The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 6-1-14

Sunday Post

We have reached the unofficial beginning of summer. In other words, it’s after Memorial Day. I don’t care that the calendar says summer doesn’t begin for 3 more weeks, it’s summer now.

We spent last weekend at my mom’s, so what should have been last week’s winners became this week’s winners. I promise, the books are still good!

unlocked by John ScalziAnd last but not least; I reviewed John Scalzi’s novella Unlocked on Friday. Because I loved it, I included him in the tweet about the review. OMG, he retweeted. Friday was one of the highest traffic days I’ve ever had. I knew there was a reason I liked him!

Winner Announcements:

The winners of titles in The Echoes of Empire series by Mark T. Barnes are Jo J., Miriam L. and Wendell A.
The winner of Little Island by Katharine Britton is Natasha D.
The winner of The Quick by Lauren Owen is Rhonda L.
The winner of the $10 gift card in the Wicked Nights Giveaway Hop is Ann S.

silver skin by d l mcdermottBlog Recap:

Memorial Day 2014
B Review: Dragons & Dirigibles by Cindy Spencer Pape
B Review: A Case of Spontaneous Combustion by Stephanie Osborn
A- Review: Silver Skin by D.L. McDermott
A- Review: Unlocked by John Scalzi
Stacking the Shelves (91)

covergasmComing Next Week:

Artemis Awakening by Jane Lindskold (dual review)
Silver Mirrors by A.A. Aguirre (review)
Court of Conspiracy by April Taylor (review)
Sweet Revenge by Zoë Archer (review)
Covergasm Blog Hop

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 5-25-14

Sunday Post

For everyone in the U.S., I hope you’re having a terrific Memorial Day weekend! It feels like it has been forever since our last 3-day weekend, and it’s about six weeks to the next one.

This coming week I had a chance to review some books that I just wanted to do, and discovered that a week isn’t nearly long enough!

Current Giveaways:

Little Island by Katharine Britton (paperback)

lovers at the chameleon club paris 1932 by francine proseBlog Recap:

A- Review: Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932 by Francine Prose
B Review: The Quick by Lauren Owen + Giveaway
B Review: Little Island by Katharine Britton + Giveaway
B+ Review: B.O.Q. by N.P. Simpson
B+ Review: Otherwise Engaged by Amanda Quick
Stacking the Shelves (90)

 

 

case of spontaneous combustion by stephanie osbornComing Next Week:

Dragons & Dirigibles by Cindy Spencer Pape (review)
A Case of Spontaneous Combustion by Stephanie Osborn (review)
Silver Skin by D.L. McDermott (review)
Unlocked: An Oral History of Haden’s Syndrome by John Scalzi

Stacking the Shelves (90)

Stacking the Shelves

Not a huge haul for this Memorial Day weekend, and that’s a good thing. Even better, the Bride books were seriously on sale this week. I read the first one in the series (What a Bride Wants by Kelly Hunter) and just couldn’t resist!

For Review:
The Awakening of Miss Prim by Natalia Sanmartin Fenollera
Bittersweet by Colleen McCullough
The Bookman’s Tale by Charlie Lovett
Dollbaby by Laura lane McNeal
The Guild of Assassins (Majat Code #2) by Anna Kashina
The Gunslinger by Lorraine Heath
Jumped (Aspen Valley #2) by Colette Auclair
The Mirror Empire (Worldbreaker #1) by Kameron Hurley
Truly (New York #1) by Ruthie Knox

Purchased:
Almost a Bride (Great Wedding Giveaway #3) by Sarah Mayberry
Second Chance Bride (Great Wedding Giveaway #2) by Trish Morey

Review: Otherwise Engaged by Amanda Quick

otherwise engaged by amanda quickFormat read: hardcover borrowed from the Library
Formats available: ebook, hardcover, paperback, audiobook
Genre: Historical romance
Length: 345 pages
Publisher: Putnam Adult
Date Released: April 22, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Miss Amity Doncaster, world traveler, is accustomed to adventure and risk. Benedict Stanbridge, a man of science and a spy for the Crown, has faced danger in the darker corners of foreign lands.

But they are about to face a threat that is shockingly close to home …

One does not expect to be kidnapped on a London street in broad daylight. But Amity Doncaster barely escapes with her life after she is trapped in a carriage with a blade-wielding man in a black silk mask who whispers the most vile taunts and threats into her ear. Her quick thinking, and her secret weapon, save her … for now.

