Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Review - - The Sins of Lord Lockwood


The Sins of Lord Lockwood
By Meredith Duran
Publisher: Pocket
Release Date: February 27, 2018
Reviewed by Janga




Liam Devaliant, fifth Earl of Lockwood, is a man with a mission: to see justice served and exact punishment on the man responsible for Lockwood’s abduction, imprisonment and torture. With the help of his friends Julian, Duke of Auburn (The Duke of Shadows), and Crispin Burke, MP (A Lady’s Code of Misconduct), he will achieve his goal, but his plan requires careful attention. He believes that he will have time later to consider his wife whom he has not seen since their wedding night almost four years earlier. He is confident that she won’t know he is back in England for at least a month.

When her husband disappeared on their wedding night, Anna Winterslow Wallace Devaliant, Countess of Forth and Countess of Lockwood, concluded that he had left her. Because being left has been a pattern in her life, Anna accepts that Liam is just another person she loved who abandoned her.  She retreats to her home on the Isle of Rawsey, but when she learns indirectly that her husband has returned, she goes to London, filled with anger over his abandonment, her weakness in loving him, and his failure to inform her of his return. To make matters worse, he has been in London for eight months, although she learned that fact only when she read it in a newspaper. What she finds in London adds more fuel to her anger.

For a variety of reasons, Liam is not pleased that Anna is in London and planning to stay in their house. He knows that the young man Anna married is dead, and he has no plans to tell her what happened to him. He cannot bear the thought of her pity nor the memories her presence evokes. There is also the problem of Lockwood’s fellow survivors, men who have no family, no resources, and no place to go except the home he has given them. Anna, ignorant of the true circumstances, sees them only as incompetent staff who need to be replaced.

The first words Anna and Lockwood exchange after their long separation are revealing.

He says, “You should not be here.”

She responds, “And you should be in hell. . . . Alas, few of us end up where we belong.”

Anna refuses to leave until she achieves her goal. As Countess of Forth, she holds a Scottish title that descends through her, and she wants an heir. Anna feeds her anger with reminders of Lockwood’s desertion, and he plays the role of the dissolute aristocrat, hiding his broken self from Anna. When he does tell bits of his story, he does so in a manner that convinces Anna he is lying. Although they share rare moments of passion and of connection beyond the physical, for the most part, they hold to their entrenched positions. But when Anna sees the brutal reality of Lockwood’s experience, she becomes his defender and champion, as determined as he to see the man behind his torment punished. But are the demons that haunt Lockwood too powerful to allow him to give and receive love?

The Sins of Lord Lockwood is the sixth book in Duran’s Rules for the Reckless series. It is the darkest and the strongest novel in an extraordinary series. Duran uses flashback chapters to show Anna and Lockwood’s meeting and marriage. The contrast between these younger, more innocent characters and the wounded survivors they have become is stark, making the wrongs done to them more heinous. Anna is independent, assertive, and frank. She demonstrates impressive strength while remaining a woman of her time and circumstances. Her love for Rawsey and its people is real, but, as she comes to realize, Rawsey has also served as refuge where she could hide from her pain. Anna and Liam are both damaged people, but his physical and psychic wounds are deeper and more pervasive than hers. Liam has survived hell and has been irrevocably changed by it. The loyalty he inspires in Julian and in his fellow prison camp survivors is a testament to his courage and honor, but he is a man who faces life without joy or hope. Anna’s presence forces him to realize that once his need for revenge is satisfied, his life will be without purpose. The battle he and Anna fight together to move him from mere physical survival to a rebirth as a full, functioning self is fiercer than his struggle with his enemy.

