Showing posts with label Wild Child. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wild Child. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Today's Special - - Molly O'Keefe


Today, we welcome Molly O'Keefe back to The Romance Dish. It's always cause for celebration when Molly has a new book out. This time around it's WILD CHILD, first in her new The Boys of Bishop series (read Janga's review here). 

Please give Molly a warm welcome!











The Art of the Glom

As I write this post, it's a rainy Sunday after a really busy week and I can hear my kids gloming a show on Netflix called Kick Buttowski. There's a chance this show has the most annoying theme song ever. But last night, with a glass of wine and the TV to myself, I finished my own glom of Sons of Anarchy, Season One.  Until two in the morning!

I recently discovered Sarah McLean's historical romances - glom.

Thea Harrison's Dragon series - glom.

I've stayed up late, woken up early, taken the book to the park, because I NEEDED TO FINISH THE BOOK, all so I could start the next one.

Gloms are little mini-addictions.

And while the adrenaline thrill and satisfaction of starting and finishing an entire television season, or a series of books in a week is nothing to sneeze at, I wonder how much we're missing when we do that? How many little subplots and moments are read and immediately forgotten because it's two in the morning and frankly, we're just skimming to the end so we can see what the cliffhanger is for the next book?

I love Meljean Brook's Iron Seas series, because whenever a new book comes out, I re-read the first books as a refresher course on the world. And with every re-read, I feel or think something new. That's its own kind of thrill. 

So, what about you? Are you a glomer? What was the last glom you went on? Or are you a read it/watch it as they come out kind of person?

To feed your next glom - I will give away one copy of Can't Buy Me Love - the first book in the Crooked Creek series and WILD CHILD the first book in my new series; The Boys Of Bishop, to one lucky winner.


If you're interested in finding out more about my new series THE BOYS OF BISHOP and WILD CHILD which is being released Oct. 30 come find me at www.molly-okeefe.com or on facebook https://www.facebook.com/MollyOKeefeBooks?ref=hl





Perfect for readers of Susan Elizabeth Phillips and Rachel Gibson, this sizzling romance tells the story of a sexy small-town mayor and a notorious “bad girl,” who discover that home really is where the heart is.

Monica Appleby is a woman with a reputation. Once she was America’s teenage “Wild Child,” with her own reality TV show. Now she’s a successful author coming home to Bishop, Arkansas, to pen the juicy follow-up to her tell-all autobiography. Problem is, the hottest man in town wants her gone. Mayor Jackson Davies is trying to convince a cookie giant to move its headquarters to his crumbling community, and Monica’s presence is just too . . . unwholesome for business. But the desire in his eyes sends a very different message:Stay, at least for a while.

Jackson needs this cookie deal to go through. His town is dying and this may be its last shot. Monica is a distraction proving too sweet, too inviting—and completely beyond his control. With every kiss he can taste her loneliness, her regrets, and her longing. Soon their uncontrollable attraction is causing all kinds of drama. But when two lost hearts take a surprise detour onto the bumpy road of unexpected love, it can only lead someplace wonderful.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Guest Review - - Wild Child

Wild Child
By Molly O’Keefe
Publisher: Random House/Bantam
Release Date: October 29, 2013

  


Jackson Davies left law school seven years ago after his parents were killed in an automobile accident and returned to Bishop, Arkansas, to make a home for his eleven-year-old sister in the Big House, the family home where generations of Davies descendants have lived. He serves as the mayor of Bishop, a job his father held before him. Bishop, like a lot of small towns, has been hit hard by the recession, especially in the years since the okra-processing plant closed. The town is on the verge of bankruptcy and will soon be forced to make some tough choices between public services. Jackson is committed to finding a way to save Bishop. If he can do that, then when his sister leaves for college in a year, Jackson can leave too and reclaim the life he lost with all its opportunities for exploration and self-indulgence.

Monica Appleby is returning to Bishop, a town she barely remembers, for the first time since she left it when she was six. Monica has lived all over the world, but it is little Bishop that haunts her. It was the site of her mother’s putting a bullet through Monica’s father in self-defense. The author of a little known book about rock-star groupies and of Wild Child, a bestselling memoir about her own experiences as an out-of-control teenager immersed in a world of drugs, sex, and rock music, Monica plans to write a book about her father’s death. To do so, she must interview the citizens of Bishop who remember details Monica never knew and perhaps awaken memories that she has buried deeply.

Jackson learns of a contest in which small towns compete to become the home of Maybream Crackers new factory. He sees it as a way to save Bishop and free him, and he is determined to do everything he can to present Bishop as a wholesome, forward thinking, family friendly town-- perfect as the factory site. The last thing he needs is the scandalous Monica back in town probing memories and raking up the darkest moment in the town’s past. The clash between Jackson and Monica is inevitable, but the powerful chemistry between them catches them both by surprise. Even more surprising is that these two people who appear to be opposites are so much alike beneath the public personae they have created. But letting people inside carefully constructed barriers is risky and scary and messy. Monica and Jackson must find the courage to truly know themselves and to allow themselves to be fully known if they are to have a chance to find their “perfectly imperfect” future together.

Molly O’Keefe manages to use light moments to balance the darkness and to include plenty of sizzle for readers for whom that is a primary consideration, but what she does best is create imperfect, memorable characters. Not just Jackson and Monica but all the minor characters as well harbor secrets that their public faces do not reveal. They all struggle with the gap between who they are and what other people expect them to be. Underlying the internal and external conflicts is the idea that people can lose themselves when they are too caught up in being what others expect them to be.

O’Keefe’s insistence that there are no perfect characters extends beyond the fictional characters to touch the reader. Most readers will feel a visceral connection to Monica who is trying to prove that she is better than the past that most people use as a basis for judging her or to Jackson who is so caught up in fixing everyone and solving their problems that he can’t see himself clearly. They will recognize the inescapable truth O’Keefe conveys: human beings are quick to apply labels to each other, but we are all too complicated and messy and contradictory to be contained by a convenient tag.

Some novels I read are merely entertainment. Rarer are those that make me think hard thoughts and push me to examine my own life. Wild Child did that. I live in a small town, I practice a faith that teaches me to love and not to judge, but I found myself wondering how I would react if a reformed wild child became part of my community. If you appreciate books that combine moments that evoke genuine laughter with those that touch darker emotions and cause you to look at the real world you inhabit with a new perspective, I highly recommend this book.

Wild Child is the first in a new series. I have no idea what’s next, although I searched for hints. The repressed schoolteacher Shelby and the brooding Brody are the secondary characters I find most intriguing, but the first book is rich with possibilities for further stories. One thing is certain: whatever Molly O’Keefe writes, I’ll be reading it. I love those flawed characters!

~Janga
http://justjanga.blogspot.com