Stacking the Shelves (112)

Stacking the Shelves

If these weren’t all ebooks, I’d need to have my head examined. (Yes, I know, even more than I do now)

We are moving back to Atlanta in two weeks, and the point is usually to reduce the amount of stuff that has to be transported. Instead, I’m stocking up on reading material for the trip. I can’t wait until we start picking out audiobooks for the long drive. We’ll just have to play them loud enough to drown out the complaints from the cats in the backseat!

For Review:
An Affair Downstairs (Thornbrook Park #2) by Sherri Browning
Blade on the Hunt (Rowan Summerwaite #3) by Lauren Dane
The Blue and the Grey (Grand & Batchelor #1) by MJ Trow
Come Home for Christmas, Cowboy (Montana Born Christmas #5) by Megan Crane
The Deepest Night (Longest Night #2) by Kara Braden
Diamond Head by Cecily Wong
Falling from the Light (Night Runner #2) by Regan Summers
Garrett (Cold Fury Hockey #2) by Sawyer Bennett
Hungry Like the Wolf (SWAT #1) by Paige Tyler
Hunter of Sherwood: The Red Hand (Guy of Gisburne #2) by Toby Venables
Hush Hush (Tess Monaghan #12) by Laura Lippman
The Importance of Being Alice (Ainslie Brothers #1) by Katie MacAlister
It Must Be Your Love (Sullivans #11) by Bella Andre
Karen Memory by Elizabeth Bear
The Mapmaker’s Children by Sarah McCoy
The Marriage Charm (Brides of Bliss County #2) by Linda Lael Miller
Pleasantville by Attica Locke
Sherlock Holmes, The Missing Years: Japan by Vasudev Murthy
Surrender (Devil’s Den #1) by Violetta Rand
Tales of the Alaska State Troopers by Peter B. Mathiesen
The Ultimate Guide to Sex After Fifty by Joan Price

Purchased from Amazon:
Hunter of Sherwood: Knight of Shadows (Guy of Gisburne #1) by Toby Venables
Thornbrook Park (Thornbrook Park #1) by Sherri Browning

Borrowed from the Library:
Baltimore Blues (Tess Monaghan #1) by Laura Lippman
Black Water Rising by Attica Locke
The Devil in the Marshalsea (Tom Hawkins #1) by Antonia Hodgson
Last Night at the Blue Angel by Rebecca Rotert

Guest Post by Victoria Vane on Rakes and Cowboys + Giveaway

Victoria in Jackson HoleToday I’d like to welcome Victoria Vane back to Reading Reality. Victoria is known as the “Queen of Georgian Romance”, but her new series takes place far away from what used to be her native habitat. Her new Hot Cowboy Nights is set in the contemporary American West, and it is off to a fine start. Just take a look at today’s review of Slow Hand to see just how fine a start!

But I wanted to hear from Victoria about how and why she decided to switch from opulent ballrooms to the wide-open range. so I had to ask, what made her turn to contemporary westerns after historicals and OMG DeVere? What kind of research (if any) did she have to do for Slow Hand?

Here’s her answer:

***
Hi Marlene! Thank you so much for having me today. It’s so great to be back with you again. It seems I have taken quite a few readers by surprise in leaping three centuries from Georgian rakehells to contemporary cowboys! Many people have asked why I decided to do this, so here is “the story” behind the stories.

The Sheik Retold by Victoria VaneAlthough I have established a fiercely loyal following with my Devil DeVere series, even after eleven published historicals, and a number of awards from reviewers, I have been unable to break out as a historical romance writer. The fact that my books get good reviews told me it wasn’t my writing, but perhaps I’d narrowed my audience too much by writing almost exclusively Georgian romances, (THE SHEIK RETOLD being the sole exception). Although the 18th century is my favorite historical era, it’s not all that popular with readers, but I just couldn’t see myself shifting to Regencies or Highlanders (although I don’t rule out anything anymore!)