There are so many exceptional things about this novel that no one review could list them all. I loved the gender reversal with Anna as the one demanding an heir. I loved the way Duran handles the love scenes. They could serve as textbook studies on how to write a highly sensual scene that also reveals character, exposes vulnerabilities, and moves the story to the next level. And each one is distinct and exactly right for that moment in the story. I love than even in a book that is almost unbearably dark, there are flashes of light and laughter. And, as always, Duran’s prose is lucid and powerful. Perhaps to a greater degree than any author I know, her prose beautifully demonstrates the effect of simplicity and conciseness.  Note the preponderance of single-syllable words in Anna’s response to Liam’s shame over his scarred body and emotional punch of “triumphant” in contrast.

“You tried to hide them? Why, you should walk naked in the street to boast of what you survived.  Other men would learn then what it means to be a man – to survive all that, and to come home triumphant.”

And then she claims him: “You are mine and I am keeping you.” Not a wasted syllable. That’s good writing!

It is difficult for me to separate this book from The Duke of Shadows where Anna and Liam’s story begins and to which parts of this book run parallel. I think The Sins of Lord Lockwood can be read as a standalone, but I think the reading will be a richer experience for those who have read The Duke of Shadows, Duran’s debut novel.

If romance with angst is your preference, you do not want to miss this book. I confess that I had to take a break a few times when reading it became too difficult for me. I often choose the light-hearted over the darker romances, but I never miss a Meredith Duran book. This one required me to re-order my favorites by her, and it is a sure bet for my Best of 2018 list. If you like historical romance with complex characters, a compelling plot, and a total impact that leaves you questioning the claim that there are no perfect books, I highly recommend The Sins of Lord Lockwood.


Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Winner - - Valentine's Day






The randomly chosen winner of a 

box of books from the Valentine's Day post is:

Emily

Congratulations!


Please send your full name and mailing address to


theromancedish (at) gmail (dot) com


Monday, February 19, 2018

Review - - Things to Do When it's Raining


Things to Do When It’s Raining
By Marissa Stapley
Publisher: Harlequin/Graydon House
Release Date: February 6, 2018
Reviewed by Janga
  


Things to Do When It’s Raining is a book that begins with endings. Mae Summers awakens one morning in her New York City apartment to discover that her fiancĂ© is missing, their office has been cleared, and FBI agents are on his trail and the trail of the money that he defrauded from investors. Mae is not implicated in his crime, but discovering that her life, personally and professionally, was founded on lies is traumatic. In the same city, Gabriel Broadbent leaves the restaurant where he has just signed the papers ending his marriage to seek solace in a bottle. In Alexandria Bay, New York, the town where Mae and Gabe grew up as childhood best friends and first lovers, Mae’s grandfather, George Summers, has left Lilly, his wife of sixty-seven years, and their once successful inn, to take up residence in a local hotel.

It is also a book about secrets—secrets between husband and wife, parent and child, friend and friend, secrets that protect and secrets that destroy. Mae returns to her hometown on the St. Lawrence River to find the stable ground of her childhood shifting. Gabe returns reluctantly, summoned home by George Summers because Gabe’s abusive, alcoholic father is dying. Mae and Gabe reunite in the face of tragedy, but just as it seems that they may have the future they once dreamed of, complications test their relationship. Gabe’s sense of unworthiness pushes him to leave Alexandria Bay and Mae again. Can they overcome the effects of the past and trust their love to endure through the vicissitudes that are an inevitable part of life? These events play out against the backdrop of the river that is both a powerful part of the story and a metaphoric thread linking past, present, and future.

First, romance readers should be aware that this novel is not romance fiction.  Mae and Gabe’s love is intense, but it is just one part of the story that includes their separate journeys and the stories of their parents and of Mae’s grandparents. Parental love and its failures is as much the emotional center of the novel as romantic love is. Some readers may find the structure and the large number of characters confusing, but others may enjoy the novel’s greater complexity. One of my favorite things is Mae’s realization that she can save herself and that, although she loves Gabe, she can survive on her own. Stapley’s prose is another of the book’s strengths. Some passages possess a lovely, haunting lyricism. And the epilogue should please readers who want the reassurance of a conventional happy ending.

