*** Please note that various posts will contain affiliate links for Amazon. Purchases from these links will make me a small percentage in store credit. ***

31 March 2022

She Walks These Hills by Sharyn McCrumb (Book Beginnings & Friday56)

 

Title: She Walks These Hills
Author: Sharyn McCrumb
Publication: 1994
Format: paperback

Publisher's Weekly Description
(because Amazon's was pathetic)

In 1779, Katie Wyler, 18, was captured by the Shawnee in North Carolina. The story of her escape and arduous journey home through hundreds of miles of Appalachian wilderness is the topic of ethno-historian Jeremy Cobb's thesis-and the thread which runs through the third of McCrumb's ballad novels (after The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter). As Cobb begins to retrace Katie's return journey, 63-year-old convicted murderer Hiram (Harm) Sorley escapes from a nearby prison. Suffering from Korsakoff's syndrome, he has no recent memory: old Harm is permanently stuck in the past. Hamelin, Tenn., police dispatcher Martha Ayers uses the opportunity to convince the sheriff to assign her as a deputy. One of her first duties is to calm a young mother who, angry at her inattentive husband, is threatening her baby with a butcher knife. Ayers and the sheriff must also warn Harm's ex-wife Rita that he has escaped. Acting as a kind of narrative conscience is a local deejay, a "carpetbagger from Connecticut,'' who sees Harm as a folk hero from another era. Deftly building suspense, McCrumb weaves these colorful elements into her satisfying conclusion as she continues to reward her readers' high expectations. 


Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff

If you're looking for a simple, fast, easy read ... stay away from Sharyn McCrumb's ballad novels. They are complex. They should be savored. They might even make you think. Even though I have read this multiple times in the past 28 years since its release, it still takes my breath away.





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As always, Friday 56 (share a blurb from the 56th page or 56% mark) is hosted at Freda's Voice 
& Book Beginnings (share the first few sentences) is at Rose City Reader

25 March 2022

Games in a Ballroom by Jentry Flint (Book Beginnings & Friday 56)

 


Title: Games in a Ballroom
Author: Jentry Flint
Publication: 3 May 2022
FormatKindle eARC via NetGalley & Shadow Mountain


Amazon Description

She was forbidden to love him. He only wanted her heart. Can a childhood game bring them together?

London, 1815

Olivia Wilde has resigned herself to never finding a love match. Her father has insisted she marry a man with a title, but the men her father deems acceptable are either boring or are only interested in increasing their own diminishing coffers. With her future looking dismal, Olivia vows to enjoy the last few months of freedom with her childhood friends, including Emerson Latham. His devilish smile and flirtatious teasing stirs up feelings she knows she cannot entertain.

Emerson is struggling to rise to his responsibilities after his father's death. Though he is still learning his place, one thing he knows for certain is that he wants Olivia Wilde to be his wife. Emerson had long ago fallen in love with her quick wit, beauty, and passionate heart. Yet, without a title, he will never be permitted to court Olivia openly. But he has a plan that may give him a chance to court her in secret.

As the Season kicks off, Emerson proposes a playful game of tag. Olivia's friends are delighted by the idea, though Olivia is wary. After all, the game must be played in secret as they tag each other at dinners and balls. As the romance builds between Olivia and Emerson, so does the risk of being discovered. Not only are their reputations at stake, so is their safety if they are caught by Olivia's strict father.

Can their love find a happily ever after before the game ends?


Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff

There are plenty of times when I want a steamy romance. The bodice ripper. The one that I shouldn't read in public because things might happen that probably shouldn't in public. A lot of the time, though, I actually prefer a slow burn. After all, it took 25+ years to get my first kiss from the one I fell for my freshman year of high school. 

This was such a fun read and I sincerely hope that it ends up being the first of a series because I so desperately need to see more of the Reckless Redhead and Brooding Baron and Arabella. I know. If you haven't read the book you don't know who they are and the book isn't even out until May. Trust me, though. Those are stories that need to be told. And read. And probably re-read. And, of course, I would very much love to see the HEA from the winners of the game. I think I deducted a star just because of the angst that I feel not knowing that I'll have more to look forward to. 