One of my good friends who is an avid reader and reviewer, suggested I try writing a contemporary romance. Her argument was that there were far more contemporary readers compared to my beloved historicals, thus more opportunity. Although I knew she was right about the demographics, I immediately dismissed the idea, believing that I had totally the wrong writing voice for it.

But months later in growing frustration, I decided it was indeed time to try something new. For weeks she and I brainstormed ideas but nothing bore any fruit. I just couldn’t relate to the increasingly popular trope of corporate billionaires and virginal heroines, or the dark and angsty NA books. It just wasn’t me. I needed to find something that I could put my own unique spin on, an idea that would help me to stand out in a crowd of talented authors.

Since most romance readers gravitate to certain kinds of heroes, I started looking at what readers like best. I also thought about what heroes I was most attracted to. The answer was a no brainer- cowboys. I’ve loved them my entire life. I’d just never thought to write about them. While I still believed my writing voice would be an obstacle, I was willing to give it a try.

Once I settled on a hero archetype, my next hurdle was finding my story.

They always say to write what you know, so for the first time I began digging into my own life and the events and experiences that have shaped me, experiences that I thought readers might be able to relate to.

One of the most traumatic moments in my entire life involved the death of a loved one. I still vividly recall my hysterical breakdown at Newark airport when bad weather caused me to miss a connection on the way to my father’s funeral. I had literally sprinted through the airport only to arrive at the gate just as the plane was rolling away from the jetway. I stood there numbly watching it, knowing I’d never have closure. (This memory still brings a lump to my throat). Then I suddenly lost it. I went into a near hysterical meltdown and was so distraught that they actually brought the plane back to the gate for me! Suddenly, both Nikki’s character and the seeds of a story implanted in my mind.

By choosing something close to my own heart, I found the words hit the page with an ease that I never could have anticipated. To my shock I had found my story and discovered a new voice.

slow hand by victoria vaneWhile SLOW HAND is a fun and flirty story, it is also partly biographical in that many of my own life experiences crept into it. This even includes the cowboy! (Wade Knowlton is named after my first girlhood cowboy crush.)

While cowboy romances are certainly nothing new to readers, each of my stories has a unique tone and theme. In all four books (SLOW HAND, ROUGH RIDER, SHARP SHOOTER and SILVER TONGUE) my heroes are modern day cowboys facing very real and relatable struggles. Wade (SLOW HAND) is burning the candle at both ends between a rural law practice and a struggling family ranch. His brother Dirk (ROUGH RIDER) is a former bull rider, rancher and wounded vet. Reid (SHARP SHOOTER) is also a vet, a marine and backcountry hunting guide. Keith (SILVER TONGUE) is a Native American struggling between two vastly different worlds. These stories are all hot and sexy but still have well-developed plots and emotional depth.

Although this new endeavor marks a distinct departure from historical romance, readers will find that my trademarks still remain—well-researched, scorching hot, emotionally compelling, character-driven stories.

