Friday 31 January 2020

Review: Sleeper by Kayley Loring

Sleeper Sleeper by Kayley Loring
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Good Solid Rom Com

This book is really sweet, but it doesn’t take itself too seriously, a bit like the main characters, Willa and Shane.

Willa has spent the last couple of years in France learning to be a perfume designer whilst nannying to pay for her stay. She is back in the US staying on her brother’s futon. Her brother is a musician now, but used to be a child actor and one of his best friends was made when he was a teen heart throb. His best friend was also Willa’s first crush.

Shane was a child actor who has gone on to be a Hollywood action comedy hero. He has a five year old son and daughter that he had with Margo an actor he worked with. Now Margo is on another continent filming and Shane is taking some time off to spend with his kids, and the nanny just quit. His best friend suggests his sister is perfect for the job. She is, and the set up is complete.

What takes this book from mediocre RomCom is the writing is very funny indeed. It is also sweet but it has some snark with it’s tenderness. It also has real hopes and fears, worries about jobs and relationships with children. It’s well written and though there isn’t major tension and plot twists, it’s a very enjoyable read.

This is the first book I’ve read by this author, and I’ll keep an eye out for other books.

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Thursday 30 January 2020

Review: Finding Nova (Seeking Eden Series Book 1) by Belle Harper

Finding Nova Finding Nova by Belle Harper
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Engaging Dystopian RH

I wasn’t sure about this book initially. In the first few chapters the language of the characters was a little stilted and the plot simplistic and a little juvenile. I think this may have been because two of the characters were around 20 and the author was trying to convey their youth and inexperience. This annoyed me a little, but I was intrigued enough to keep reading and I’m glad I did.

The book later evolved into something much more engaging and the writing became more fluid and natural. The characters started to develop and their personalities being more fleshed out. When this happened their speech was much more natural sounding and I found myself being sucked into the story.

The story revolves around Nova, a 20 year old woman who is one of the 1% of women who survived a virus that hit the world when she was 6 years old. She lived with her father and her father’s friend, Kevin, until her father died the year before and Kevin tried to keep her safe by hiding her gender. Finally her gender was uncovered and they had to run away before she was sold into marriage or sexual slavery.

During the course of their escape they try to cross the desert, finally thinking they are going to die in a storm, when Ezra comes across them and carries Nova to safety. However, when his friend Noah goes to look for Kevin, he can’t find him. Nova is alone with strange men and is terrified. Noah has an older lover, Colton, who helps keep the two younger men safe.

As the story develops we learn more about how the end of civilisation has changed humanity and how the strong subjugate the weak. Women and young weaker men are prey and they have to fight for their safety every day.

During the course of the story, we meet more people who either intend to help or harm Nova and the men, and sometimes it’s hard to tell which is going to be which. The whole drive of the story is protecting Nova and getting her to safety.

It’s an interesting start to the series, and I’ll definitely be reading the next book soon.

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Wednesday 29 January 2020

Review: Queen of Monsters (The Dank Court Series Book 4) by Dagmar Avery and K Margaret

Queen of Monsters Queen of Monsters by Dagmar Avery and K Margaret
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Mighty Magics, Small Miracles, Gods and Monsters

This final part of the Dank Courts series was great fun. It tied everything together brilliantly. I continue to love Gogo and her fantastic earth magic, that brings faerie back to life. I love the little details in these book, like the giant snail that is treated as a pet and the glow worms that come to Gogo when she calls. It’s these details that really bring books to life and I adore them.

The characters in this book are great, and there was much more about the the courts that haven’t yet been covered in the series such as Alyx and Senara, who are both slowly adding guards. I really hope that they are covered in the future and have their own series, because both characters are intriguing, as are their guards/potential guards.

So much happened, plot-wise, in this book, that you get completely sucked in. There are battles and alliances, politics, gods and monsters, mighty magics and small miracles. It’s wonderful read, and I highly recommend it, but you need to read everything from The Sleeping Court onwards to enjoy it properly. I recommend you do so, because the whole thing is amazing from Book 1 onwards.

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Tuesday 28 January 2020

Review: The Sweet Unknown (The Dank Court Series Book 3) by Dagmar Avery and K Margaret

The Sweet Unknown The Sweet Unknown by Dagmar Avery and K Margaret
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Gogo finally claims her King, and he is all set to transform the Sluagh, with whom he has history. The Dank Court is under threat from the Goblins, as the Goblin King wants Gogo to be his Queen and then he’ll absorb the Dank Court and The Sluagh under his rule. Gogo and her men are determined that this will not happen. To the extent that war is on the horizon.

I really enjoyed this book as it brought characters together from the other series and drew them together into the overall story arc. It was nice to hear about the other characters again, and how their lives are developing.

Gogo is becoming a much stronger person, especially once she joined with her King. She is more confident in herself and more sure of her physicality, such as her tentacles that she has always felt sensitive about. Her designs are also selling well, which has helped her self esteem. I really enjoy it when I see a character develop in this sort of way as she works her way into understanding her own strengths and how they relate to the rest of the world.