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As always, Friday 56 (share a blurb from the 56th page or 56% mark) is hosted at Freda's Voice 
& Book Beginnings (share the first few sentences) is at Rose City Reader

22 March 2022

Notorious by Mae Thorn (Tuesday Intros & Teaser Tuesday)

 

Title: Notorious
Author: Mae Thorn
Publication: 11 March 2022
FormatKindle eARC via NetGalley & Dragonblade Publishing


Amazon Description

Revenge is best served heartbroken, but love bleeds justice.

Welcome to book 1 in the exciting new series Poisonous Passions by bestselling author Mae Thorn!

During the Revolutionary War in New York City, Delia Wolcott blames the British for her brother’s death. In retaliation, she becomes the traitorous poisoner, Foxglove, rescuing rebels from His Majesty’s grasp. She will stop at nothing to find justice for those abandoned by General Washington. She spies on officers to gain information about her brother’s murder and leaves no witnesses.

British captain Lord Carrington is sent to New York to hang Foxglove for treason, but little does he know the woman he has fallen for is the murderer he seeks.

He risks treason himself and his family’s future if he fails in his duty.

Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff


I love it when a book completely takes me by surprise with just how very much I enjoy it. I expect to enjoy what I read ... otherwise why would I choose to read them, right? But there are times, like now, when I just kind of expect to enjoy the distraction and end up gobmacked. I get so wrapped up in the story and the characters and when the book ends I start to hyperventilate a bit. 

Moreso when it is the first book in the series and has only just been released and there is, as of yet, no more.

I need more Poisonous Passions. I need Mae Thorn to write and write and write and .... you know, write.

It looks like there will be three books in the series. I need them now. 

And then I need more. 

I read a lot of Regency and Victorian and sooooooo much set across the pond. But this book. Oooooh this book.

It's an American Revolutionary War story ... set in my dear New York. 

New York City, of course. Not the center of the dang state like I am, but that's to be expected. Syracuse wasn't Syracuse until 42 years after this story took place. Even then, it wasn't much of anything at all until the Erie Canal. Hmmm ... I would be quite enthralled with some canal romance going on in a book or several at some point ... but now, back to Notorious

We have the heroine ... who is also kind of the villain ... but isn't ...
And the hero ... who hates the villain ... but is enthralled with the heroine ...

There are friends and family members and other villains and other heroes and heroines and secrets and lies and and humor and intrigue and hopes and dreams and just the right bit of "just do it already" romance. It pretty much has everything.

Except for pirates.
Or vikings.
Or kilted Highlanders.

Although ... maybe they were in the pages of the book our heroine was reading in Chapter Nineteen. I'll just believe that to be the case.



 
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"First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday Intros" is from the first paragraph or two of a book being read now (or in the future) and is hosted by Socrates' Book Reviews. 

"Teaser Tuesday" at The Purple Booker asks for a random line or two from anywhere in the book currently being read.

20 March 2022

I'll Sleep When I've Read... The Mayfair Bookshop by Eliza Knight



Title: The Mayfair Bookshop
Author: Eliza Knight
Publication: 12 April 2022
FormatKindle eArc via NetGalley & William Morrow


Amazon Description

1938: She was one of the six sparkling Mitford sisters, known for her stinging quips, stylish dress, and bright green eyes. But Nancy Mitford’s seemingly dazzling life was really one of turmoil: with a perpetually unfaithful and broke husband, two Nazi sympathizer sisters, and her hopes of motherhood dashed forever. With war imminent, Nancy finds respite by taking a job at the Heywood Hill Bookshop in Mayfair, hoping to make ends meet, and discovers a new life.

Present Day: When book curator Lucy St. Clair lands a gig working at Heywood Hill she can’t get on the plane fast enough. Not only can she start the healing process from the loss of her mother, it’s a dream come true to set foot in the legendary store. Doubly exciting: she brings with her a first edition of Nancy’s work, one with a somewhat mysterious inscription from the author. Soon, she discovers her life and Nancy’s are intertwined, and it all comes back to the little London bookshop—a place that changes the lives of two women from different eras in the most surprising ways. 



Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff

Amazon claims that the print edition of this gem of a book is going to clock in at 432 pages. I finished it in just over a day because once I started I did not want to put it down for anything. I have been fascinated with the Bright Young Things and, in particular, the dynamics of the Mitford sisters for years and have several of Nancy's books sitting on my e-Cloud collecting e-Dust. They probably won't be just sitting there for much longer. Eliza Knight did such an amazing job of pulling me in to Nancy's life that I am now itching to read the books that her character talked about writing. 

The current-day storyline? Eh. It was nice and sweet and helped add a little sense of mystery to the tale, but each time a Lucy chapter came up I couldn't help but hope that it would be a short one so I could get back to Nancy and whatever she was dealing with .... and she dealt with quite a lot. That being said, I still actually wouldn't mind this becoming the first of a series of some sort with Lucy and her Mayfair friends and colleagues delving into other literature-based mysteries. I wouldn't mind that at all.

If you want to share whatever has kept you up past your bedtime because you just needed one more chapter ... or the entire book ... please comment! My TBR pile is already toppling, but I can always add more.

 

18 March 2022

Silence in the Library by Katharine Schellman



Title: Silence in the Library
Author: Katharine Schellman
Publication: 13 July 2021
FormatKindle ebook


Amazon Description

Regency widow Lily Adler didn't expect to find a corpse when visiting a family friend. Now it's up to her to discover the killer in the charming second installment in the Lily Adler mysteries.

Regency widow Lily Adler has finally settled into her new London life when her semi-estranged father arrives unexpectedly, intending to stay with her while he recovers from an illness. Hounded by his disapproval, Lily is drawn into spending time with Lady Wyatt, the new wife of an old family friend. Lily barely knows Lady Wyatt. But she and her husband, Sir Charles, seem as happy as any newly married couple until the morning Lily arrives to find the house in an uproar and Sir Charles dead.

All signs indicate that he tripped and struck his head late at night. But when Bow Street constable Simon Page is called to the scene, he suspects foul play. And it isn't long before Lily stumbles on evidence that Sir Charles was, indeed, murdered.

Mr. Page was there when Lily caught her first murderer, and he trusts her insight into the world of London's upper class. With the help of Captain Jack Hartley, they piece together the reasons that Sir Charles's family might have wanted him dead. But anyone who might have profited from the old man's death seems to have an alibi... until Lily receives a mysterious summons to speak with one of the Wyatts' maids, only to find the young woman dead when she arrives.

Mr. Page believes the surviving family members are hiding the key to the death of both Sir Charles and the maid. To uncover the truth, Lily must convince the father who doesn't trust or respect her to help catch his friend's killer before anyone else in the Wyatt household dies.


Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff


I honestly have no idea why some book descriptions have to be soooooooo long. It really takes away from any sort of need to summarize or recap or any of that stuff to tell you about the book in question. Sometimes it's just plain annoying. Other times it's more of an "ooooh ... this means I can just jump right into the whole Read This Book part of the ramble!"

Whoever writes the descriptions for Katharine Schellman? Please do keep being wordy. I have a feeling that I will always want to jump right to read this book.

In case you missed it, I read and adored the first Lily Adler mystery, The Body in the Garden, back in January. Here we see Lily again, as well as her household staff, her husband's best friend Jack, the young Jack-wannabe Jem, and Lily's dear friend Ofelia ... and, much to my great delight, Bow Street constable Simon Page. I do so adore Simon. Jack is nice and rugged and all, plus he has that whole Freddy connection with Lily ... but I'm pulling for Simon ... or a nice, happy, single widowhood for dear Lily. As long as Simon is happy with someone. I really don't care if it's Lily. [I'm choosing to ignore, for now, the other single men Lily has been introduced to now that she is officially out of her mourning period. I kind of hope that she does, as well.]

Schellman has penned another charming mystery full of red herrings and humor and intrigue. I had not figured out whodunnit .... and whodunnit again ... and I love when that happens. It's a nice surprise to be surprised. I am quite glad that I stumbled upon this series when I saw the upcoming third listed on NetGalley. Hopefully I will also see a fourth.