But the monster known in the press as the Bridegroom, who has left a trail of female victims in his wake, has survived the wounds she inflicts and will soon be on his feet again. He is unwholesomely obsessed by her scandalous connection to Benedict Stanbridge—gossip about their hours alone in a ship’s stateroom seems to have crossed the Atlantic faster than any sailing vessel could. Benedict refuses to let this resourceful, daring woman suffer for her romantic link to him—as tenuous as it may be.

For a man and woman so skilled at disappearing, so at home in the exotic reaches of the globe, escape is always an option. But each intends to end the Bridegroom’s reign of terror in London, and will join forces to do so. And as they prepare to confront an unbalanced criminal in the heart of the city they love, they must also face feelings that neither of them can run away from…

My Review:

I was vaguely disappointed that Otherwise Engaged is not part of The Ladies of Lantern Street series. I kept expecting the Arcane Society to make an appearance, but alas, it was not to be.

The lack of a supernatural element does not mean that Otherwise Engaged is lacking in suspense! We have a serial killer, an extensive cover up, madness the like of Sweeney Todd or Jack the Ripper, and a fake engagement between an intrepid globetrotter and a rookie spy.

What more could a reader ask for?

Amity Doncaster is the woman I think we’d all like to have been in the late 1800s. She is an absolutely fearless world traveler, visiting exotic places all over the globe as a completely independent woman. She supports herself by writing travel articles for the London newspapers, and the public breathlessly awaits her next adventure.

Then she meets Benedict Stanbridge in the Caribbean. She’s taking in the sights of a small island town during a cruise, and he’s bleeding to death in an alley. Not the most salubrious meeting in romantic history.

She rescues him. Not just by helping him get on board ship, but by doctoring his wounds and nursing him back to health. She saves his life. In return, there’s one kiss and his immediate transit to California as soon as they dock in New York.

She never expects to see him again, although she has hopes. Neither of which stand her in good stead when she returns to London and rumors start circulating that all the time she spent in his cabin was more intimate and less innocent than it truly was.

Those rumors make her the quarry of a serial killer who targets women in society circles who have supposedly given up their virtue. He may be mad as a hatter, but it is unfortunately an organized madness. The Bridegroom killer nearly makes Amity his next victim, but she outsmarts him with a concealed blade.

And into the midst of the ensuing drama and scandal, Benedict Stanbridge rushes back into Amity’s life. While his initial desire is to begin where they left off in New York, he believes that he needs to rescue her from the possibility of another attack. She won’t sit idly by while he does all the work; but she will let him assist in her investigation.

To divert the scandal, they agree to a fake engagement, but one that they both secretly hope will become real. It takes Benedict quite a lot of convincing, and several near-death experiences, to convince Amity that it is her that he really wants, for love and not just to protect her.

Escape Rating B+: The fake engagement trope, when it works, is one of my favorites. Two people who are supposed to be in love discover that they actually are. As a concept, the fake engagement works better in historicals than contemporaries, because it feels like there are more logical reasons to fake an engagement. The threat of scandal just isn’t what it used to be.

Amity and Benedict are terrific as the couple who can’t believe that anyone would love them. Amity is practical, sensible and off-the shelf. She’s also been the victim of a scandal, having once had a fiancee who was only interested in using her, then left her at the altar, starting her on her globetrotting adventures. She ran away from the scandal by seeing the world. She also believes herself to be terribly plain, and Benedict much too handsome for her own good.

Benedict is an engineer. He’s sure he’s much too boring for an adventurous woman like Amity. He also suffered from a broken engagement, with a woman who was only interested in him for his money and family connections, but found the man himself terribly boring. (She was a very stupid woman).

Forcing them together for the sake of investigating the Bridegroom Killer makes them get past the superficialities, and also binds them together through the shared experience of danger. Amity finds Benedict anything but boring–he’s a brilliant engineer and an amateur spy!

They need each other for balance, and they fall in love with the real person they are able to trust to guard their back, because they spend their fake engagement under threat from all sides. Falling in love is inevitable, but they are each the last person to see it.

The combination of the hunt for the serial killer with the search for the foreign agent involved in industrial espionage kept the suspense and danger ratcheted up for the entire story. Otherwise Engaged is breathtakingly fun!

***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 5-18-14

Sunday Post

I heard a terrible joke this week: “In Seattle, what do you get after two days of rain and gloom?” Answer: “Monday”. And it can be so damn true. But not this week. It was supposed to rain, and instead we got the gray but not the wet.

mellie suitcaseMellie has taken to sleeping on a suitcase in the office. (Why we’ve left a suitcase in the office is a whole other question). But now it’s HER suitcase. Maybe she thinks it will keep us from traveling?