About Victoria
Victoria Vane is an award-winning author of smart and sexy romance. Her collective works of fiction range from historical to contemporary settings and include everything from wild comedic romps to emotionally compelling erotic romance. Her biggest writing influences are Georgette Heyer, Robin Schone, and Sylvia Day. Victoria is the founder of Goodreads Romantic Historical Fiction Lovers and the Romantic Historical Lovers book review blog. Look for her sexy new contemporary cowboy series coming from Sourcebooks in 2014.
CONTACT:
victoria.vane@hotmail.com
Web: http://www.victoriavane.com
Blog: http://victoriavane.wordpress.com
Twitter: @authorvictoriav

~~~~~~TOURWIDE GIVEAWAY~~~~~~

For all of us booklovers out there, Victoria is giving away five beautiful handmade bookmarks.
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Review: Slow Hand by Victoria Vane

slow hand by victoria vaneFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: paperback, ebook
Genre: contemporary western romance
Series: Hot Cowboy Nights #1
Length: 288 pages
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
Date Released: November 4, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

In rural Montana…
Wade Knowlton is a hardworking lawyer who’s torn between his small-town Montana law practice and a struggling family ranch. He’s on the brink of exhaustion from trying to save everybody and everything, when gorgeous Nicole Powell walks into his office. She’s a damsel in distress and the breath of fresh air he needs.

Even the lawyers wear boots…

Nicole Powell is a sassy Southern girl who has officially sworn off cowboys after a spate of bad seeds-until her father’s death sends her to Montana and into the arms of a man who seems too good to be true. Her instincts tell her to high tail it out of Montana, but she can’t resist a cowboy with a slow hand…

My Review:

When I first saw the title of this book, I flashed back to the Pointer Sisters song of the same title. And it totally fits. In the song, and in this book, the woman is looking for “somebody who will spend some time, not come and go in a heated rush.”

Although in the story, Nicole Powell isn’t even aware that she’s looking. She seems to have sworn off men, and especially cowboys, with plenty of good reasons. While Wade Knowlton isn’t exactly looking himself, he’s so much more than just a cowboy, and he has his own reasons for being gun-shy about a relationship.

They both need time and care to reach a point where they’re ready to have the real relationship that is sparked by their intense chemistry. Nicole is prettty sure she’s been down this road before, where the chemistry burns hot, and fizzles out fast. Unfortunately her attempts to date anyone without that spark just fizzle into nothing.

Wade hasn’t bothered with relationships, just associates with benefits, since his wife died and left the relationship with his brother in a mess of recriminations and guilt. His trust in women was burned away when he finally acknowledged how much everyone had been used. But his brother still hasn’t gotten over the wreck, or the loss of his rodeo career to an IED in Iraq. There’s plenty of wreckage to go around.

Including the family ranch. Wade has been pouring the money from his law practice into keeping the ranch afloat, but it’s only a stop gap. The financial hole is too big to be filled by full-time Dirk, part-time Wade, and their aging parents. Wade wants to sell, Dirk wants to hang on and try one more experiment.

Nicole finds herself in the middle of both their mess and hers, and doesn’t initially have the emotional wherewithal to deal well with either. She’s in small-town Montana to settle the estate of a father she barely remembers. She’s just hoping for closure, but gets way more than she bargained for on every side.

The story starts with a meet-cute in the Denver airport, and continues through some amazingly funny and ironic coincidences. Nicole loses her wallet on the plane, and Wade is the only person she knows within a thousand miles. Not that she really knows him, he’s just her dad’s lawyer.

But as Nicole works through her frustations of the Catch-22 involved in getting a new ID without any ID in the middle of rural Montana, she has the chance to get to know Wade and his family, and gets a glimpse of the man her dad became by exploring the place he called home.

She’s sure that when everything is finally settled, she’ll return to her life in Atlanta. No matter how empty and sterile that life might be, it’s hers and it’s all she has. Unless she gives in to the promise in Wade’s slow and slightly hesitant courtship.

They both just need to find a faith in each other that they’ve never found before. Something that won’t be easy for either of them.

Escape Rating A-: I think that if most of us inherited the kind of estate that Nicole does, we’d be out of our office jobs like a shot. One of the things that I liked about this story was that you really felt for Nicole, and that the author made Nicole’s reasons for not doing so understandable and sympathetic. She can change her life, but the life she’s built has been hard-won; it is difficult to take a leap into the emotional dark that way. It’s easy to see why she would be reluctant to make her life in a small town very far away from anyplace else, with no support network and only knowing one person initially.