I wavered on the ranking for this book. Objectively, I can see its merits, and I know many readers will find it a rewarding read. I’m not a fan of Nicholas Sparks, but I think if you are a reader who appreciates his books, you will probably enjoy this one. Frankly, I think Stapley’s prose is superior. But this book was just not the kind of read I am looking for these days. I hope the three stars reflects my appreciation for the book’s clear strengths and my conclusion that it is not my cup of tea.





Friday, February 16, 2018

Review- - The Story of Our Lives


The Story of Our Lives
By Helen Warner
Publisher: Harlequin / Graydon House
Release Date: February 13, 2018 
Reviewed by Janga
  

Sophie, Melissa, Amy, and Emily meet their first year as university students in London and establish a friendship that endures across two decades as they grow from girls to mature women, sharing their lives and supporting one another through triumphs and tragedies, through life with good men and with jerks and worse. As is common in women’s fiction—and perhaps to some degree in life--each character is a distinct type. Sophie, the center of the group, meets the love of her life at an early age, enjoys success in her career, and is the most stable of the foursome. Melissa, the child of divorced parents who have second families, is a lost girl and something of a wild child. Amy begins as an effervescent optimist and seems set for a fairy-tale life when she marries a rich, handsome, devoted man, but the darkness beneath the perfect surface almost destroys her. Emily, the most intellectual and the most reserved, becomes pregnant just before she graduates. The identity of her son’s father remains a secret until late in the novel.

The story opens in 1997 when the women, twenty-five at the time, gather for a girls’ weekend. Sophie, living with the boyfriend whom she met the same year she met the other women, is excited about her career in television production but is wondering if steady Steve, who seems boring when compared to her male colleagues, is really right for her. Melissa, who works in the music industry, is drinking too much and hooking up indiscriminately. Amy has met her Prince Charming and announces her engagement. Emily is a devoted mother, rearing her young son Jack alone, with help from her loving parents.

Over the next fifteen years, the friends share each other’s lives through marriages, motherhood, postpartum depression, miscarriage, infidelity, addiction, and domestic abuse. Their annual reunion is sacrosanct, and as they grow more affluent, so do the sites where they gather. Their holidays include time in Ireland, Sophie’s native soil, and Los Angeles, where Melissa’s work takes her. Their love can be tough when necessary; they band together to call Melissa on her self-destructive habits and to save Amy from the marriage that is destroying her. But when another looming tragedy forces Emily to reveal her son’s father at last, the truth may shatter the bonds of their long friendship.

The Story of Our Lives is a well-written novel that falls somewhere between chick lit and women’s fiction, probably closer to the former. Sophie, Melissa, Amy, and Emily are flawed but generally likeable characters. Their romantic lives are a substantial enough part of their story that romance readers will likely enjoy the book. I found Sophie the most appealing of the four friends, and I adored her boyfriend, later husband Steve, a classic beta hero. And the ending will certainly please romance readers. Warner prefaces each chapter with a snippet of headline news from the real world, a strategy that allows the reader to see the lives of the four women within the contexts of a larger world of tragedy, scandal, and hope.

If you like chick lit/ women’s fiction, particularly with an English accent, I think you will find this book a rewarding, entertaining read. 


Thursday, February 15, 2018

On Second Thought - - Venus in Blue Jeans / Konigsburg Series




Venus in Blue Jeans
By Meg Benjamin
Publisher: Entangled
Release Date: August 21, 2017
(Originally published by Samhain,
January 27, 2009)
Reviewed by Janga
 






Back in late 2009, I received a book from my friend and fellow Romance Vagabond Lindsay Faber, then an editor with Samhain, with a note saying she hoped I would enjoy the novel because she imagined how much I would like it when she acquired it. That book was Venus in Blue Jeans, the first book in Meg Benjamin’s Konigsburg series. I fell in love with the characters, the setting, and the author’s voice. A desire to read the next book in the series as soon as it was released rather than wait several months for a print edition pushed me to buy my first ereader. The Konigsburg books remain high on my list of all-time favorite contemporary romance series.