There is a bit of a cliff hanger with this book, but it isn’t too annoying.

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Monday 27 January 2020

Review: Calling to the Deep (The Dank Court Series Book 2) by Dagmar Avery and K Margaret

Calling to the Deep Calling to the Deep by Dagmar Avery and K Margaret
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This series just keeps on dragging me in further and further into the Dank Court. There is lots going on to keep me interested. Gogo is on a quest to find the tentacled dream lover, and he’s only able to give her a series of clues to enable her to find him. Whilst this is going on, she is dealing with her design career and other antics going on in her friends’ courts. She is also having problems with the Sluagh Court trying to marry her off to the Goblin King, who they think will keep her docile. These multiple story arcs are fascinating and it kept my interest as it dove about weaving them all together with each passing chapter.

I will say this, there is a cliffhanger, so be prepared to buy Book 3 immediately on finishing Book 2! I think it’s worth it though, this is really gripping stuff.

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Sunday 26 January 2020

Review: Seasons in the Abyss (The Dank Court Series Book 1) by Dagmar Avery and K Margaret

Seasons in the Abyss Seasons in the Abyss by Dagmar Avery and K Margaret
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I love this series, by which I mean the entire scope of it, including the first two set of books. These authors have created a wondrous version of faerie and the dark courts that resonate with blood, death and longing. This third set of books begins with Gogo, the Dank Court Princess, who also happens to be the Sluagh Princess too. Her father is the king and a nightflyer, mated to her mother the previous Dank Court Princess. Gogo is sweet, kind and loving, but with a spine of steel and will not be pushed around.

The Queen has set the Courts the challenge of filling the coffers because the previous Queen ran them dry. The idea is to earn money in the human realm to buy up the lands that anchor faerie to the human realm. Certain sections of her Court and the Sluagh do not want to have anything to do with humanity and are trying to rebel against the move. At the same time as dealing with politics she has been set on a quest to find out about her dreams filled with tentacles and desire.

The book is constructed exceptionally well, with the plot building carefully and the characters being revealed, page by page. I love Gogo, and her relationship with Quade, the captain of her guard, is sweet and nurturing. The other three guards are less wholehearted in their love of her, but as Quade’s existence is wrapped around her, she doesn’t mind. I like the nuances of the different relationships she has with her guard and that she offers and receives diverse things with them.

This is a very promising start to this new section of the series, but if you haven’t read the first two sets of books, I wholeheartedly recommend reading them before starting this series. It might not be essential, but it certainly fills in some gaps and as a bonus, they are fantastic reads.

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Saturday 25 January 2020

Review: Rules and Roses (Untouchable Series Book 1) by Heather Long

Rules and Roses Rules and Roses by Heather Long
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Really Good Contemporary NA Reverse Harem

I’d give this 4.5 ⭐️ if I could.

This is one of the best NA Reverse Harems I’ve come across, because it gets it right. It gets the confusion and the screw ups and the rampant hormones of being a teenager and having feelings for friends of the opposite sex. Some of them have some experience, some have none and neither of those two extremes are wrong or right, but I liked that none of them were extremely experienced.

Frankie is in her senior year of high school and is very bright and very driven to get out of Texas and that requires money and grades. She also has a mother who isn’t really around and treats her daughter more like a room mate and a nonexistent father. She also has four best friends who happen to be the four most popular and good looking guys in school. This has made her quite unpopular with the female population. Then she finds out that the guys had warned off any other guy at school from asking her out she becomes hurt and enraged and takes the Summer away from her friends to try and work out how she feels about the way they have treated her.

As someone who had good looking male friends in school I understand how differently you get treated by girls because of this. The girls either pretend to be your friend to get close to the guy they like or they cut you dead because you’re not good enough for the guy they like, even though you are just friends. This book really brought back some memories for me and I felt for Frankie (even if she is a fictional character).

I loved how detailed the author was about the characters and their hobbies and personalities. I felt like I got to know all of them during the course of the book and I really felt a connection to them, which made me want to keep on reading, just one more chapter.

Everything was very carefully thought out and paced and the style of writing was natural and unforced. It was so easy to read and I got sucked in quickly to the book because of it.

I can’t wait to see what happens in the next book, and I will definitely be looking at some of the other series this new to me author has written.

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Friday 24 January 2020

Review: Birth of the Bacchae (Immortal Relics Series Book 1) by Stephanie Mirro

Birth of the Bacchae Birth of the Bacchae by Stephanie Mirro
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Quite Dark

I’d probably give this 3.5 ⭐️ if I could.

I’m feeling quite conflicted about this book. On one hand it is an unusual perspective on the idea of ‘vampires’, which is always fun, on the other hand it was pretty depressing and dark in places, particularly at the end.

Sera is an archaeologist and whilst on a dig in Italy she comes across her first big find, an amulet, found in the temple of Bacchus. She instantly feels a connection to the amulet and is drawn towards it.