She and Wade have the strong possibility of a relationship from the very beginning, but if things don’t work, well, it is a very small town. Combined with her romantic history, hesitance makes sense, and it takes a lot of work and growth on both their parts to get to their much deserved happy ending.

And I absolutely, totally loved it, to the stand up and cheer point, when Nicole tells her petty tyrant of a boss the equivalent of take this job and shove it.

Wade is a complex character. He became a lawyer because he wanted to get away from the ranch, and also becauses he wants to do some good in local politics. Whether that second ambition is even possible is a philosophical discussion and a story for another time, but he hasn’t managed to get away from the ranch. His family needs his labor and the money he pours in, but he’s finally tired of sticking not enough fingers in too many holes in that dike. It’s not just that guilt and obligation have kept him tied down, but also that he’s tired of setting aside what he wants for a cause that he feels is already lost.

Nicole becomes the catalyst for Wade to make a lot of changes. His presence in her life, and the reasons behind it, also make her re-examine the choices that she has made. They reach towards each other for that happy ending, and it’s great to see them earn it.

rough rider by victoria vaneOne of the most interesting side characters in Slow Hand is Wade’s brother Dirk and their mess of a relationship. Also the mess Dirk is making of his personal life. I can’t wait to see how the author gets Dirk out of his multi-year funk in Rough Rider.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 11-9-14

Sunday Post

It’s hard to believe that Thanksgiving is almost upon us, but it is barreling towards us at breakneck speed. Unless you are in Canada and it’s already been and gone.

But starting this coming Saturday I’ll be participating in the 5th Annual Gratitude Giveaways Hop. And I’m very grateful that we found a house in Atlanta on the first day of the search. I’m not looking forward to moving, but I am looking forward to being back. Once it’s all done, that is.

This Thursday, Cass and I are doing a joint review, or possibly joint rant, about a dragon book. (because, Cass). There will be snark. Tune in to see what we thought. Or felt. Or puked over.

Current Giveaways:

The French Executioner by C.C. Humphreys (print, U.S. only)
$50 Gift Card, 2 Gift Baskets, print copy of Not Quite Forever by Catherine Bybee and swag

Winner Announcements:

ancillary sword by ann leckieBlog Recap:

A Review: Ancillary Sword by Ann Leckie
B+ Review: Core Punch by Pauline Baird Jones
B+ Review: The French Executioner by C.C. Humphreys
Guest Post by Author C.C. Humphreys + Giveaway
A Guest Review by Cryselle: Manipulation by Eden Winters
B+ Review: Not Quite Forever by Catherine Bybee + Giveaway
Stacking the Shelves (111)

gratitude-2013Coming Next Week:

The Red Book of Primrose House by Marty Wingate (blog tour review)
Soldier Girls by Helen Thorpe (review)
Dirty Laundry by Rhys Ford (review)
Til Dragons Do Us Part by Lorenda Christensen (joint review with Cass)
In the Company of Sherlock Holmes edited by Leslie S. Klinger (review)
Gratitude Giveaways Hop

Stacking the Shelves (111)

Stacking the Shelves

Madness in Solidar won’t be published until May, 2015, but I’ve already finished it. I was in the middle of one of this week’s books which was totally and utterly  meh (although Cass and I will probably skewer it) and I needed to read something I knew would be good. Modesitt’s Imager Portfolio is always good. If you are a fan of epic fantasy and haven’t started this series, you have plenty of time to grab a copy of Imager and get caught up.

I couldn’t resist Horrorstör. We’re moving next month and I just know there’s a trip to Ikea in our future. I need to be properly prepared. Or properly horrified.

For Review:
Cowboy, It’s Cold Outside (Montana Born Christmas #4) by Katherine Garbera
Deadly, Calm and Cold (Collectors #2) by Susannah Sandlin
Epitaph by Maria Doria Russell
The Hanged Man by P.N. Elrod
Horrorstör by Grady Hendrix
I Am Sophie Tucker by Susan and Lloyd Ecker
Long Walk Home (River Bend #5) by Lilian Darcy
Madness in Solidar (Imager Portfolio #9) by L.E. Modesitt Jr.
Officer Elvis (Darla Cavannah #1) by Gary M. Gusick
Phoenix Legacy (Phoenix Institute #2) by Corrina Lawson
Phoenix Rising (Phoenix Institute #1) by Corrina Lawson
Tethered by Pippa Jay
Tolkien by Devin Brown
Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Disturbances by Neil Gaiman

Borrowed from the Library:
Doc by Maria Doria Russell
Fevre Dream by George R.R. Martin
House Immortal (House Immortal #1) by Devon Monk

Review: Not Quite Forever by Catherine Bybee + Giveaway

not quite forever by catherine bybeeFormat read: ebook provided by the author
Formats available: ebook, paperback, audiobook
Genre: contemporary romance
Series: Not Quite, #4
Length: 322 pages
Publisher: Montlake Romance