Current Giveaways:

Dialogues of a Crime by John K. Manos (paperback)
Echoes of Empire series by Mark T. Barnes (5 ebook copies of any title in the series)
$10 Amazon or B&N Gift Card in the Wicked Nights Blog Hop
$40 Amazon or B&N Gift Card and 3 ebook copies of Brightarrow Burning by Isabo Kelly

Winner Announcements:

The winner of the Mothers’ Day Ebook Bundle is Shelley S.
The winner of The Spymistress by Jennifer Chiaverini is Missy B.

pillars of sand by mark t barnesBlog Recap:

B+ Review: Dialogues of a Crime by John K. Manos + Giveaway
A+ Review: The Pillars of Sand by Mark T. Barnes
Guest Post by Mark T. Barnes on Creating Myths + Giveaway
Wicked Nights Blog Hop
Guest Post by Author Isabo Kelly on What Having Kids Taught Me about Writing + Giveaway
C Review: The Queen of the Dark Things by C. Robert Cargill
Stacking the Shelves (89)

lovers at the chameleon club paris 1932 by francine proseComing Next Week:

Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932 by Francine Prose (blog tour review)
The Quick by Lauren Owen (blog tour review)
Little Island by Katharine Britton (blog tour review
B.O.Q. by N.P. Simpson (review)
Otherwise Engaged by Amanda Quick (review)

Stacking the Shelves (89)

Stacking the Shelves

In addition to feeding my addiction at both NetGalley and Edelweiss, there were a couple of special purchases I’d like to mention.

The wonderful folks at StoryBundle are running a special bundle this week of Science Fiction and Fantasy written during NaNoWriMo. This looks like a terrific punch of new SF/F authors, and I can’t wait to see how the stories turn out.

Humble Bundle (much better known for their indie gaming bundles) have a special Doctor Who comics bundle this week. If you love the Doctor, or are curious about the comics, this is a great way to read a pretty full starting collection.

For Review:
The Agincourt Bride (Catherine de Valois #1) by Joanna Hickson
Allegiance (Penton Legacy #4) by Susannah Sandlin
Black Ice (Midgard #2) by Susan Krinard
Dark Refuge (Spirit Wild #4) by Kate Douglas
The Little Green Book of Chairman Rahma by Brian Herbert
Lock In by John Scalzi
The Tudor Bride (Catherine de Valois #2) by Joanna Hickson
Witchlight (Magic Born #2) by Sonya Clark
Wouldn’t It Be Deadly (Eliza Doolittle & Henry Higgins #1) by D.E. Ireland

Purchased:
Doctor Who Comics Bundle from Humble Bundle
Sci-Fi/Fantasy NaNo Bundle from StoryBundle
Unlocked: An Oral History of Haden’s Syndrome by John Scalzi

Borrowed from the Library:
Otherwise Engaged by Amanda Quick

Stacking the Shelves (88)

Stacking the Shelves

In addition to the usual suspects, this week Library Journal sent me the next Inspector Gamache book to review. It’s a really ugly ARC, and I don’t care. I absolutely adore the series, and I’m thrilled to get the next book in any form available. If you like character driven mysteries, start with Still Life. If you are eagerly awaiting the new one (due out at the end of August) let me tell you, it’s worth the wait!

For Review:
Burn for Me (Hidden Legacy #1) by Ilona Andrews
A Case of Spontaneous Combustion (Displaced Detective #5) by Stephanie Osborn
Gemsigns (®Evolution #1) by Stephanie Saulter
Heirs of the Demon King: Uprising by Sarah Cawkwell
Leashing the Tempest (Arcadia Bell #2.5) by Jenn Bennett
The Long Way Home (Chief Inspector Gamache #10) by Louise Penny
Love and Let Spy (Lord and Lady Spy #3) by Shana Galen
Premonitions by Jamie Schultz
Rogues edited by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois
Sundance by David Fuller
What a Bride Wants (Great Wedding Giveaway #1) by Kelly Hunter (review)

Borrowed from the Library:
Reaper’s Legacy (Reapers MC #2) by Joanna Wylde
The Silk Map (Gaunt and Bone #2) by Chris Willrich

Stacking the Shelves (87)

Stacking the Shelves

In addition to my usual roundup of books from NetGalley and Edelweiss, you’ll notice that one of the things purchased is another bundle from the wonderful folks at Story Bundle. StoryBundle logoThis time round, they have a fantastic collection of romance, as they say, from the past, the present and the not-quite-normal. Go to Story Bundle, take a look at the titles they have on offer, and decide how much they are worth TO YOU. Pay what you think the collection deserves.