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As always, Friday 56 (share a blurb from the 56th page or 56% mark) is hosted at Freda's Voice 
& Book Beginnings (share the first few sentences) is at Rose City Reader

15 March 2022

The Perfect Witness by Susanna Beard (Tuesday Intros & Teaser Tuesday)

 


Title: The Perfect Witness
Author: Susanna Beard
Publication: 30 March 2022
FormatKindle eARC via NetGalley & Joffe Books


Amazon Description

Then
Ten-year-old Daniel witnesses his friend being murdered by the boy’s father, and dumped in a canal.

Terrified of his friend’s father, scared he won’t be believed by the police, Daniel convinces himself that it was all a nightmare.

Now
Daniel is plagued by memories of that night.

The frightened scream.
The splash of something heavy hitting the water.
What really happened that night?

Daniel has to find out the truth. His new girlfriend, Poppy, promises to help him.

But the more questions they ask the more they dredge up.

Some things are better left hidden under the surface.

Is a deadly past destined to repeat itself?


Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff



Within a twenty-four hour span, Daniel loses his job and his girlfriend and his apartment. He has a strange medical/mental condition where he can recall personal memories perfectly. Repeatedly. Vividly. Without even wanting to. It makes life difficult. Panic attacks are regular occurrences. Sleep is not. Dealing well with other people isn't a thing that happens easily -- aside from his younger sister who also has difficulty dealing with him at times. He's a mess.

One such memory is the possible murder and disposal of a childhood friend. It has haunted him for almost twenty years and in an attempt to put his life back together and function properly, Daniel decides to revisit this memory and try to piece together what actually happened. 

It's definitely a slow burn of a book. We don't find out the details of the memory until a quarter of the way through. He doesn't meet Poppy -- the girlfriend in the description -- until the 56% mark. The reader meets her before then, but it takes a while for the two to cross paths while they're walking and camping along the canal. He's doing it because that is where he last saw Ryan. She's doing it in memory of her recently deceased grandmother who suffered from Alzheimer's.
How strange - here she was, walking in honour of someone who couldn't remember, and she'd found someone who couldn't forget.

The two click with each other instantly. They tell each other everything and, much to Daniel's surprise, she doesn't shy away from him and his memories. In fact,, she wants to help him.

The cover and description states that this is a "psychological thriller." I suppose it is, in its own way. Daniel is definitely haunted by what he believes he remembers and that, on its own, is psychological. It is not, however, what I generally think of when I see "psychological thriller." I expect some sort of serial killer and/or constant danger. A bit of danger, yes. Daniel is, after all, chasing after a man believed to have killed his own child ... but nearly as constant as I was expecting.

It was a nice surprise. 

I enjoyed getting to know Daniel and Poppy and Beans without the constant panic and angst and threat. They were the focus of the story and, for the most part, the memories took a back burner ... just as Daniel had always hoped that some day they would.
 
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"First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday Intros" is from the first paragraph or two of a book being read now (or in the future) and is hosted by Socrates' Book Reviews. 

"Teaser Tuesday" at The Purple Booker asks for a random line or two from anywhere in the book currently being read.

13 March 2022

I'll Sleep When I've Read... The League of Gentlewomen Witches by India Holton

 

Title: The League of Gentlewomen Witches
Author: India Holton
Publication: 15 March 2022
FormatKindle eArc via NetGalley & Berkley



Amazon Description
Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the teahouse. . . .

Miss Charlotte Pettifer belongs to a secret league of women skilled in the subtle arts. That is to say—although it must never be said—witchcraft. The League of Gentlewomen Witches strives to improve the world in small ways. Using magic, they tidy, correct, and manipulate according to their notions of what is proper, entirely unlike those reprobates in the Wisteria Society.
 