Date Released: November 4, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Romance author Dakota Laurens believes that happily-ever-afters exist only between the covers of her sexy novels. But to her surprise, she finds a real-life hero when she meets a handsome emergency room doctor. The outspoken author feels an instant and intense attraction to Dr. Walt Eddy, and the feeling is mutual. When the globetrotting doctor pulls a disappearing act on Dakota, she’s prepared to write him off…until fate brings a blindsiding twist to her story.

Still scarred from a past tragedy, Walt may have disappeared on Dakota, but now he’s determined to win her back. For the first time in years, he knows he’s ready for a new chance at love. Yet between Dakota’s doubts and two sets of meddling parents, can the once-blissful couple finally create the bright, loving future they desperately want?

My Review:

I just plain liked this book. Sometimes that happens, you read a book and there isn’t any great message or anything, but it makes for an incredibly lovely time with some really nice people. Not Quite Forever is one of those books. I had fun, I loved watching these two people get together, and I finished the last page with a smile on my face.

My one regret is that I haven’t read the rest of the Not Quite series, but I can fix that.

Why did I like it so much?

First, there are the characters. Dakota Laurens is a romance author with a quick wit and a smart mouth. (I wonder if she’s modeled on the author or a romance writer that she knows?) Lauren writes just the kind of books that I like to read; sexy contemporaries where the characters have issues to resolve that will take some effort, and a happy ending that feels right and not forced.

Notice I said sexy contemporaries? Dakota has become a best-selling author, but her mother can’t manage to get the stick out of her ass (not in a good way) to read her daughter’s books. She refers to them as porn and worries about what her social circle will think instead of supporting her daughter.

Dr. Walt Eddy is in some similar familial hot water. His parents don’t support his decision to go into emergency medicine, or his work with the fictional equivalent of Doctors Without Borders. Unless he goes into cardiology and takes over his dad’s practice, his dad is silent and his mother is openly disapproving. Most parents would think he was close to an ideal son, but not her.

Their meeting at a conference mix-up is very much a meet cute. His emergency medicine conference is in the same hotel as her romance readers conference, but with considerably less attendance. His presentation is accidentally assigned to her room, and sparks fly as they tease each other over the hotel person’s head.

They have all the chemistry they need, but can’t seem to catch a moment alone to explore it. The first time they really get to be alone together, it’s during a weekend at his parents home in Colorado. And it’s a rescue date where she’s helping him to avoid his mother’s blatant and unwelcome matchmaking.

Like so much of their relationship, Walt starts out by definitely leaving Dakota that it’s all temporary and for slightly ulterior motives. She’s falling, and it seems like he’s doing everything he can to keep them from meaning too much to each other.

And its a disastrous pattern that he keeps repeating until he ends up with his foot so far down his throat that he can’t manage to admit to himself what he really feels, let alone reveal himself to Dakota.

He pushes her away, and she does what any intelligent woman would do; she leaves him to wallow in his own stupidity, no matter how much it hurts. When Walt finally is willing to admit what a complete ass he’s been, he discovers that he’s on the way to losing more than he ever imagined.

Escape Rating B+: This is one of those stories that I just plain liked. I think because I really liked (and possibly identified with) Dakota. She was funny and smart and had made a terrific life for herself doing something that she loved.

Walt was a candidate for icing on the cake that she had already made herself. He just had to deal with his own issues first. If he hadn’t screwed up big time, he might have come off just a shade too perfect. But he really screwed up, so not perfect.

It was interesting that they came from surprisingly similar family dynamics; an overbearing and disapproving mother and a silently approving father. They were both successful, but their parents were unsupportive. And they both had sisters who were extremely supportive.

I don’t normally like the “accidental pregnancy” trope, but it works in this story between these people. It helps that Dakota doesn’t need anyone to rescue her, except a bit in the emotional sense. She can afford to be a single mother, and doesn’t need Walt to take care of her financially. Emotionally, they need each other.

If you’re looking for a contemporary romance featuring grown up protagonists, Not Quite Forever is a fun one. I’m going back to read the rest of the series. While this story stands alone, I quite liked the people who are clearly the heroes/heroines of the earlier stories, and I want to find out how they found each other!