When she gets back to the US, they are able to take the amulet back with them to study it, which she has the opportunity to take the lead on. Her perfect boyfriend, Hiro, is sweet and kind and loves Sera as much as she loves him, completely. He is such a lovely character, and it is unusual for a lead character to start the story in a strong relationship. Sera also has a best friend Nora, who as also on the dig. When Sera starts to have vivid and inexplicable dreams, Nora persuades her to go with her to visit her mother’s best friend, who is a psychic. Renee turns out to be able to help Sera with her dreams.

All the time whilst Sera is trying to come to terms with the pull on her from the amulet there are vampires searching for it too, which puts Sera and her loved ones in danger.

There is a lot of torment and suffering in this book, which is something I don’t enjoy very much, but if you don’t mind physical and emotional suffering, then you may enjoy this book a lot more than I did.

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Thursday 23 January 2020

Review: Duplicity (Victory Lap Duet Book 2) by Mercedes Jade

Duplicity Duplicity by Mercedes Jade
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Slight Let Down

I’d probably give this book 3.5 ⭐️ if I could.

I’m not sure how I feel about this second book in the Victory Lap Duet. It seemed to take a long time to resolve the danger that Tess and her siblings were in and quite a lot of the resolution was under-explained.

The four friends and Tess are now in a committed poly relationship. Things are becoming more dangerous now Tess’ father is back on the scene, and the Twins Dad and Bastion’s Dad and step-mother are causing problems. War takes them all to stay on his Dad’s island for a weekend and his parents seem to be much more supportive.

It takes an awful long time for everything to get sorted out and most of that is taken up by sex. Lot of gratuitous teenage sex. If this bothers you, don’t read this book. I have to say that I’m old enough to feel slightly uncomfortable at teenagers discussing kink and having safewords, mainly because when I was a teenager being kinky meant doing it with the lights on. I don’t have a problem with teenagers being in a poly relationship but to be accomplished sexual practitioners before the age of 25 still seems unlikely to me. Maybe I’m just out of date, and the internet has made all teenagers advanced masters of kink. Anyway, it just spoiled my enjoyment of the book a little bit. It’s a shame because the story had lots of promise.

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Wednesday 22 January 2020

Review: Gene Born: Hunter's Choice (The Koci Hybrid Series Book 4) by Lilly Griffin

Gene Born: Hunter's Choice Gene Born: Hunter's Choice by Lilly Griffin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Danger Planetside

I would give this book 4.5 ⭐️ if I could.

This series goes from strength to strength. The characters become more full and engaging with each book. In this book the people from Earth and their alien allies manage to win free of slavery and find a planet. Only the planet isn’t quite as safe as they think it’s going to be.

Through adversity the disparate groups come together to stay safe. There are also the groups where mates cross species lines.

There are quite a few alternate POV scenes in this book, which I wasn’t sure about initially, but it is a good way of conveying information that Sloan isn’t yet aware of. It did break up the narrative a bit though, so I’m still not sure.

We are also introduced to more races of aliens, and there are even more males interested in Sloan and the other females.

One particularly interesting subject in this book is the emerging sentience of Willa, Sloan’s AI. It’s quite sweet the way she interacts with Sloan, though she sometimes behaves like a teenager throwing tantrums.

As with all of the other books in the series, I really enjoyed this read, and can’t wait for the next one.

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Tuesday 21 January 2020

Review: Gene Born: Gladiator Hell (The Koci Hybrid Series Book 3) by Lilly Griffin

Gene Born: Gladiator Hell Gene Born: Gladiator Hell by Lilly Griffin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Hybrids vs Gladiators

I’d probably give this 4.5 ⭐️ if I could.

This book builds on the ones that have come before in a great way. It takes all the interesting characters we met in the previous books and throws them in the deep end as they end up at the Gladiators Guild.

During this book Sloan comes into her own as a leader of her people. Her intelligence and drive have lifted her into a position she was unprepared for, but does not shy away from. She is determined to keep her people alive to the best of her ability.

Her bond with Ajax and Jaxon becomes deeper and they meet new aliens to become friends with.

There is a lot more sex in this book, and it gets pretty hot.

I’m enjoying this series more with each book as I get to know the characters and the universe in which they live. It’s fast paced and filled with passion. A really good read.

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Monday 20 January 2020

Review: Gene Born: Pirates Bane (The Koci Hybrid Series Book 2) by Lilly Griffin

Gene Born: Pirates Bane Gene Born: Pirates Bane by Lilly Griffin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Dark Sci-Fi

This series is pretty dark. It’s about genetic modifications done without consent, the death of our world and being sold in slavery in another galaxy. However it is also filled with the ingenuity and intellect of human hybrids who have taken every kind of indignity and come out fighting for their freedom, working together to form a strong and cohesive unit.

It’s an inspiring story, that has a cliff hanger, but it isn’t a tear your nails out with your teeth kind of cliff hanger. It’s a ‘I really want to know what happens next’ kind of ending, but it won’t drive you nuts.

A really interesting story and I look forward to reading the next chapter.