When the long lost amulet of Black Beryl is discovered, it is up to Charlotte, as the future leader of the League, to make sure the powerful talisman does not fall into the wrong hands. Therefore, it is most unfortunate when she crosses paths with Alex O’Riley, a pirate who is no Mr. Darcy. With all the world scrambling after the amulet, Alex and Charlotte join forces to steal it together. If only they could keep their pickpocketing hands to themselves! If Alex’s not careful, he might just steal something else—such as Charlotte’s heart.


Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff
Before I start oohing and aahing over how splendorific The League of Gentlewomen Witches is, I need to make one thing very clear : get thee to a bookstore and get (and read) The Wisteria Society for Lady Scoundrels first. I devoured it in January and almost immediately started to beg the kind folks at Berkley to approve me on NetGalley for the second book. I think the begging may have even started before the book was actually on NetGalley. Several characters overlap and even if they didn't, it's an amazing book and should be read. So do it ... or walk the plank ... or be turned into a toad ... or something.


The League of Gentlewomen Witches is the story of Charlotte and Alex ... and a whole lot of other witches (if there was such a thing) and pirates (who make absolutely no secret of there being such a thing). Charlotte is the prophesized heir to the League. Alex is a hot-as-all-hell Irish pirate and the best friend of Ned from The Wisteria Society. It's a love-hate relationship from the beginning since the League and the Society have a long-standing feud that no one wants to see end, and Alex has his own reasons for despising witches. They end up having to work together after she stows away in his house -- which he realizes after it has already gone airborne -- in order to chase after Black Beryl's stolen amulet ... and the kidnapped Tom, fiancé of Oply (pirate and "close personal friend" to the Queen).

It's a joyous thrill ride with humor and angst and Jane Austen references ... and plenty of "exercise." A third book hasn't been announced that I've seen, but I'm already planning on pestering Berkley for an advanced read ... and I'm already hoping that we see more of our favorites from the first two. I would particularly very VERY much like to see Miss Dearlove and Bixby. 
(Yes, it's cheating. No, I still don't care. My blog, my feature, my rules ... and ... pirates.



If you want to share whatever has kept you up past your bedtime because you just needed one more chapter ... or the entire book ... please comment! My TBR pile is already toppling, but I can always add more.

 

11 March 2022

The Raven Spell by Luanne G Smith (Book Beginnings & Friday 56)

 


Title: The Raven Spell
Author: Luanne G Smith
Publication: 1 February 2022
FormatKindle ebook


Amazon Description

In Victorian England a witch and a detective are on the hunt for a serial killer in an enthralling novel of magic and murder by the Amazon Charts and Washington Post bestselling author of The Vine Witch.

After a nearly fatal blow to the skull, traumatized private detective Ian Cameron is found dazed and confused on a muddy riverbank in Victorian London. Among his effects: a bloodstained business card bearing the name of a master wizard and a curious pocket watch that doesn’t seem to tell time. To retrieve his lost memories, Ian demands answers from Edwina and Mary Blackwood, sister witches with a murky past. But as their secret is slowly unveiled, a dangerous mystery emerges on the darkened streets of London.

To help piece together Ian’s lost time, he and Edwina embark on a journey that will take them from the river foreshore to an East End music hall, and on to a safe house for witches in need of sanctuary from angry mortals. The clues they find suggest a link between a series of gruesome murders, a missing person’s case, and a dreadful suspicion that threatens to tear apart the bonds of sisterhood. As the investigation deepens, could Ian and Edwina be the next to die?


Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff


Victorian serial killers, detectives and witches. What's not to love, right? 

I read most of the book in the airports and on the plane Wednesday starting around 6:30am (hence the no WWW Wednesday this week). I have since arrived at my hotel, obtained libations, and continued to read. The book was finished by 5pm.

When this autoposts early Friday morning I will be fully on vacation and hopefully I will be sleeping... or at least happily distracted from little things like phones and blogs and life. Speaking of being distracted, I was quite thankful that everyone else near me on the trip was too distracted with their own stuff to notice my audible swoons and sighs. I would have happily told them all about how wonderful the book was -- wherever I was in it at the time. I was hooked from the beginning and stayed entranced until the end.

I can't wait to see what happens next in the series and by the time I return home Smith's Vine Witch series should be waiting for me in the mail.


