Showing posts with label Contemporary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contemporary. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Review - - One Star Romance

One-Star Romance
by Laura Hankin
Publisher: Berkley
Release Date: June 18, 2024
Reviewed by Hellie



Natalie and Rob couldn’t have less in common. Nat’s a messy artist, and Rob’s a rigid academic. The only thing they share is their devotion to their respective best friends—who just got engaged. Still, unexpected chemistry has Natalie cautiously optimistic about being maid of honor to Rob’s best man.
 

Until, minutes before the ceremony, Nat learns that Rob wrote a one-star review of her new novel, which has them both reeling: Nat from imposter syndrome, and Rob over the reason he needed to write it. 

When the reception ends, these two opposites hope they’ll never meet again. But, as they slip from their twenties into their thirties, they’re forced together whenever their fast-track best friends celebrate another milestone. Through housewarmings and christenings, life-changing triumphs and failures, Natalie and Rob grapple with their own choices—and how your harshest critic can become your perfectly imperfect match. 

After all, even the truest love stories sometimes need a bit of rewriting.

Hellie’s Heeds: 

I wasn’t sure how to rate this book. On the basis of a “romantic-COMEDY”--I wouldn’t put this in that category. But honestly I’m so confused by the rom-com category nowadays. I suppose if this book were set next to Bridget Jones’ Diary–which was more painful to read than laugh-out-loud funny, perhaps this fits the category. But I thought Bridget Jones fit the category because in essence, the story-line was a bit fluffy. The stakes were lower–the most Bridget had to lose in most of the episodes was her dignity, of which she had very little. But this story–oh, so many stakes. I decided to rank the book by how I felt at the end–as just a story, neither particularly romantic or comedic, and decided it was worth 5 stars because this book made me FEEL ALL THE FEELINGS. I admit, I hated feeling most of them.  

If a book could be a soulmate, this was my soulmate. I could identify with Natalie hard–the artist writer girl who spends the whole of her 20s flailing around, failing left, right, and center, making incredibly bad decisions and/or not dealing with her issues (mainly because she doesn’t make enough money to get the therapist she so desperately needs.) I shared scenes from the book and tried to explain the heroine to my husband–he hated her. *LOL* And I admit the first third of the book, I didn’t like her a lot either (even if the heroine was me in fiction form.) The hero, Rob, was much more likable, but he had his quirks. There was a point in the book where Rob meets a lovely woman who you think he’ll marry–and you think he should because Natalie is definitely not emotionally mature or available to date him–and for reasons I can only think of as “Hermione-Ron Wish Fulfillment”, they don’t end up together and Rob and Natalie finally work it out…but it felt like a stretch at some points. 

Where this book shines though is Angus. Angus the unlikely hero. I could write odes to Angus, the bumbling goofy guy who somehow ended up marrying way out of his league, but ultimately proves he is more than worthy of her and she is worthy of him. The places I laughed the hardest…and cried the hardest featured him. May we all be worthy of our own Angus one day. (I’m glad to say I found mine.)  

The “romance” between Natalie and Rob is a distant third…or dead-last compared to the relationship between Natalie and Gabby. From the first page, Natalie would be content to keep the Clubhouse girls only. Gabby is her best friend–and she can’t imagine anyone or anything coming between them. But then there was Angus. It was like being stabbed through the heart because Natalie’s insecurities and hurt that her friend had replaced her with “some guy” was something I could relate to. (My husband could not relate to it, but my husband has always been too old for friends, I think. Or maybe it’s a girl thing.) Reading this book healed a lot of hurts I still had; and in a romance sort of way, there is a happily ever after for all involved. No animals or beloved characters were killed in the writing of this book.  

If you are wanting a romance that primarily focuses on the hero and heroine–this is not really the book. Sure 99% of the scenes are either in the hero or heroine’s POV, but the story itself revolves around Gabby and Natalie, or Angus and Gabby, most of the time. It’s how I fell so in love with Angus actually–the real hero.  

If you are wanting a comedy, aside from the fabulous wedding scene, prepare instead to bawl a lot. (Or if you didn’t have a bestie who gave you abandonment issues and you think your girlfriends should automatically understand that they’re just friends while a husband is family, well, you may want to set the book on fire in several spots–I’m not sure you’ll ever like Natalie.)  

But if you want to read about Angus, a hero for the ages, I think you’ll agree he’s definitely worth all the stars. I’m not sure if I want to thank Laura Hankin for this story–or yell at her, “How dare you!” while sobbing into some tissues. I’ll have to check out her other books–I have a feeling they’re all of the complicated variety.