~~~~~~TOURWIDE GIVEAWAY~~~~~~

Catherine is giving away a $50 gift card and two gift baskets! For a chance to win, use the Rafflecopter below:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

NQF Blog Tour Graphic

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 11-2-14

Sunday Post

I love weeks when all the review books are in the “good to great” range, instead of in the “OK to good” range. It makes for an excellent week.

lj bestbooksSpeaking of good books, it’s that time of year when the “Best of the Year” lists come out. My first one has already been published, well, sort of. Library Journal has published its overall best of the year list online, but the annotated versions of the specific genre lists will be trickled out in November. I’m the author of the “Best E-Original Romance” section of the list. I didn’t make a note of when it was scheduled to appear, but Galen checked on each of my authors on twitter to see what they said as they found out. Too fun! I swear this is my favorite thing to do every Fall.

Speaking of things to do every year, or nearly; we’re moving again. We’re headed back to Atlanta after Thanksgiving (and hopefully before Xmas). It’s hard to believe that we just did this two years ago, and that we’re doing it again. (I never expected my life to be choreographed to Willie Nelson’s On the Road Again, I just don’t like country music that much.) We have to pack the books again OMG.

Current Giveaways:

Print copy of Burn for Me by Ilona Andrews along with some Burn for Me swag

Winner Announcements:

The winner of the $10 Gift Card in the Spooktacular Giveaway Hop is Amanda K.
The winner of one book in Jeffe Kennedy’s Covenant of Thorns series is Joy F.

burn for me by ilona andrewsBlog Recap:

A Review: Forcing the Spring: Inside the Fight for Marriage Equality by Jo Becker
B+ Review: Dirty Secret by Rhys Ford
B Review: The Unwitting by Ellen Feldman
A Review: Burn for Me by Ilona Andrews + Giveaway
A- Review: Duck Duck Ghost by Rhys Ford
Stacking the Shelves (110)

 

 

core punch by pauline baird jonesComing Next Week:

Ancillary Sword by Ann Leckie (review)
Core Punch by Pauline Baird Jones (review)
The French Executioner by C.C. Humphreys (blog tour review)
Manipulation by Eden Winters (guest review by Cryselle)
Not Quite Forever by Catherine Bybee (blog tour review)

Stacking the Shelves (110)

Stacking the Shelves

This was a pretty quiet week in the shelves; I think it’s still the winter lull. The big push for new titles is in the Spring (March, April, May) and in the Fall (September, October). Winter and Summer are generally pretty quiet.

Since NetGalley and Edelweiss are mostly working into the January/February 2015 timeframe at this point, there just isn’t any there there. So to speak. Which gives me a chance to get to work on my “Best of the Year” lists.

For Review:
Branded (Aspen Valley #3) by Colette Auclair
The Fourth Rule of Ten (Tenzing Norbu #4) by Gay Hendricks and Tinker Lindsay
Rough Rider (Hot Cowboy Nights #2) by Victoria Vane
Temporal Shift (Dark Desires/Blood Hunter #4) by Nina Croft
The Wrong Man (Ted Stratton #3) by Laura Wilson

Purchased from Amazon:
Dirty Deeds (Cole McGinnis #4) by Rhys Ford

Borrowed from the Library:
Ancillary Sword (Imperial Radch #2) by Ann Leckie
Soldier Girls by Helen Thorpe

Stacking the Shelves (109)

Stacking the Shelves

I just realized that I have Christmas romances for the next three Christmases! Everything from Tule Publishing always looks so yummy when I see it on NetGalley, then I forget how many I have until Saturday. OMG

8 is really an audiobook. It’s the full-cast recording of the play by Dustin Lance Black about the court case to fight Prop 8 in California. Because I loved Forcing the Spring so much (review on Monday), I couldn’t resist hearing the fictional version.