This is what I wrote in my Goodreads review after that first reading:

Dialogue so real and funny you'll wish you had overheard it at a local bar; Texas-size H/H in Docia Kent and Cal Toleffson (although he's a transplant from the Midwest), who have jobs they love that don't involve spies, corporations, or law enforcement; a suspense plot that gives a new wag to an old dog without detracting one iota from the romance; sexy love scenes that are hot and tender and sometimes even humorous; and a small town filled with individuals, some of them flawed and foolish--these are just some of the reasons I loved this book.

Venus in Blue Jeans is the first of Meg Benjamin's Konigsburg books. I'm thrilled that she has written/will be writing the other Toleffson brothers stories. Count me among those who will definitely be returning to Konigsburg.

Although I love every book in the series, after several rereads, the first book is still my favorite. Cal, a veterinarian, and Docia, a bookstore owner, are likable and believable and anything but cookie-cutter characters. Their attraction to one another is powerful and immediate, but lust does not consume their every thought. They are adults who are engaged with their work, find time for their friends, and deal competently with life despite their insecurities and family issues. I’ll confess to a shallower reason for loving Cal: Benjamin has Docia describe him as “Kris Kristofferson, circa 1976.” The book also has a vividly drawn cast of secondary characters including Nico, Docia’s cat with an attitude.

Much of the humor stems from Benjamin’s clever turn of phrase. A cagey dealer in Texas memorabilia has “the ethics of an Enron executive.” Cal mentions his mother and considers “throwing a pinch of salt over his shoulder. But that was to keep the devil, not your mother, off your back.” Docia’s father wears a “suit whose retail price could probably have fed a large contingent of suffering orphans for a couple of weeks with enough left over to buy them all iPods.”

Between 2009 and 2014, Benjamin wrote another seven Konigsberg novels. The three that immediately follow Venus in Blue Jeans feature the other Toleffson brothers. In Wedding Bell Blues, Pete Toleffson, a county attorney in Des Moines, is in Konigsburg to serve as best man when he tangles with (in both senses of that idiom) Docia’s maid-of-honor Janie Dupree. In Be My Baby, “ninja accountant” Lars Toleffson, a recently divorced single father, moves to Konigsburg and hires Jessamyn Carroll, a widow with an infant son, to take care of Daisy, his precocious two-year-old. The combination proves a perfect balance. Long Time Gone, the darkest of the Toleffson stories, pairs oldest brother Erik, Konigsburg’s new police chief, with Morgan Barrett, who is struggling to learn all she needs to know about how to run her father’s winery. The suspense thread in this one is the most effective in the quartet, and Erik and Morgan’s romance develops gradually and convincingly.


The next four novels in the series feature other members of the community: ex-gambler bar owner Tom Ames and temporary barmaid Deirdre Brandenburg in Brand New Me; restaurant manager Kit Maldonado and assistant police chief Nando Avrogado in Don’t Forget Me; chicken farmer MG Carmody and Joe LeBlanc, head chef at The Rose in Fearless Love; and sous chef Darcy Cunningham, a Nebraska transplant who is bewildered by the Texas obsession with barbecue, and Harris Temple, “the Barbecue King,” in Hungry Heart, which also features a second romance, a match against type between Faro bouncer Chico Burnside (who is much more than most of Konigsburg knows) and scientist Andy Wells. Fearless Love gets my vote for funniest in the series, but Don’t Forget Me, a reunion story, is my favorite in the second quartet.

When Samhain closed its doors at the end of February 2016, this series became unavailable, but Entangled reissued the full series last summer. If you like contemporary romance with characters who feel like friends, a community with flaws and quirks and strengths, and prose that is lucid, smart, and funny, I highly recommend these books. I’m betting that if you begin with Venus in Blue Jeans, you won’t be able to resist the rest of the series. Just writing about them has me primed for another reread.