 

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Release Blitz - - The Siege: A Novel by Marilyn Baron




The Siege: A Novel
By Marilyn Baron
Genre: Contemporary, Women's Fiction, Romantic Suspense, Mystery, Historical
Publisher: The Wild Rose Press
Released: January 8, 2018

A journey of self-discovery leads to love and passion in the search for a family's hidden past...

Artist Theia Constas receives a tour of Italy from her grandmother as a college graduation present. Before she departs, her ya-ya's deathbed revelation of a cache of WWII photographs and love letters extends Theia's itinerary to Crete in search of her unknown grandfather, a promising artist who studied under Chagall but didn't survive the war. 

Wade Bingham, an actuary who always follows the rules and calculates the odds, finds himself alone on his honeymoon trip, wondering why his fiancee jilted him at the last minute.

In the wrong place at the wrong time when their hotel in Florence, Italy is besieged by terrorists, the two strangers find themselves thrust together in Wade's honeymoon suite. Immediately attracted to each other, Wade conducts a siege of his own to win Theia's heart.  




Excerpt
The Siege
“Go back to your room,” the American tour director ordered, shouting at the woman.

“I can’t get the door to open,” Theia protested, thrusting her key card at him in frustration.

The tour director hurriedly took the proffered card in sweaty hands and tried the lock, which didn’t click.  He jammed the key card into the slot again, to no avail.

A man opened the door and stuck his head out of the room. “What’s wrong? Is this some kind of a fire drill?”

“It’s no drill. Get back in your room and shelter in place until I give the all-clear. Don’t open the door to anyone.”

The tour director returned Theia’s card. “Get back in your room with your husband.”

“This is my room, but he’s not my husband,” Theia insisted.

“There must be some kind of mistake,” the man in the room announced. “This is my room.”

The tour director grabbed the woman’s key card again and examined the key holder. He shook his head, rolled his eyes, and looked at Theia like she was a recalcitrant child. “You’re on the wrong floor, miss. This is Room 515. You’re in Room 415.”

“I’m sorry.” Theia blew out a breath and turned to leave. The tour director blocked her way.

“Excuse me, but I need to get back to my room.”  Tears of exhaustion pooled in her eyes. She wanted to scream.

“I’m afraid you can’t go anywhere. We’ve disabled the elevators for your safety, and hotel security is blocking the stairs, for now.” He ushered her into Room 515 and pushed her into the arms of the man standing at the door.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  


 Book Unleashed  


In The Siege, Theia makes a pilgrimage to Crete to search for information about her grandfather and other Jews on the island who perished during WWII. 

Have you researched your ancestry?

Have you visited any of the countries/areas where your ancestors once lived? 






  

GIVEAWAY


Date: January 8 - 14, 2018

Prizes:
1) $25 Amazon Gift Card
2) The Alibi eBook copy
3) Signed Print of Amelia Marsh by Sharon Goldman

   

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Marilyn Baron writes in a variety of genres, from women’s fiction to historical romantic thrillers and romantic suspense to paranormal/fantasy. Her latest book, The Siege: A Novel, a mainstream women’s fiction set in Italy and Greece, released January 8, 2018, is her 14th novel with The Wild Rose Press, Inc. and her 23rd work of fiction. AmazonEncore republished her psychic suspense novel Sixth Sense in 2015. She is also one of six authors of Love Around the Table, a short story anthology published November 1, 2017. She’s published five short stories with TWB Press.

She’s received writing awards in Single Title, Suspense Romance, Novel With Strong Romantic Elements and Paranormal//Fantasy Romance. She is The 2017 Finalist for the Georgia Author of the Year Awards in the Romance Category for Stumble Stones: A Novel.

A public relations consultant in Atlanta, Marilyn graduated with a BS in Journalism (Public Relations) and a minor in English (Creative Writing) from the University of Florida. She worked in Public Relations for AT&T in Atlanta for 13 years before starting her own PR firm.

She serves on the 2017-2018 Roswell Reads Steering Committee and the Atlanta Authors committee and she presented on an Atlanta Writers Club panel at the 2017 AJC-Decatur Book Festival.

Read more about Marilyn’s books, short stories, and other works of fiction at http://www.marilynbaron.com.