If romance isn’t your thing, check out some of their past bundles to get an idea of the many realms that they collect. If you sign up for their mailing list, you’ll get notices whenever they have a new bundle. They’re always interesting, whether they are quite your cup of tea or not. I think this is my fourth. Or fifth. At least.

For Review:
Gilded Lily (Steam and Seduction #3) by Delphine Dryden
Knight of Love by Catherine LaRoche
The Nightingale Girls (Nightingales #1) by Donna Douglas
The Nightingale Nurses (Nightingales #3) by Donna Douglas
The Nightingale Sisters (Nightingales #2) by Donna Douglas
Serafina and the Psycho Sous-Chef (Serafina’s #4) by Marie Treanor
Stone Song (Cold Iron #3) by D.L. McDermott
Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Thomas Sweterlitsch
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot by David Shafer

Purchased:
The Mary Russell Companion by Laurie R. King
Romance: Past, Present and Paranormal Bundle from Story Bundle

Borrowed from the Library:
The Leopard Prince (Princes Trilogy #2) by Elizabeth Hoyt
Shadows of the Workhouse (Call the Midwife #2) by Jennifer Worth
Silver Mirrors (apparatus Infernum #2) by A.A. Aguirre

Stacking the Shelves (81)

Stacking the Shelves

I never think the list is going to be this big, then I get to the end of the week, and it’s, well, this big. If these were print, our apartment would probably crash into the one below. I’m always grateful that my iPad doesn’t get heavier the more books I stuff into it. But one of these days I’m going to have to weed. ICK!

Review:
American Craftsmen by Tom Doyle
The Betrayal (City of the Gods #2) by S.J. McMillan
Deadly Curiosities by Gail Z. Martin
The Escape (Survivor’s Club #3) by Mary Balogh
Giving In (Surrender #2) by Maya Banks
Here’s Looking at You by Mhairi McFarlane
Hunter by Night (Chronicles of Yavn #3) by Elisabeth Staub
Invisible City (Rebekah Roberts #1) by Julia Dahl
Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932 by Francine Prose
Nightmare Ink (Living Ink #1) by Marcella Burnard
The Scarlet Tides (Moontide Quartet #2) by David Hair
Shield of Winter (Psy-Changeling #13) by Nalini Singh
The Splintered Kingdom (Bloody Aftermath of 1066 #2) by James Atcheson
The Sweet Spot by Stephanie Evanovich
Thief’s Magic (Millennium’s Rule #1) by Trudi Canavan
The Time Traveler’s Almanac edited by Ann & Jeff VanderMeer
Veil of the Deserters (Bloodsounder’s Arc #2) by Jeff Salyards

Purchased:
Download My Love by Eva Lefoy

Borrowed from the Library:
The Admiral’s Bride (Tall, Dark & Dangerous #7) by Suzanne Brockmann
Lady Thief (Scarlet #2) by A.C. Gaughen

Stacking the Shelves (78)

Stacking the Shelves

Someone blogged a couple of weeks ago about the temptation to get ARCs, resisting the temptation, and feeling overwhelmed by the number of review copies in one’s TBR stack versus the number of books one actually wanted to read, but wasn’t committed to. (And now I can’t find it!)

I know I get more books than I can reasonably read in a week, month, or possibly year. But I only get eARCs unless I have a firm commitment to review a particular title. (Library Journal sends print ARCs, but they also send a deadline)

It’s about having LOTS to choose from. Which seems contradictory, because I usually end up reading books based on what tours I have scheduled. But I only pick tours or eARCs that I think I will like (we all get disappointed occasionally!)

So how do you feel about the size of your TBR? Does it weigh you down, or is it just a fact of life? Or perhaps you revel in it, just a bit?

For Review:
Always On My Mind (Sullivans #8) by Bella Andre
At Star’s End (Phoenix Adventures #1) by Anna Hackett
Dead Americans and Other Stories by Ben Peek
The Fan Fiction Studies Reader edited by Karen Hellekson and Kristina Busse
The Forever Watch by David Ramirez
Good Together (Carrigans of the Circle C #1) by CJ Carmichael
It’s Always Been You (Coming Home #5) by Jessica Scott
Love Game (Matchmaker #3) by Elise Sax
A Plunder of Souls (Thieftaker Chronicles #3) by D.B. Jackson
The Retribution by Anderson Harp
Taken with You (Kowalski Family #8) by Shannon Stacey
The Time Traveler’s Boyfriend by Annabelle Costa
Trinity Stones (Angelorum Twelve Chronicles #1) by L.G. O’Connor
Wicked Temptation (Nemesis Unlimited #3) by Zoe Archer

Borrowed from the Library:
Fables: Snow White (Fables #19) by Bill Willingham and Mark Buckingham