Winner - - Kat Martin







The randomly chosen winner of a copy of

Into the Fury by Kat Martin is:

cheryl c

Congratulations!

Please send your full name and mailing address to:

theromancedish (at) gmail (dot) com


Winner - - About that Kiss








The randomly chosen winner of a copy of

About That Kiss by Jill Shalvis is:

Ada

Congratulations!

Please send your full name and mailing address to:

theromancedish (at) gmail (dot) com




Winner - - Christmas in Good Hope






The randomly chosen winner of a copy of

Christmas in Good Hope by Cindy Kirk is:

Kim

Congratulations!

Please send your full name and mailing address to:

theromancedish (at) gmail (dot) com


Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Valentines Day Facebook Hop








Join us on Facebook today for the Valentine's Day Hop!

Over 80 authors and bloggers will be participating 
in this fun hop through a variety of 
Facebook pages for Valentine's fun and giveaways. 

I'll be giving away a $20 Amazon e-gift card!

If you aren't on Facebook, don't worry. 
I have a Valentine's Day giveaway for you 
right here on the blog, so tell me...

How do you plan to spend Valentine's Day?

What's your favorite Valentine's treat? 


I'm partial to soft caramels dipped in dark chocolate and 
sprinkled with sea salt. I made some today 
to give my neighbors for Valentine's Day 
and kept a few for myself. So good!

What book are you currently reading? 

One randomly chosen person 
who leaves a comment on this post today 
will receive a box of books from my book stash. 
(U.S. addresses only)

Happy Valentine's Day

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Review - - The Color of Love

The Color of Love
By Sharon Sala
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
Release Date: February 6, 2018
Reviewed by Janga
  

When Ruby Dye, owner of the Curl Up and Dye hair salon in Blessings, Georgia, failed to show up in her usual place at church on Sunday morning, her friends were concerned. When she did not respond to their phone calls or text messages, their worry escalated. Concern turned to fear when Vera and Vesta Conklin, who worked with Ruby at her shop, and P. Nutt Butterman, Ruby’s Sunday lunch date, found her house ransacked and the message “Help Me” written in bloody letters. Ruby has become a valued part of the community, and the town comes together to pray for Ruby’s safety.

Ruby arrived in Blessings nearly fifteen years ago, looking for a safe place to escape the abusive husband she had divorced. She found sanctuary and a place to belong in the small Southern town, but just as she feels confident of her safety and is filled with hope that local lawyer Peanut Butterman is the secret admirer who has been sending her gifts for the past several months, Jarrod Dye, her violent former husband shows up at her front door, forces his way into her home, and abducts her.  Ruby is afraid that her life may end before she can experience the new happiness she was beginning to believe was within her reach.

This is just the beginning of the adventures of Ruby and Peanut as these two popular characters finally get their own story in Sala’s latest Blessings novel. The two will get their HEA, but not before danger threatens both of them and they prove that they and their love for one another can survive whatever life throws at them. Woven into the story of Ruby and Peanut are two secondary story threads of good people overcoming adversity. Widow Melissa Dean is unjustly fired from her job, but she faces the blow with determination and optimism and ends up with more than she dreamed. Twelve-year-old Charlie Conroy is doing his best to be the man of the family and take care of his sick mother and five-year-old sister after his father’s death in a meth explosion. But their situation is dire with no electricity and little food in the house. When a nursing home resident goes missing, Charlie and his bloodhound Booger get their chance to show their stuff. They not only find the woman, but Charlie earns $25.00 and wins the hearts and the help of the compassionate community of Blessings for himself and his family.

In the fifth novel of this heartwarming series, the town of Blessings once again functions as a central character. It is a small town with the usual propensity for gossip and nosiness that can have a mean edge, but it is also a place filled with good-hearted people who take care of their own. Ruby, who has been front and center of the caretaking brigade in earlier books is less comfortable when it is her turn to be on the receiving end. Determined not to be an object of pity and to stand on her own two feet, she has a difficult time accepting help graciously. Just as she is recovering from her injuries, physical and emotional, evil strikes a second and more devastating blow. Fans of the series will rejoice to see Ruby and Peanut prevail and to root for the other characters who prove that at least in Blessings good guys win.