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Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Spotlight Tour - - SOLO by Jill Mansell


Title: Solo
Author: Jill Mansell
Pub Date: January 3, 2017
ISBN: 9781492632429

It all starts at a party, as these things often do…

· A one-night stand with far-reaching consequences
· Momentarily enamored guests going home with all the wrong people
· An unfaithful wife struck by jealousy and getting a dose of her own medicine
· A shocking family secret revealed at the worst possible moment

One fling follows another, and now the whole community is embroiled in a great big web of deceit, the untangling of which will charm you, amuse you, make you laugh and make you cry.

Whatever’s going on in your life, Solo by Jill Mansell is the perfect distraction right about now…

With over 10 million copies sold, New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Jill Mansell writes irresistible and funny, poignant and romantic tales for women in the tradition of Marian Keyes, Sophie Kinsella and Jojo Moyes. She lives with her partner and their children in Bristol, England. Website | Twitter | Facebook


Buy Links:



QUESTION
Complete this sentence: I knew I had found the love of my life when he ___
Well, I'd only just started seeing Cino when my house was flooded by a burst water tank in the loft, in the middle of winter, so we had no water, no heating and no dry furniture at all. It's the most miserable thing that can happen, but he came and stayed and helped me move all the ruined carpets into the snowy garden, and helped me through the whole nightmare for days on end, and I really hadn't thought he was that type of person, so I was wildly impressed. (Of course, thirty years later it can take him a good couple of years to get around to fixing something tiny like a broken light switch...)


EXCERPT

I must be drunk, thought Tessa, kicking off her shoes and sinking into a sitting position on the edge of the vast, canopied bed. When a man like Ross Monahan urged you to spend the night at his place and assured you that you were quite welcome to the bed—he would be happy to sleep on the settee—you knew you were playing with fire.
Either drunk or crazy, she told herself as she pulled her dress over her head, threw it in the direction of a large, red-velvet chair and wrapped herself in the dark-blue toweling robe he had left for her.
But she knew she wasn’t that drunk. She was enjoying the game which had begun so many hours earlier. The challenge had been thrown down and she couldn’t resist it. She was going to seriously enjoy being the only woman in the history of the world to have slept in Ross’s bed…alone.
His suite of rooms on the top floor of the hotel was as sumptuous as she had imagined, particularly since seeing the rest of The Grange earlier. Like stowaways, they had remained closeted in the conservatory until the early hours of the morning when the last guests had departed, either roaring off into the night in their smart cars or retiring to their rooms in the hotel.
Then, taking her hand, Ross had given her the full guided tour, showing her the elegant sitting rooms, the restaurant, the squash courts, the superb gym and the spectacular indoor swimming-pool built inside a second, even larger, conservatory, illuminated by underwater lighting and surrounded on three sides by more tropical vegetation. Ross was as proud of the hotel as a new father. Tessa had been touched by his enthusiasm. But if he was under the impression that she would be so overwhelmed by this display of his success that she would leap into bed with him, he was going to be disappointed.
Saying no was much, much more fun.
Firmly securing the belt of the far-too-big robe around her waist, she threw back the bedcovers and slid between cool white sheets, just as a cautious knock sounded at the door.
“It’s OK, I’m decent.”
“Pity,” said Ross lightly. He was still dressed, and carrying a folded blanket over one arm.
Tessa gestured at the bed. “This is awfully kind of you. You’ll probably have a terrible time trying to sleep on that settee.”
“Probably.” He gave her a mournful look, then grinned. “But I’ll survive.”
She watched him fling the blanket over the narrow leather Chesterfield. “And it’s four thirty now. Nearly time to get up again anyway.”
“Don’t remind me.”
“I’m very grateful.”
“Absolutely no problem.”
Tessa pulled the covers up to her chin and smiled at him. “You’re a true gentleman.”
“I believe you,” said Ross. “Thousands wouldn’t.”
She watched him hover for a few seconds beside the sofa, wondering no doubt if she might change her mind. Then, giving him one last big smile, she plumped up her pillows and turned over. “Mmm, well, thanks again. Good night.”
Tessa didn’t know what time it was when she shifted in her sleep and first realized that she was no longer alone in the bed. Her bare leg was resting against another bare leg, definitely not her own. Sleepily, almost subconsciously, she stretched out her hand and encountered a smooth, warm back. She became aware of the very faint scent of aftershave and toothpaste, and the quiet, regular breathing of someone deeply and peacefully asleep.
To her great surprise, Tessa was neither shocked nor annoyed by this invasion of her privacy. It was, after all, his bed and a narrow, slippery leather Chesterfield was about as conducive to a good night’s sleep as a tin bath.
In fact, she realized drowsily, she had forgotten quite how nice it felt to lie next to another body, accidentally brushing against an arm or a hip, sharing each other’s warmth and enjoying the primal instincts of simply being together.
With a guilty start she came properly awake. For the way her fingertips were trailing down Ross’s spine wasn’t in the least bit accidental. And, without even realizing it, her own left leg had managed to fit against the curve of his right one with all the snugness of a missing piece in a jigsaw.
This was taking the enjoyment of sharing each other’s warmth a little too far.
Regretfully easing her leg back to her own side of the bed and removing her hand from his back, she closed her eyes and attempted to distract her mind from its traitorous wanderings. She had always believed that physical intimacy—not just sex—was something like a video recorder or a Magimix: what you didn’t have, you didn’t miss, it just faded from your mind and became unimportant.
It had been almost a year since her last relationship had ended. At first, of course, she had missed the hugs and the kisses—and the sex—but certainly not enough to go rampaging round Bath in search of males, any males, with whom to satisfy the need for physical contact.
And pretty soon she had become used to being and sleeping alone once more. The withdrawal symptoms had been mild. Because hugging and kissing and sex weren’t physical addictions like heroin. They were something that was nice but also quite possible to live without.
On the other hand, a year was a long time.