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As always, Friday 56 (share a blurb from the 56th page or 56% mark) is hosted at Freda's Voice 
& Book Beginnings (share the first few sentences) is at Rose City Reader

08 March 2022

Booked for Death by Victoria Gilbert (Tuesday Intros & Teaser Tuesday)

 


Title: Booked for Death
Author: Victoria Gilbert
Publication: 11 August 2020
FormatKindle eBook


Amazon Description

A book lover's B&B in an idyllic waterfront village becomes the scene of a grisly murder--and a ruthless battle between treachery and the truth.

Nestled in the historic waterfront town of Beaufort, North Carolina, Chapters Bed-and-Breakfast is a reader's paradise. Built in 1770, the newly renovated inn hosts a roster of special events celebrating books, genres, and authors. It's the perfect literary retreat--until a rare book dealer turns up dead in the carriage house during a celebration of Golden Age mystery author Josephine Tey.

The victim's daughter points the finger at forty-two-year-old widow and former schoolteacher Charlotte Reed, who inherited the B&B from her great-aunt Isabella. Charlotte is shocked to discover that the book dealer suspected Isabella of being a thief who founded Chapters on her ill-gotten gains. Charlotte has successfully learned the B&B business in a year, but nothing has prepared her to handle a death on the premises.

Armed with intelligence and courage and assisted by her vibrant older neighbor, a visiting author, and members of a local book club, Charlotte is determined to prove her innocence and to clear her great-aunt's name. But the murderer is still at large, and equally determined to silence anyone who might discover the truth behind the book dealer's death. Now, Charlotte must outwit an unknown killer--or end up writing her own final chapter.

Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff


I started to read this last week and then thought maybe I would wait and read a Tey or two first since that's who they're celebrating at Chapters bed & breakfast in the book ... and then I got distracted by ugh-ness at work ... and another totally unrelated book ... and finally just decided that Tey can keep waiting. It's been a rather murderous handful of days so perfect for a cozy. Right? Sure. We'll go with that.

Right off the bat I loved the concept of the bookish bed & breakfast. I'm a book nerd who has worked in hotels for over half her life. This sounds like an absolute dream ... so of course a guest has to get killed and the proprietor has to be one of the main suspects. Keeping the dream alive and all that. Luckily, I suppose, I don't have any aunts -- great or otherwise -- who have an inn bouncing around to bequeath to yours truly so I'm probably safe. Especially lucky since this is the first in the series of at least three, so I guess people are going to keep dropping like flies.

In this first installment the victim was a horrible human being so there was no shortage of suspects. Luckily, Charlotte and her friends and neighbors are all mystery fans (because of course they are) and step up to solve the murder (because of course they do) and save the bed & breakfast in the process. 

Woo-freakin-hoo!

I've told you it's been a bad few days. I'm a little punchy.

Probably didn't help that there are sooooo many characters and suspects and horribly annoying people. It reminded me a little too much of work this week. 

And then there's Charlotte. 

She's a widow. 

She will mention this repeatedly

I stopped counting at the 30th mention. I'm very happy that she was very happy and feel sad for anyone -- fictional or not -- who has lost the love of their life .... but it got to be a bit much. 

I would still recommend this to cozy fans in spite of my gripes. For that we can thank feisty 70-something next door neighbor, Ellen. She may very well be what saved this for me and why I'll pick up the next one. Maybe things won't be quite so ugh when I read that and I won't be quite so irritably nitpicky.

Maybe.


 
****************************************************************

"First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday Intros" is from the first paragraph or two of a book being read now (or in the future) and is hosted by Socrates' Book Reviews. 

"Teaser Tuesday" at The Purple Booker asks for a random line or two from anywhere in the book currently being read.

06 March 2022

I'll Sleep When I've Read... If You Ask Me by Libby Hubscher

Title: If You Ask Me
Author: Libby Hubscher
Publication: 8 March 2022
FormatKindle eArc via NetGalley & Berkley



Amazon Description
When an advice columnist’s picture-perfect life implodes, she opts to go rogue in this hilarious, heartwarming romance from the author of Meet Me in Paradise.