If you like romance that is community-centered with multiple plot threads, a rich vein of humor, and a feel-good finish for more than the focal couple, I recommend The Color of Love. It can probably be read as a standalone, but it will be a particularly rewarding read for those who have watched Ruby and Peanut’s relationship slowly develop through the earlier books. Lest any fans of the series fear Ruby and Peanut’s HEA ends the series, book six, Come Back to Me, a reunion/prodigal son/secret-baby tale, will be released on September 4, 2018. Since I really enjoy Sala’s voice, her atypical protagonists, and the Blessings setting, I have already added the next one to my book calendar. I hope Sala follows the route Jodi Thomas took in her Harmony series and eventually gives us more of the Conroy family as well.

Monday, February 12, 2018

Today's Special - - Kat Martin



Kat Martin joins us today to chat about building the plot of her newest novel, Beyond Danger. The second book in Martin's Texas Trilogy, this story looks like another thriller that's sure to keep me on the edge of my seat wondering where Martin will take her characters next. 







Building a Plot

I’ve always been a plot-oriented writer--which can be good news or bad.  Fortunately, the idea for BEYOND DANGER, book #2 of my Texas Trilogy, came to me while I was working on book #1.
Beau Reese, co-owner of Texas American Enterprises, is black-haired, blue-eyed, and sexy as hell.  He was once a highly successful race car driver, sort of a Texas Paul Newman.  Beau loves fast cars and fast women.  

He is also wanted for murder. 

Private Detective, Cassidy Jones, is smart and beautiful and she’s no pushover.  Lucky for Beau, she’s also determined to prove his innocence.

When the idea came to me for the first book in the trilogy, BEYOND REASON, I knew I wanted to write multiple stories set around Lincoln Cain.  Since Linc owned a company that demanded a lot of his time, I figured he needed a partner to help while he was trying to protect the heroine, Carly Drake, from a dangerous drug lord.

As I began working on the second book, the beginning was easy.  Beau was in the wrong place at the wrong time, making him the prime suspect in his father’s murder.  The trick was to follow the clues that would lead him and Cassidy, a private detective, to the information that would prove Beau innocent of the crime.

Unfortunately, to do that, they ultimately needed to find the person who actually committed the murder.  Which meant they had to find out why someone wanted Beau’s father, a former Texas state senator, dead. 

One of the best parts about writing a novel is finding the right pieces and parts of the puzzle then figuring out how they all go together. 

It’s also one of the worst parts.

Nothing is worse than writer’s block, the curse of every author.  So far, determination and persistence have managed to get me through those times. 

I like to write big stories, which means they’re stand alone novels, each with a very different plot.  But the heroes are always connected, the kind of men who are there for each other no matter how tough things get.  In BEYOND DANGER, Beau gets help from Linc and Linc’s brother, Joshua, the hero of BEYOND CONTROL. 

I hope you enjoy BEYOND DANGER, and that you’ll watch for Josh Cain in BEYOND CONTROL, out in June.  If you haven’t read Linc and Carly’s story, BEYOND REASON, I hope you’ll give it a try. 