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Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Review - - FALLEN


FALLEN
By Carey Baldwin
Publisher: Witness Impulse (HarperCollins)
Release Date: June 9, 2015




 
Fallen is Carey Baldwin’s second book in her Spenser and Cassidy series, which chronicles the adventures of FBI agent and profiler Atticus “Spense” Spenser and Dr. Caitlin Cassidy, a forensic psychiatrist and FBI consultant. In Fallen, Spense and Caity delve into the underside of the glitz and glamor of Hollywood when a string of homicides in L.A. baffle the local police and they’re called in to help solve the case.

The action in Fallen kicks off when the body of a high price prostitute falls out of a hotel window right onto Hollywood Boulevard.  Soon after, other bodies are found with the same M.O. dubbed the “Fallen Angel Killer” by the press because of the way the killer displays the bodies of the victims, and the physical similarities between them. Spense and Caity scramble to try to make sense of the killer’s motive and how he’s finding his victims. The stakes are raised even higher when the Fallen Angel Killer kidnaps the next victim, and threatens to kill her unless “Celebrity X” publicly confesses their sins and issues an apology within 48 hours. So, the race is on to figure out who Celebrity X is and get them to confess, or find where the Fallen Angel Killer has hidden the victim.

Carey Baldwin writes heart-pounding romantic suspense that keeps the reader guessing and turning the pages.  I was fascinated by her exploration of the seedy underside of our celebrity, fame-crazed culture and the toll it takes on those caught in its trap.  The villain was a total surprise to me, but it totally made sense once all of pieces of the puzzle came together.  Baldwin had cleverly laid out all the clues for the reader to figure out, but not so blatantly that the solution was too obvious.  Baldwin’s medical and psychology background comes to the forefront and allows her to add an appealing richness and depth to the story by really diving into the killer’s motivation and psychological makeup to explain why he/she is so driven to kill. The writing is smart, fast-paced, and absorbing with a sly sense of humor. Baldwin has a great talent for drawing her readers into the story, and making them enjoy every minute of the pulse-pounding ride.

With romantic suspense novels, there is always the risk that the suspense will overwhelm the romance. In many RS novels, the love story gets lost in the suspense and mystery.  That is not the case in Fallen.  Spense and Caity’s relationship is definitely front and center in this book.  Baldwin deftly deals with the lingering fallout from the events of Judgement, the first book in the series, and uses that to move Caity and Spense’s relationship forward.  Caity has some scars and baggage to deal with due to events in her past, and I love how understanding Spense is and how determined he is to make things work between them. The two of them continue to work on their communication skills and growing attraction. The deepening of the emotional bond between them is wonderfully done and I loved them working through the bumps in their relationship.  Even though the relationship hasn’t gotten 100% physical, the sense of them becoming an even more solid team makes the reader invested in them as a couple and the series as a whole. 

Signs indicate that Caity and Spense are off to Dallas in the next book. I can’t wait to find out what’s in store for them next!  I highly recommend Fallen, and any of Carey Baldwin’s books, to anyone who enjoys a great romance suspense novel with great writing, spine-tingling plots, and compelling characters that will stay with you long after you get to the end.