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Sunday 19 January 2020

Review: Found (Project: Adapt Series Book 1) by Jade Waltz

Found Found by Jade Waltz
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Aliens Who Look And Behave Like Aliens

Quite often in alien romance fiction the aliens the MFC will fall for are aliens that are remarkable similar to humans, but they are really big and blue or they have behavioural traits of a very alpha males. This makes for a less complicated story and more acceptable romance. This book takes an alternate slant.

Selena is kind of human. Earth was destroyed 60 years earlier by the Yaarnik, a race of aliens who have no problems at all with destroying a planet. Before they wiped out Earth, they took many women prisoners. These women have been experimented on. Selena is the second generation of offspring born from the original humans and has been changed. She has been ruthlessly experimented on her entire life, kept naked and imprisoned, alone and in pain until the day the ship on which she lived was attacked.

After the attack she is rescued by a ship filled with very alien looking aliens. The ship carries two different species that come from the same planet, one plant based and the other fish based. As you can imagine they have very different cultures and their relationships are different.

Sex in this book may feel uncomfortable to read about and strange and some people may not enjoy it. However, I thought the writing was beautiful and as Selena is not entirely human, it made sense that she would be attracted to non-humans.

This book mainly deals with Selena’s entrance into a environment, where she encounters different species, cultures and abilities. It’s a nice safe contained space, so the story can be less overwhelming than if she’d been thrust into a multi-species environment straight away.

Selena is a strong and interesting character, who has a great attachment to Earth and human culture, despite never having lived there. This is because the Yaarnik used the lure of books and other media from Earth as a way of keeping her docile and well behaved. Selena was so starved for companionship and intellectual stimulation she dove into Earth culture and that is what has shaped her expectations of what family and friendships should look like.

It’s a very interesting book, and I look forward to reading about Selena’s adventures as she gets exposed to further cultures.

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Saturday 18 January 2020

Review: A Lost Paige (Hidden Kingdom Trilogy Book 2) by L Rose

A Lost Paige A Lost Paige by L. Rose
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Bonds Are Tightened

This second book of the Hidden Kingdom Trilogy builds on the first nicely. We get to see how the bonds between Paige and her mates are made permanent and how the various mates interact with each other. Here’s a clue, there are quite a lot of MM scenes in this book.

The book is rather full of lots of steamy scenes, but it still manages to move the plot forwards as we get to understand the various supernatural races a little bit better. There is also a rather strong demonic presence in this book, this isn’t *always* bad.

Paige and her loyal subjects have to deal with those within the Hidden Kingdom who don’t want things to change. There are some individuals who don’t want all races to be treated equally because that might threaten their own position, or there are those that don’t think same sex matings should be allowed. Having to fight on several fronts at once can leave a strain, and Paige and her loved ones have to count on each other to pull through.

I like how Paige develops in this book, because she shows her weaknesses as well as her strengths. She shows her emotions to her subjects and its not seen as necessarily a bad thing. She’s still trying to get her head around being a monarch, and struggling with letting others fight her battles for her.

I also like how the relationships with the Queen’s consorts balance each other out. They all have different strengths and weaknesses and not just power wise, but also experientially and emotionally.

I think the next book will be fun, and I can’t wait to read it.

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Friday 17 January 2020

Review: Junkyard Cats by Faith Hunter

Junkyard Cats Junkyard Cats by Faith Hunter
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Great Dystopian Sci-Fi

I love Faith Hunter and I particularly enjoy listening to Khristine Hvam’s narration of her books. Buying this book was a no-brainer despite being a different genre from Ms Hunter’s usual works.

This work is set decades in the future, after several world wars and invasion of ‘bugs” from space. Shining Smith is a survivor of the wars, she lives in a junkyard left to her by her deceased father and is kept company by an office AI, called Gomez, a war-bot inhabited by a very damaged human soldier Matteo and dozens of cats.

This story starts with Shining discovering a dead body in the trunk of a car she bought on the black market, covered in bi-coloured ants, a dangerously genetically modified creation that seeks human flesh to consume. Shining survived a bi-coloured swarm attack as a child and still remembers the pain. Not many people survive swarm attacks.

In the footsteps of the dead body an OMW enforcer arrives. The OMW started out as a motorcycle club and became a militia during the wars. 12 year old Shining and her father were part of the OMW and fought alongside the Government against the People’s Republic of China, but Shining was supposed to be dead and things were beginning to mount up, with no time to think.

This story is gripping, filled with drips of information about Shining, her life and the world in which she inhabits. It’s drip feed nature keeps you riveted throughout, and Shining is a complex and compelling character, that you root for, from the start.

As this is an audible original, you can only get the book in audio format, so if you are a Faith Hunter fan, you have probably heard several of the accents and ‘voices’ used before in other books by Ms Hunter. However, this did little to detract from the great story.

I hope a future book in this series comes out soon, because I really enjoyed this one.

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Thursday 16 January 2020

Review: The Last Vampire: Book One (The Last Vampire Series Book 1) by RA Steffan and Jaelynn Woolf

The Last Vampire: Book One The Last Vampire: Book One by R.A. Steffan and Jaelynn Woolf
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Interesting Urban Fantasy

I enjoyed this interesting twist on a vampire book, being about the vampire in existence. Rans is a centuries old vampire who fought in the demon/fae war on the side of the demons. The fae won that war and demons are no longer allowed to interfere on Earth.