For Review:
All I Want for Christmas is You (Coming Home #5.5) by Jessica Scott
The Axeman’s Jazz by Ray Celestin
Bad Romeo by Leisa Rayven
Cat Out of Hell by Lynne Truss
Christmas in Venice (Christmas Around the World #3) by Joanne Walsh
Christmas at Waratah Bay (Christmas Around the World #1) by Marion Lennox
Christmas with the Laird (Christmas Around the World #2) by Scarlet Wilson
A Cowgirl’s Christmas (Carrigans of the Circle C #5) by CJ Carmichael
A Crown for Cold Silver by Alex Marshall
Down and Dirty (Cole McGinnis #5) by Rhys Ford
Just in Time for Christmas (Southern Born Christmas #2) by Kim Boykin
The Mouth of the Crocodile (Mamur Zapt #18) by Michael Pearce
Ray Bradbury: The Last Interview and Other Conversations by Ray Bradbury and Sam Weller
Skeleton Key (Todd & Georgine #1) by Lenore Glen Offord
Tainted Blood (Hell’s Belle #2) by Karen Greco
The Trouble with Christmas (Southern Born Christmas #4) by Kaira Rouda
A Very Married Christmas (Southern Born Christmas #3) by Erika Marks
The Wanderer’s Children (Angelorum Twelve Chronicles #2) by L.G. O’Connor
Windy City Blues (Jules Landau #2) by Marc Krulewitch
A Yorkshire Christmas (Christmas Around the World #4) by Kate Hewitt

Purchased from Amazon:
Escape from Zulaire by Veronica Scott
Mission to Mahjundar by Veronica Scott
Not Quite Dating (Not Quite #1)by Catherine Bybee
Not Quite Enough (Not Quite #3) by Catherine Bybee
Not Quite Mine (Not Quite #2) by Catherine Bybee
The Right Thing by Donna McDonald
Teach Me by Donna McDonald

Borrowed from the Library:
8 by Dustin Lance Black

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 10-19-14

Sunday Post

The upcoming week’s schedule has changed at least three times so far, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it changes again before the week is out. I intended to review a book that I found so ponderous I couldn’t keep going; the thing was preventing me from reading anything good.

Cass has been guest reviewing her take on Rachel Bach’s Paradox series. I loved it when I reviewed it earlier this year. Cass pretty much seems to like them too, except for the romance bits (at least so far). I can’t wait to read her usually snarky take on Heaven’s Queen!

Spooktacular2013Current Giveaways:

$10 Amazon or B&N Gift Card in the Spooktacular Giveaway Hop

Winner Announcements:

The winner of the $10 Amazon Gift Card in the Books That Need More Attention Giveaway Hop is Sara S.
The winner of In Your Dreams by Kristan Higgins is Cheryl B.
The winner of The Moonlight Palace by Liz Rosenberg is Michelle W.

dirty kiss by rhys fordBlog Recap:

B+ Review by Cass: Honor’s Knight by Rachel Bach
B Review: Alex by Sawyer Bennett
Spooktacular Giveaway Hop
B+ Review: Dirty Kiss by Rhys Ford
B- Review: Olde School by Selah Janel
Stacking the Shelves (108)

 

 

 

key by pauline baird jonesComing Next Week:

The Key by Pauline Baird Jones (review)
The Monogram Murders by Sophie Hannah and Agatha Christie (review)
Heaven’s Queen by Rachel Bach (review by Cass)
Forcing the Spring by Jo Becker (review)
Rogue’s Paradise by Jeffe Kennedy (blog tour review)