~Lisa

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Review -- One in a Million

One in a Million
Lucky Harbor—Book 12
By Jill Shalvis
Publisher: Grand Central
Release Date: October 14, 2014





Reviewing this book is bittersweet for me. It was just over four years ago when I reviewed Simply Irresistible here at The Romance Dish and first fell in love with the small coastal town of Lucky Harbor, Washington, where you can leave your front door unlocked and no one would ever touch your stuff, but you can’t keep a secret. I have since reviewed several of the other books in Shalvis’s popular Lucky Harbor series. Simply Irresistible is the first book of the series, so it has come full circle as One in a Million is the last. As with any series, some books stand out to readers more than others. One in a Million is one of those stand-out books for me.

Tanner Riggs and his two best friends own and run Lucky Harbor Charters. As a team, they offer boat tours, scuba diving lessons, take people deep-sea fishing, etc. These activities are tame compared to what Tanner did in the past: going into the military right after high school and becoming a Navy SEAL and later being in charge of setting explosives on an oil rig. When his teenage son, Troy, comes to live with him, Tanner is thrown for a loop but is definitely up for the challenge.

Callie Sharpe grew up in Lucky Harbor but moved away after her fiancé left her standing at the altar. So it’s a bit ironic that she now runs an Internet wedding site promoting happily-ever-afters. She may have a cynical viewpoint of what happens in the years following the wedding, but she sure is good at preparing for one. She returns to Lucky Harbor to check on her grandmother, who Callie’s parents believe is losing her mind. (Obviously they don’t know Lucille as well as readers do! Ha!) Callie wasn’t prepared for her reaction when she lays eyes on her high school crush, Tanner Riggs. How do you bring together two people who have given up on the idea of true love? With doughnuts, coffee, a hot-headed teenager, and a matchmaking grandmother, of course!

I. Love. This. Book. I do, I love this book. I love Tanner. I love Callie. I love their hilarious meet-cute in the bakery. I love Tanner’s son and Callie’s grandmother, and I love Tanner’s and Callie’s sweet romance. Tanner was a bit of an adrenaline-junkie in the past, but an explosion on the oil rig changed him both physically (his leg was badly injured) and mentally (his good friend died). This causes Tanner to appreciate what he has and I love this about him. He was so real to me. And the scenes between him and his son were heartfelt and completely genuine. I have a teenage son, and while mine isn’t as wild and obstinate as Troy, I connected with Troy. Ms. Shalvis did a great job with his character.

I also connected with Callie. She is a total introvert, who is clumsy and a bit socially awkward at times. I can so relate! I really enjoyed her reactions to the things Tanner would say when they shared coffee and doughnuts. Because she was left at the altar, I can totally understand her hesitation at her and Tanner’s friendship becoming something more serious. She doesn’t want to take the chance on having her heart broken again. Thank goodness for her grandma’s sage advice! Callie’s unconditional love for Lucille and their interactions was something that really grabbed me. Lucille is one of those truly unforgettable characters. I will miss her and her crazy antics! I could go on and on and on, but I want you to enjoy this book. I’m telling you, I loved it.

As I said at the beginning, I’m sad that this is the last Lucky Harbor book. But, then again, if Ms. Shalvis wrote too many more books in the series, it wouldn’t be a “small town” anymore! So if you’re looking for a great contemporary series/romance, I heartily recommend the entire series, and, especially, One in a Million!


~Andrea

Monday, September 29, 2014

Review -- He's So Fine

He’s So Fine
Lucky Harbor—Book 11
By Jill Shalvis
Publisher: Grand Central
Release Date: September 30, 2014






As the captain, chief navigator, and mechanic of Lucky Harbor Charters, Cole Donovan can certainly hold his own while in the water. So, when he falls into the harbor after getting shocked while doing some electrical repairs on a boat, it’s not a big deal. Apparently, the crazy woman who jumps in to “save” him thinks it is a big deal. After thrashing in the water for a bit, Cole manages to get her out of the water, but not without agitating an old shoulder injury. While attempting to warm them up, he realizes that the woman is his pretty neighbor.

Olivia Bentley thought she was helping Cole. After all, she saw the spark and then saw him fall into the water. Evidently, she was wrong. She feels bad that she caused him to hurt his shoulder, but she isn’t sorry to get so close (and get a peek!) as they are warming up. It would seem that Cole didn’t mind it either, because he shows up to check on her soon after. At first she believes that he’s just being neighborly, but he continues to show up for various reasons. Olivia knows that she could easily fall for a guy like Cole, but also knows that she shouldn’t if she wants to keep her secret safe.