Rans is shot and finds shelter in a shed, where he is disturbed by Zorah, a 20-something waitress, whose mother was shot when she was 6 and whose father checked out on being a Dad when it happened. She has been on her own since she was 18, when her Dad moved to a different city, leaving Zorah behind in the old family home. She suffers from chronic joint and muscle pain and is exhausted all the time.

Rans has to feed on Zorah as he’s been so badly injured and when he tastes her blood, which has a unique flavour to it, he decides to watch her and see what happened next.

It’s an unusual take on vampires, which I like, and Zorah is an interesting character, that we don’t get shown enough of. Rans has a very interesting past, that we’re never going to see all of. This combination makes me want to read the next book, just to find out more about these interesting characters.

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Wednesday 15 January 2020

Review: Gene Born: Awakening (The Koci Hybrid Series Book 1) by Lilly Griffin

Gene Born: Awakening Gene Born: Awakening by Lilly Griffin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Fascinating

This story pulled me in very quickly. The voice of the main character, Sloan, resonated with me. She is intelligent, strong and fierce. The world in which Sloan is placed is a horrific, torturous and barbaric. Experimented on by scientists after Earth begins to fail, in order to become slaves to the world’s elite. The story starts just as Sloan is woken up after 10 years of experiments have been conducted on her whilst she was in cryo-sleep.

The story conveys superbly the sense of being powerless and the rage felt because of that. It also conveys the sense of alliance and friendship between those that experience the same thing.

It’s a dark tale, and Sloan goes through a lot, but this author has crafted a gripping story and a well articulated world. I can’t wait to read the next book.

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Tuesday 14 January 2020

Review: Lost King (The Kings of Retribution MC Series Book 6) by Sandy Alvarez

Lost King Lost King by Sandy Alvarez
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Romance and Drama Aplenty

I’d probably give this 4.5 ⭐️ if I could.

This is a really good series and I really enjoyed this book in particular. There has been an ongoing saga with Quinn and Emerson. Quinn is a member of The Kings Of Retribution MC and has been since he left high school. He fell head over heels for Emerson the first time he saw her, 2 years ago. Emerson is a doctor and treated Bella earlier in the series. She moved to Polson, coincidentally and she and Bella became friends. Bella is with Logan, one of Quinn’s best friends, so they are around each other a lot. Emerson never took Quinn too seriously, but he has definitely got under her skin.

This story deals with their romance and also some difficulties with another club trying to move into town. They are ruthless and dedicated to getting what they want, no matter the cost to anyone else.

There are some real ups and downs for Quinn and there were some real heart in the mouth moments. I really found it difficult to stop reading the book, once I got going because the story was gripping.

This is an excellent MC book.

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Monday 13 January 2020

Review: Unbreakable (The Kings of Retribution MC Series Book 5) by Crystal Daniels

Unbreakable Unbreakable by Crystal Daniels
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Good Solid MC Romance

I am enjoying this series quite a lot. It is a very good example of an MC Romance Novel. It has the mature Jamie, who is the Prez, who has lost the love of his life quite early into the marriage, he raised her nephew after the death of his sister in law and then his wife. His MC has been into dodgy dealings in the past, but is now clean(ish).

It also has the broken and fearful Grace, a tiny red-head who is running from her abusive husband. It’s pretty standard fare, except that Jake has been carefully allowing Grace to grow strong, has helped the MC family embrace her and the Old Ladies have become her friend. He sees her every day and is careful not to spook her. He is kind and patient, which is not like most MC Presidents we see in these books and is a refreshing change.

However, when Grace gets spooked by her feelings for Prez, she runs away leaving no trace of her whereabouts. Finally after 6 months the MC get a piece of information that allows Jake to track her down. At this point we go into standard MC fare, with kidnappings, shootings, lock downs and the like. It’s a little predictable, but that’s kind of why I like MC books. It’s reassuring to read something when you kind of know what’s going to happen.

It is well written and the characters are interesting. It was nice to read an MC romance about a mature MC president who didn’t fall for a 20 year old virgin, but someone with experience and maturity too. All in all, a good entertaining book.

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Sunday 12 January 2020

Review: Light the Lamp (Portland Storm Series Book 3) by Catherine Gayle

Light the Lamp Light the Lamp by Catherine Gayle
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Sweetly Unusual Hockey Romance

This hockey romance is a little different from usual. Hockey is an aggressive, fast paced and violent sport and this story was none of those things. This story was slow, sweet and tender.

Liam is a Swedish hockey player who lost his wife 18 months ago to a drink driver. He lost his scoring ability when she died and was traded to the Portland Storm, where they wanted him for his age and experience as much as his old scoring ability.

