible views of the law. So while I liked it, I didn’t love it. Despite this, I’ll probably buy the next book, just to get more of Fortune, Gertie and Ida Belle.

Friday Bargains: Mostly 0.99 deals

I reviewed, and loved Beguiled Again by Patricia Burroughs earlier this year. And now you can buy a copy for just 0.99. Not sure if it is available at Amazon and BN, but Bookview Cafe sells DRM free e-books.

I like Patricia Rice’s Rebel series, but I haven’t bought Blue Clouds yet. But I am planning to, since it is just 0.99 (too!) at BookView Cafe.

I read and loved Patrice Greenwood’s mysteries this summer, but I haven’t read her fantasy novels yet. But Dead Man’s Hand is just 0.99 right now, and it sounds interesting.

Claimed by Stacey Kennedy is 0.99 right now. I haven’t read it, but Stacey Kennedy have been on my to check out list for awhile. On the other hand, maybe I should read the free short story bundle with her and Eve Langlais instead.

When I bought it a couple of years ago, I was sure that Liz Flaherty’s Home to Singing Tree was contemporary romance since the blurb is pretty vague, and she have only published contemporary romances. It isn’t. It is well written Post Civil war historical romance, and it is just 2.99 at Allromance right now. I am pretty sure I paid more than that :).

I have heard good things about Ruthie Knox, and right now two of her novellas is 0.99. At least on Allromance.

Review: Fairies in my Fireplace by R. L. Naquin

 

17657000The Particulars: Urban Fantasy, Carina Press, available as e-book

The Source: Purchased at Kobo

The Grade: C

The Blurb:

A migration of mythical creatures has begun, and more and more of them are landing on Zoey Donovan’s doorstep. As the only Aegis left in the country, it falls to her to protect the Hidden and keep them safe—and her house has become a sanctuary for water sprites, goblins, harpies, djinn and more.

Keeping track of her boarders is a full-time job, and Zoey’s already got her hands full trying to run her wedding planning business. Good thing she has a resident closet monster to keep her organized, and a hot Reaper boyfriend to help her relax every once in a while.

But she can’t keep up monster-triage indefinitely, and as more Hidden arrive, it becomes clear that someone—or something—is hunting them. In the midst of planning an event for a notoriously difficult client, Zoey’s got to figure out who’s behind the hunt…and she’s got to stop them before there are no Hidden left.

The Review:

This is the third book in R.L Naquin’s Monster Haven series, and it stands reasonably alone. However, I recommend that you read, or re-read, the previous two books, since there was a couple of times I wished I had re-read the previous books before reading this one.

This book deals with the consequences of the last book. It was interesting to see how Zoe struggled with balancing her Wedding Planning business and her duties as an Aegis. I really liked how Ms Naquin gradually revealed why the Hidden was flocking to Zoe’s house.

The Hidden that arrived at Zoe’s house was fugitives, and most of them were peaceful, but a bit mischevious. I really liked that new characters played important roles in the book, since often the story is focused on the same characters.

The villain was an interesting contrast, since there was nothing nice about the Collector. Her ruthless, and the fact that there were people willing to cater to it, was chilling.

The plot was well written, and there was some interesting twists in the story. I really liked how it slowly was revealed that the problem with the Hidden was tied to the event Zoe was planning. But there was also smaller plot twists, that was connected to events in previous books.

While there was several things I liked with this book, there was also several things I didn’t like. The biggest problem I had was a lack of tension. Both inform of sexual tension between Zoe and Riley, but also in general. I never felt that the plot built towards an confrontation with the villain.