It’s no secret that I am a fan of Jill Shalvis’s Lucky Harbor series. In it, she has created notable characters that I care deeply about and placed them in an unforgettable small town setting that this reader would love to visit. Plus, she includes secondary characters that are hilarious and add that extra something to make each story even better.

But let’s talk about my favorite part of this particular book: Cole. Oh, how I love Cole. He is honest, frank, and as his partner and friend Tanner puts it, “He’s a straight shooter, our Cole.” He’s a sexy nerd who can fix anything with duct tape and a screwdriver. You know, like McGyver. He wants to help Olivia by fixing little things here and there in her vintage shop, Unique Boutique. How sexy is that? I think poor Cole just wants to feel needed by someone while he is recovering from hurting his shoulder. And even though Olivia is hesitant to let Cole into her life, when he does things like that, he is hard to resist. When she sees him with his family, she is floored because they are on the opposite end of the spectrum as her family. Cole’s mother and sisters are loving, considerate, and devoted to each other whereas Olivia’s family members are selfish and use Olivia as a cash cow. It’s no wonder Olivia comes to Lucky Harbor to get away from them! I would, too! Readers find out Olivia’s secret fairly early on in the book, but I won’t spoil it for you. I will say that I am so glad it wasn’t a clichéd secret. It was one I haven’t read before so it was refreshing. Cole’s friends—Sam (from It’s in His Kiss) and Tanner (from next month’s One in a Million)—play huge roles in this story as do their heroines. And what’s a Lucky Harbor novel without the amusing antics of Lucky Harbor’s resident busybody Lucille. I love her! And after reading this one, I have a feeling she will play an even bigger part in the next book. I can’t wait!

He’s So Fine is another great addition to Ms. Shalvis’s Lucky Harbor series and a book that I highly recommend!


~Andrea

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Sneak Peek - - Virtue Falls


PJ here.  Christina Dodd has been on my auto-buy author list for more than fifteen years.  I've followed her from historical romance to contemporary romantic suspense to paranormal and now, with the upcoming release of Virtue Falls, to suspense thrillers. Many of her books sit on my keeper shelves but I believe this new book may be her best writing yet. With Virtue Falls, Dodd has created an edge-of-your-seat thriller that kept me reading until the wee hours of the morning and still has me thinking of the story's characters more than three weeks after finishing the book. This one has my highest recommendation. 

As award-winning author, Hank Phillipi Ryan says, "This dark and powerful psychological thriller will surprise you, haunt you, and captivate you.” 

Today, I'm pleased to welcome Christina Dodd as she brings us a sneak peek excerpt from her September 9th release, Virtue Falls.




            Torture your hero early and often; it develops his character, like roasting nuts brings out the flavor.


            This is one of my favorite writing tips; I often post it on Facebook because it gets people's attention, makes them laugh, makes them think. Everyone loves a tortured hero, a man who truly has had troubles in his past and yet, somehow, manages to rise above them to behave … like a hero.