Till next time, all best and happy reading.  Kat  

~~~~~~~~~~~

Readers, are you puzzle solvers?

Do you try to solve mysteries as you're reading books or do you rely on the author to reveal the answers at the right time?

One randomly chosen person who leaves a comment before 11:00 PM, February 14 will receive a copy of Into the Fury. (U.S. only)



Connect with Kat

To CELEBRATE the release of BEYOND REASON, enter Kat's new contest for a chance to win a KINDLE FIRE 7" Display, Wi-Fi, 8 GB and a Kindle copy of AGAINST THE WILDAGAINST THE SKY and AGAINST THE TIDEContest runs from May 1, 2017 through June 30, 2017.

For May, Kat Martin is giving away to FIVE winners an audio edition of one of her AGAINST series books, plus a copy of INTO THE FIRESTORM.

Purchase Links:

Amazon:
b&n:
indiebound:
kobo:
itunes:


Friday, February 9, 2018

Blog Tour Review - - About That Kiss


About That Kiss
By Jill Shalvis
Publisher: Avon
Release Date: January 23, 2018
Reviewed by Janga
  

Kylie Masters is doing her best to forget the unforgettable kiss she shared with Joe Malone. The man may be a woman’s fantasy in the flesh, but Kylie has seen enough of her mother’s mistakes with commitment-phobic tough guys to know that is not what she needs in her life—or so she tells herself. But when a small penguin sculpture, the only memento she has of her beloved grandfather, an artist in woodwork, disappears and she is bombarded with penguin in jeopardy photos, she turns to ex-military, current security professional Joe for help.

Joe grew up poor and rough, doing what he needed to do after his mother’s death to take care of his younger sister, Molly, and his father, a veteran suffering from severe PTSD, even when it was illegal. Enforced military enlistment turned his life around, but he is still a lone wolf, devoted to his family but leery of romantic relationships that involve more than the moment. Despite the example of his friend and boss Archer Hunt and Elle Wheaten (Accidentally on Purpose), Joe is a skeptic when it comes to love, and he is not happy that he can’t get Kylie Masters out of his mind—or his heart.

As Joe and Kylie work together to solve the mystery of the penguin and an increasing threat to Kylie, the chemistry between them grows more explosive and more difficult to resist. Can these two make peace with their pasts and learn to trust their feelings for one another?

About That Kiss is the fifth entry in Shalvis’s popular Heartbreaker Bay series. It has the humor, the tribal connections, and the sizzle that have been trademarks of this series and of Shalvis’s romances generally. Kylie is smart and independent with an appealing vulnerability balanced by a healthy sense of self-worth. Joe is strong, tough, and more comfortable with actions than with words. They are an engaging couple, and the supporting characters, particularly Molly Malone, add interest and winsomeness to the story.

Chasing Christmas Eve, the novel that preceded this one, was my favorite in the series. Perhaps that is why I found this one a bit of a letdown. It has all the right ingredients, but I just never felt the connection that Shalvis at her best evokes.  The romantic comedy-suspense mix seemed a bit off to me. I found myself more interested in what is the setup for the story of Molly and Lucas than in the central romance. Regardless, the magnetism of the Heartbreaker Bay core group is still potent, and canine lovers will be charmed by Kylie’s dog, Vinnie. Family dynamics also add appeal. If you are a fan of the Heartbreaker Bay series, you will not want to miss this one. If you are new to the series, other novels are probably better entry points. Book 6, Slow Winter Nights, Molly and Lucas’s story, will be released in September 2018, another Heartbreaker Bay Christmas story. That one is definitely high on my TBR list.

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


Have you been reading the Heartbreaker Bay series?

Do you have a favorite book or couple/character in the series?

One randomly chosen person who leaves a comment on today's post before 11:00 PM, February 10, will receive a print copy of ABOUT THAT KISS. (US / Canada Only)


New York Times bestselling author Jill Shalvis lives in a small town in the Sierras full of quirky characters. Any resemblance to the quirky characters in her books is, um, mostly coincidental. Look for Jill’s bestselling, award-winning books wherever romances are sold and visit her website, www.jillshalvis.com, for a complete book list and daily blog detailing her city-girl-living-in-the-mountains adventures.


Connect with Jill
Facebook: @JillShalvis
Twitter: @JillShalvis

BUY LINKS for ABOUT THAT KISS:
IndieBound: http://bit.ly/2DHAnxo
Barnes & Noble: http://bit.ly/2mGIuC8
Books-A-Million: http://bit.ly/2ETb4Id
GooglePlay: http://bit.ly/2EsNr99