Noelle is a young, sweet and empathic woman, who’s parent died when she was 19 leaving her to drop out of college and care of her teenage brothers. Due to losing her job and not wanting her brothers to drop out of college, she lost their house and was living in a car. When her car broke down at the side of the road, Liam spotted her and took her away whilst they waiting for the radiator to cool down. Then her car was totalled.

This story was about two people who have had horrible things happen and how they differed in the ways in which they handled them. It was about learning to communicate pain and fear as well as love and compassion.

I got sucked into the story, enjoying the characters a lot and desperate to see what would happen next. I enjoyed it a lot.

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Saturday 11 January 2020

Review: Euphoria (The Carnal Court Series Book 2) by Devyn Sinclair

Euphoria Euphoria by Devyn Sinclair
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Fighting For Control

This is the second book in a Fae Reverse Harem series. Kari is now based in Allwyn (where all the fae live) as her mates believe that to go back to Earth would risk her life. She agrees, but is reluctant to let go of her normal life. She convinces them to let her visit to let her friends know she is alive and to get her most precious possessions. The trip does not go well.

The story covers Kari and her mates trying to hide from Ariana, the fae who wants Kari’s magic, and trying to learn how to use the magic gifted to her by Cerys, the goddess who sacrificed her existence to make Allwyn.

Kari wants to go on the offensive with Ariana, but her mates are not as comfortable with the idea as she is.

The plot is really good in this book and it’s filled to the brim with hot and sexy scenes between Kari and her mates. There are quite a few typos, but I tried to skim over those, but for those people who hate them with a passion, here’s your warning. Other than that, it was an easy and enjoyable read, that flows naturally in a way that draws you in.

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Friday 10 January 2020

Review: The Only Essence (The White Dragon Series Book 1) by Mia Hawkins

The Only Essence The Only Essence by Mia Hawkins
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

One to Unite All The Races

This is quite a fun Reverse Harem. Rayven is a 21 year old who ran away from foster care when she was 16, after her only friend disappeared. She also happened to be flooded with pain and woke up with a brand new tattoo.

Rayven has been on the run ever since, trying to avoid being attacked by strange men. She has discovered that she very fast, strong and agile. She is able to fight off several of these men at once and heal herself when she’s done fighting. However, she has no idea why she has these abilities.

She is captured by a group of four supernatural men, who have been ordered to bring her to the Council of Supernatural Leaders. They don’t know why. This group of men have been friends since childhood, even though they are different races. They are all drawn to Rayven.

This book is pretty entertaining and the mystery of what Rayven is and why she is wanted by the Council is intriguing. The characters are a little shallow, but this is the first book in a series, which often leaves the characters less than fully fleshed out, particularly in a Reverse Harem where there are more characters involved.

I think this might be the first book I’ve read from this author, and I’ll definitely keep an eye out for more, in particular the sequel to this book.

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Thursday 9 January 2020

Review: Spectra: A Cynical Superhero (Spectra Series Book 1) by Amy Sumida

Spectra: A Cynical Superhero Spectra: A Cynical Superhero by Amy Sumida
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Fabulously Reluctant Superhero

This book was so much fun. Amara is a 34 year old translator who works closely with the US President. She can speak every language she hears or reads instantly. She is also supernatural. She has the ability to see and manipulate auras and her life is good. She lives inside "The Supermarket”, the area of Washington DC that is home to supernaturals and no one who isn’t supernatural can even see the entrance, let alone walk through it.

A local supernatural often acts as a superhero with the normal humans because he wants to do something worthwhile with his abilities. He keeps trying to drag Amara into his superhero gang, but Amara is reluctant. Then the angels and demons come calling, and maybe having superheroes on her side isn’t such a bad thing.

This author has created a wonderful world of supernatural beings who live in harmony, for the most part, unknown by human society, but known about by the establishment. They all have different abilities and strengths, which are all well thought through.

I really enjoyed Amara and her cynical sarcasm. She is elegant and has an Ivy League education. She has a cutting remark at hand for every occasion and calls everyone darling. I really enjoyed that she was secure and knowledgeable about her abilities. This is a grown woman who knows what she wants and goes after it.

The plot is fun and large in scope. It moves quickly and not all resolutions are happy ones. However, on the whole Amara gets a HFN ending, to keep us content until the next book can be read.

This book is well worth a read, and I’ll definitely be reading the next in the series.

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Wednesday 8 January 2020

Review: Broken Destiny (Hidden Academy Series Book 1) by Serena Lindahl

Broken Destiny Broken Destiny by Serena Lindahl
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Interesting NA Paranormal Reverse Harem

This is a very promising start to a new series. I’ve not read anything by this author before, but this book is encouraging me to keep an eye out for other works. One of the main things that attracted me to this book was the disabled protagonist.

Zosia is an unusual character. She is 19 years old and spent the majority of her childhood in an orphanage. She has no memories before the age of 12/13 when she woke up in a hospital with her legs shattered. She has unusual abilities in that she can sense other supernaturals and she can see ghosts. The ghost that she spends the most time with is Kodi, a ghost that first appeared to her after she moved to the orphanage. He appeared to be around 19 years of age when he died, but he has no memories of how that happened. He is Zo’s only friend and he helps protect her in the orphanage from those that see her as a weak target.