            The hero in my new suspense, VIRTUE FALLS, has had recent trouble — a heart-breaking divorce, the loss of his beloved job, and the knowledge that his own loss of control caused an irreparable tragedy. He has secrets, too, old, dark secrets that haunt him. His recent troubles and those old secrets have broken him, and only one thing can save him — a call to action, delivered at just the right moment… 

~~~~~~~~~~


            Garik Jacobsen walked into his Las Vegas apartment, his home now for eight months. He flipped on the TV, flung his suit jacket on the chair, and placed the Styrofoam containers which held his dinner on the kitchen counter. As he headed for the bedroom, his stomach rumbled.
            Ever since the FBI had taken his badge, he hadn’t been eating regularly.
            But tonight, for the first time, he knew exactly what to do, and his appetite had come back with a vengeance.
            Yay for him.
            The bedroom was stark: blinds at the window, a bed, a nightstand, a reading lamp. He pulled open the drawer and looked down at the pistol he wasn’t supposed to own. He picked it up, weighed it in his hand, checked to see that it was properly loaded. It was. And the safety was on. Putting the pistol back, he shut the drawer.
            He kicked his dress shoes in the direction of the closet. They banged, one by one, into the cheap wooden sliding door.
            He worked as a security guard at Nordstrom; the tie had been loosened as soon as he left the store. The jacket had come off as soon as he got to the court-ordered therapist’s office. Now it was time for t-shirt and jeans, and he donned them with the reverence of a man who wore them all too seldom.
            Opening the drawer again, he picked up the pistol. He shoved it into his waistband, and headed back to the kitchen. There, he kicked a discarded pizza box aside. He flipped open the tops of his Styrofoam containers and admired the contents.
            Yeah. Steak: thick, charbroiled, rare. Potatoes au gratin with enough cheese to give a cardiologist a heart attack. Green beans cooked with bacon.
            He might skip the green beans. He liked them, but what was the point of eating something good for him now?
            In the other container, tiramisu. In the paper cup, espresso.
            Yeah.
            He heated the skillet on the stove, melted a stick of butter until it was smoking, and slapped the steak in to crisp it up. He put the beans and potatoes on a plate and into the microwave. He got out a fork and his good steak knife — it was actually a stiletto, but he wasn’t allowed to own one of those either, so he called it a steak knife — and put it on the coffee table.
            On the TV, a rerun of CSI. Like he needed to watch that noble shit about duty and honor. He changed the channel, found The Punisher, one of the best, most violent, stupidest movies of all time, and left it.
            He flipped the steak, watched it sizzle another minute, then pulled the plate out of the microwave and lovingly laid the steak beside the steaming potatoes. Going to the couch, he sat down, put the plate on the table, and pulled the pistol from his waistband. He placed it beside the plate, within easy reach.
            The movie had ended. Local news blared, the anchor team making much of insignificant details in the Las Vegas area while ignoring the big shit that was important. He used the remote to mute them, picking up his knife and fork, and with exquisite care, he carved the steak.
            Perfect. The blood ran red onto the white plate, embracing the pile of potatoes.
            Elizabeth would have turned her head away. Blood made her squeamish. Once after he’d been shot, she had rushed to the ER to see him, taken one look and had fainted so fast she’d needed medical attention for a concussion.
            So during the whole time of their marriage, Garik had eaten his steak medium. When she had told him she wanted a divorce, he’d pointed out his steakly sacrifice, but she had said, in that supremely reasonable tone which bugged the shit out of him, that if not for him and his carnivorous habits, she would be a vegetarian. And anyway, eating to please each other didn’t make for a happy marriage.
            Apparently not.
            Now he lifted a bite of tender, rare steak to his lips, chewed and swallowed, and smiled.
            Heaven.
            Piercing one of the green beans with his fork, he lifted it in a salute. “To you, Elizabeth,” he said, and ate it, too.
            His pleasure in the moment slipped … damn, but he missed that woman. He hadn’t understood her. The stuff she cared about! Stuff like rocks and quakes and volcanoes. Stuff that bored him silly, and when he tried to get her interested in what was important, like crime and passion and violence, she’d pointed out that people change, come and go, but the earth was forever. She had always been so calm, so logical … so remote.
            Except in bed. My God, he’d never met a woman like that, who hid a fiery passion beneath a cool, inquiring, scientific mind. He wished … well, he wished a lot of things, most of them to do with Elizabeth, and all of them impossible now.
            He shrugged. Water over the dam, or under the bridge, or whatever it was. It had taken him more than a year to get himself to this point of Zen acceptance. He wasn’t going to screw it up now thinking about what might have been.
            Instead, he once again submerged himself in the meal, in the cheesy, salty potatoes, in the steak, in the beans and the bacon.
            He’d love a glass of wine, but he had decided he didn’t want anyone to say alcohol had influenced his decision.
            As a last dinner went, this one was pretty fine. Any man on death row would be glad for this, and when he had finished — he ate every bite, even the green beans — he leaned back against the couch and sipped his espresso, laced with cinnamon and whipped cream.
            All he needed now was a woman. But since Elizabeth had left him, he hadn’t been much good at sex. He figured that was a big part of his problem. No sex, no pressure valve, and Garik the perfect-record FBI agent gets fed up with the bullshit regulations and loses his temper. And gets in big trouble.