She is able to move around with the aid of crutches or a wheelchair. Sitting for long periods hurts her almost as much as standing does, so she alternates between the two. This detail is one I love. This is something important to convey to physically fit people, that when you are disabled it is often the case that being in a wheelchair is not the disabled person’s only option, and sometimes that option is not the best one. If you don’t understand that all disabilities are different it makes no sense that you would use a wheelchair if you didn’t need to, or would choose to stand if it hurts too much. While this is not a disability advocation book, it does my heart good to see someone with a disability being central to a Reverse Harem book.

In actual fact Zo’s disability is not the main thing holding her back, it’s actually her loss of memory. In this book she is discovered in the orphanage and taken to Apocrypha, a Hidden Academy for young elite supernaturals to learn how to lead their world. Zo knows she doesn’t belong there as her magic is weak and she doesn’t know what she is, but the supernatural man who discovered her is sure that she has a role to play as the future Librarian at the academy. The Library is a source of supernatural knowledge and filled with power. If there is no Librarian than the academy will not be open. This man believes that Zo is the only one who can fulfil this role properly.

This story covers her starting her new life and finding guardians who can help her in her new role.

I really liked this story and the characters are all intriguing. I can tell the author has fleshed out the characters and history, even if not much of it is revealed in this book. It means that their interaction feels real, even if we don’t know why yet. The plot is intriguing as it feels like this is simply an introduction to lots of things to come. There is a lot of information dangled just out of reach that you want to grasp hold of but the author won’t let you just yet. It’s a frustrating but clever tactic to make you want to read the next book.

The world building feels a little lacking, but that may be another tactic on the part of the author. It always annoys me when I feel that I have missing information about the world in which the characters walk, and this is the case here. Given the apparent talent of this writer I have high hopes that some answers will appear in future books.

Apart from my moderate annoyance at missing information, this was a very engaging book, and I look forward to reading the next one in the series.

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Tuesday 7 January 2020

Review: Max (The Casanova Club Series Book 12) by Ali Parker

Max Max by Ali Parker
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Tech CEO

I really enjoy these little snippets every month. They make me smile, however we are are on book 12 and things are little bit more repetitive. We have the handsome CEO, wealthy and hard working who needs a little Piper in his life. He gives her his heart, she can’t help her warm feelings and heartbreak ensues. I’m glad next month is the last Casanova because I can’t see how many more billionaire characters an author can write, especially in a novella.

As usual there a few hot and steamy scenes and some epic romance. There was also family stuff in the background. It’s an entertaining small bite of romance.

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Monday 6 January 2020

Review: Reborn in Flames by M Sinclair

Reborn in Flames Reborn in Flames by M. Sinclair
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

NA Paranormal Reverse Harem

This book is quite sweet, almost sugary, despite the childhood abuse of the MFC.

The MFC is Maya and is due to turn 18 in 5 days. She’s been brought up in the basement of her father’s church. She’s been subjected to beating and isolated from the world. The only three people she’d met were her mother and father and her mother’s new boyfriend, Jed.

Her mother and Jed have dragged her from Louisiana all the way to Washington State and enrolled her in a school, for the first time in her life. At school she meets three young men who she clicks with straight away. They take her under their wing and introduce her to the people they share their house with. All six men are drawn to her and want to protect her.

Maya’s interactions are odd because she’s been isolated from the outside world. She’s been subjected to a lifetime of abuse but she instinctively trusts the guys and a couple of other people. She is very cutesy at times, which apparently the guys think is adorable and sexy at the same time. Her reactions feel off to me considering her abuse which made the whole book a little bit difficult to connect with. However, I still enjoyed the writing, and weirdly feel like I might still read the next book in the series because of curiosity about the plot, which seems interesting.

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Sunday 5 January 2020

Review: Fevered (The Carnal Court Series Book 1) by Devyn Sinclair

Fevered Fevered by Devyn Sinclair
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A Fae Curse

Kari is a human with magic. She was a ballet dancer until a couple of years ago when she injured herself so badly she had to leave her life behind and start again. She took her magical ability and opened a potion shop.

She was travelling to attend a gala at which her friends were being promoted in the dancing ranks, when she was attacked by a customer. The woman magically tried to draw Kari’s power away, and in the process was killing her. Until she was rescued by three fae men. Even though the attack was stopped she remained cursed and it continued to try and kill her. The men wanted to take her to Allwyn (the home of the fae) to get help from their friend to remove the curse when her friend, who she wanted more from, arrived. He insisted on coming with them to Allwyn, because he didn’t trust the fae.

The book covers the journey across Allwyn to the Carnal Court the home of the three fae and their friend. Their magical ability is tied to their court and in their case that is passion. This means the book is quite full of sexy scenes.

The writer creates very clear descriptions of the world of Allwyn, with it’s beautiful Crystal Court and it’s stunning temples. She also clearly conveys emotion and physical sensations. As someone who experiences chronic pain, her descriptions of the pain that Kari experiences is very accurate, and I empathised greatly with her.