            So no, he wasn’t going to go looking for sex for dessert. Going out in a blaze of impotence would be too humiliating.
            Instead, he reached for the pistol.
            It wasn’t his service pistol. The FBI had taken that away from him. Garik had bought this piece at a pawn shop, and the Colt felt good in his hand. Solid. Cold. Uncaring. Unthinking…
            He felt at rest with his decision.
            Margaret would be angry, grieved and hurt, and he regretted that. He knew Elizabeth would mourn him, too. But Margaret wasn’t really related to him, for all that she’d cared for him so diligently, and Elizabeth was no longer his wife. He’d gone over the logic a hundred times, and he couldn’t live with the knowledge he had started down the road in his father’s footsteps. That he was a killer. Inadvertently, but a killer.
            He unmuted the TV and turned up the sound. It wouldn’t muffle the shot, but it might make it sound like he was watching another version of The Shooter.
            Lifting the gun, he placed the barrel in his mouth.
            He lowered it, and grimaced. For all the many times he’d handled a gun, he’d never tasted one. Metal and gun oil had ruined the savory, lingering flavors of his meal. Tough shit, huh.
            He lifted the pistol again. That flavor wasn’t the worst part of this.
            The worst part was getting distracted by those phony newscasters.
            The guy with the carefully applied blond streaks in his hair and dutiful concern announced, “An eight-point-one earthquake struck off the west coast of Washington state, shaking an area extending from Alaska to San Francisco and wreaking havoc in Seattle where it knocked bricks off of buildings and killed sixteen people in a bank collapse.” Photos and videos took over the screen. “A massive tsunami struck the coast, tearing into the beaches.” The video switched to helicopter shots of the incoming waves battering the low-lying beaches. “The town of Forks was hard hit, and there we begin our coverage—“
            Garik put down the pistol. He sat forward. “What about Virtue Falls?” he asked aloud.
            The picture switched to a wide-eyed female, standing in front of a collapsed building illuminated by flood lights. “As you can see, in this small rural community made famous by the Twilight books and movies, the earthquake damage has been substantial—“
            “How much truth are you telling, and how much is news hype?” Standing, Garik headed for his jacket, pulled his cell phone and called Virtue Falls resort.
            No connection.
            He called the Virtue Falls sheriff’s office.
            No connection.
            The news babbled on, abandoning the earthquake in Washington state and moving to the story of a local woman who had inherited a guitar once played by Bob Dylan. Because, you know, that was important.
            Garik hit the internet to get the earthquake details.
            The news was right about one thing. Helicopter footage showed a huge tsunami striking the coast, rushing up rivers and swamping low-lying areas.
            Elizabeth.
            He’d been married to Elizabeth. He knew the theory about Virtue Falls Canyon. He knew Elizabeth was working down there on her father’s project.
            Had she been in the canyon when the earthquake hit?
            Surely not. It had struck late in the day.
            But he knew her. When she was obsessed with her rocks, time passed and she never noticed…
            What about Margaret? The resort hung precariously over the Pacific. Margaret had paid for refitting of the resort, but could it withstand the assault of the ocean?
            He called the airlines.
            They weren’t flying into Seattle right now. They weren’t flying into Portland, either. Damage at the airport.
            Going into the bedroom, he pulled out his duffel bag; he had always kept it packed for unexpected trips for the FBI, and old habits died hard.
            He put on socks and running shoes.
            He’d take his truck, a white Ford F250, powerful as hell. After all, Nevada had a top speed limit of seventy-five miles per hour, and he still held an FBI ID.
            He had claimed he lost it in the fight.
            His supervisor had claimed he believed him.
            So even figuring he’d get pulled over at least four times, when he flashed that ID, the cops would mostly let him go.
            On a good day, he could make it back home to Virtue Falls in twenty hours.
            He hoped to hell this was a good day.
            Grabbing his keys and his knife, he walked out the door, leaving his pistol behind.

Excerpt from Virtue Falls
By Christina Dodd
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Release Date: September 9, 2014




Garik is one tortured hero!  So tell us, readers, what do you think of tortured heroes? Love 'em or hate 'em?





Christina will be giving away autographed copies of Revenge at Bella Terra to three randomly chosen people who leave a comment on today's post. (U.S. addresses only)










Do you enjoy audio books? Click below to listen to the first chapter of Virtue Falls.
 





New York Times bestselling author Christina Dodd www.christinadodd.com builds worlds filled with suspense, romance and adventure and creates the most distinctive characters in fiction today. Her fifty novels — suspense, paranormals, and historicals — have been translated into twenty-five languages, featured by Doubleday Book Club, recorded on Books on Tape for the Blind, won Romance Writers of America’s prestigious Golden Heart and RITA Awards and been called the year’s best by Library Journal. Dodd herself has been a clue in the Los Angeles Times crossword puzzle — her mother was totally impressed. VIRTUE FALLS, the first full-length book in her new, much-praised suspense series, will be published September 9 in hardcover and e-book. With more than fifteen million of her books in print, her legions of fans always know that when they pick up a Christina Dodd book, they’ve found, “an absolute thrill ride of a book!”

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