It didn’t go much into the history of the characters and it was very focused in the present. I’m hoping that future books will explore the characters more individually rather than as a collective of fae males.

Other than that, it was an enjoyable read and I will probably read the next book in the series.

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Saturday 4 January 2020

Review: The Sex Education of M.E. by LB Dunbar

The Sex Education of M.E. The Sex Education of M.E. by L.B. Dunbar
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Romance for the Over 40s

I’ve come to appreciate LB Dunbar’s books a great deal. There are so few really good romance books for people who have lived a little life. This author takes characters who have been married and had children, but who are starting again and has them have real feelings about sex and relationships that are as passionate as the 20 somethings that get all the good romance books, but I find them more interesting because they have more life experience. It may be I’m prejudiced because I am over 40, but I don’t think passion dies with kids.

This book is about Emme, a 42 year old widow with two teenage daughters. She is reluctant to start a relationship a year after her husband’s death, but she misses sex. At a party her friend tries to set up a dating profile for her, which is interrupted by meeting Merek a very sexy single man, who was around the same age as her. He was also drunk, but offered to give her a ride anytime she wanted to try him out.

It wasn’t a promising start but her Emme’s friend got involved and manipulated them into meeting again and then sexual attraction got involved.

This is a complicated book, because both characters have histories. It’s also complicated because both characters don’t really know what they actually want, just what they think they want, which causes problems.

There are secrets and revelations about the past and conflicts with Emme’s children, and lots of hot sex.

It’s a sweet and sexy story, with some sad and moving parts to it. It’s a convincing story and I enjoyed it a lot. If you want a story that’s different from the usual 20 year old virgin who falls for her boss/professor/father’s best friend, this could be the book for you.

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Friday 3 January 2020

Review: Under Twilight (Fearless Destiny Series Book 3) by Debbie Cassidy

Under Twilight Under Twilight by Debbie Cassidy
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Kenna’s Past Comes To Light

I really enjoyed this series, but felt that the ending was a little hurried and confusing. I wish that the author had just taken a little bit more time and explained how all the threads wound together a little more thoroughly.

However, apart from the last couple of chapters the rest of the book was as good as the first two. Kenna comes face to face with the puppet master that has caused all the trauma across the worlds, and begins to learn about her own heritage and history as more and more strands of her past are exposed.

Kenna is conflicted about her feelings for Erebus and Baal. Two good djinn who care about her and need her to fight for their Realm, and are willing to put their feelings aside for the good her of their Realm. Kenna has to start seeing things as a ruler, rather than a human woman.

Throughout the whole series, Kenna has been an interesting character to read and she is no different in this book, as she comes into her own.

As I stated earlier, this was an enjoyable read, and the series as a whole was very good.

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Thursday 2 January 2020

Review: Into Evernight (Fearless Destiny Series Book 2) by Debbie Cassidy

Into Evernight Into Evernight by Debbie Cassidy
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Superb Follow Up

It’s always hard to write reviews for books in a series. Everyone who writes reviews tends to write them for the first book because they want others to read the series and then they want to rave about the series in a last review, but it’s hard to do the middle ones. This is because you don’t want to reveal too much, this goes double for this series, as there are so many things happening.

This book is about Kenna and taking her prophesied place in the Fifth Realm. She has a lot to learn about the Realm and it’s inhabitants and she is helped by Baal and his entourage. She finds about the inequity in their society and how the djinn currently ruling over the Realm was trying to undo centuries of rule that allowed people to live as they chose rather than according to their tribe.

Whilst Kenna was undergoing her own adventures in the Fifth Realm, Brett was assisting Baal by pretending to be the Emissary to the Twilight Realm where one of the three kings was holding up essential supplies of Luna that protect Lindrealm.

It appears that hidden motives are starting to be revealed in this book, as Kenna starts to come into her own.

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Wednesday 1 January 2020

Review: Beyond Everlight (Fearless Destiny Series Book 1) by Debbie Cassidy

Beyond Everlight Beyond Everlight by Debbie Cassidy
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Unusual And Imaginative Urban Fantasy

Debbie Cassidy seems to have a wonderful knack for creating magical and intriguing realms. She is a prolific writer, but that in no way indicates a lack of quality. This author is not just a talented builder of worlds, but also a talented weaver of tales, with an uncanny way of helping her readers understand her characters.

This story follows Kenna, who is a Fearless, a member of the human race who is able to fight the denizens of another realm that crashed into ours when scientists started playing around with things they didn’t understand. There are three realms discussed in this book, Lindrealm, or what used to be Earth, Twilight Realm and Evernight. There are all sorts of treaties in place to enable Earth to stay free of the denizens as much as possible, but things seem to be failing somewhat.

There are so many layers to this story it’s hard to summarise it in a way that doesn’t provide spoilers. There are complex relationships between Kenna and the other characters in the book, with friends, love interests, family and allies. It’s impossible to guess what is coming next because of the author’s wonderful imagination.

If you want to be transported to another world, this book can certainly do that.

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