Violet Covington pens 
Dear Sweetie, the most popular advice column in the state of North Carolina. She has an answer for how to politely handle any difficult situation…until she discovers her husband, Sam, has been cheating on her. Furious and out of sensible solutions, Violet leaves her filter at the door and turns to her column to air her own frustrations. The new, brutally honest Dear Sweetie goes viral, sending more shock waves through Violet’s life. When she burns Sam’s belongings in a front-yard, late-night bonfire, a smoking-hot firefighter named Dez shows up to douse the flames, and an unexpected fling quickly shows potential to become something longer lasting.

A lot of people want to see the old polished Violet return — including her boss, who finds her unpredictability hard to manage, and Sam, who’s begging for another chance. But Dez appreciates Violet just the way she is — in fact, he can’t get enough of her. The right answers don’t come easily when Violet finds herself at her own personal crossroads. But maybe, by getting real, Violet can write her own happy ending.


Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff

I came very close to turning down the offer to read Libby Hubscher's If You Ask Me when Berkley reached out. It's not historical. There's no mention at all of anything paranormal or supernatural or magical. No great mystery to be solved. It wasn't "my thing."

I pulled it up on my phone one Saturday morning when my 15 year old was home. It was several weeks ago so that way I would have plenty of time to send a "sorry -- it didn't work for me" and back out of the blog blitz if necessary. When my son finally sent me to bed late that night/very early the next morning, after I had finally set my phone back down after the last page, I realized that I was quite wrong about a lot of things. 

Okay, so it's not historical .... but there's magic in the transformation that occurs in the main character, Violet; there's the great mystery over whether things would work out in so many aspects of her life; there's no way I could have backed out of the chance to ooh and aah over this one. 

Most of all, I was wrong about it not being "my thing" because it was exactly the thing that I needed at the time. It has the perfect blend of snark and heartache and hope .... and teasable/sharable/quotable blips :



If you want to share whatever has kept you up past your bedtime because you just needed one more chapter ... or the entire book ... please comment! My TBR pile is already toppling, but I can always add more.

 

04 March 2022

The Rigid Duke by Darcy Burke (Book Beginnings & Friday 56)



Title: The Rigid Duke
Author: Darcy Burke
Publication: 8 March 2022
FormatKindle eARC via NetGalley


Amazon Description
As a refinement tutor, Mrs. Juno Langton helps young ladies develop the skills and confidence to secure an advantageous marriage. Her cheerful disposition never wavers no matter how challenging her assignment. When a house party provides an opportunity to match her difficult charge with a duke, Juno will go to any lengths to satisfy her employer and ensure the young lady’s future. Too bad the duke is an unsmiling, rigid grouch, albeit an irritatingly handsome one.

The Duke of Warrington dislikes social gatherings and despises the Marriage Mart which makes it nigh impossible to find a wife. He plans to secure his future duchess at a house party, but she’s being managed by a thoroughly meddlesome—and provocative—Mrs. Langton, who is determined to find his better nature. He’ll do anything to avoid her sunny charm and room-brightening smiles, but she’s breaking through his shell and the only way he can think to keep her quiet is to kiss her. He must marry the young lady, not desire the companion.

But now he’s rethinking his wife choices.

Ramble-y Teaserish Stuff


Another new series from Darcy Burke? Why yes, I do believe I will. There are so many that I haven't read yet, but I'm sure I'll get to them. I became a bit hooked after the Phoenix Club binge and I'm tempted to say that The Rigid Duke -- the first book in the Matchmaking Chronicles -- may be even better.

We've got Alexander Brett, the Duke of Warrington, more commonly referred to as Dare, and Mrs Juno Langton, a young widow who now acts as "refinement tutor"/matchmaker to the so-called helpless cases of the ton. The Duke needs a wife. Juno's latest client wants her daughter, Marina, to be a Duchess. 

Both Dare and Marina have social issues ... in that they would both rather be left alone than be put in to any sort of social situation. They are thrown together at a house party and he openly admits that he loathes such things and she wounds herself dancing in order to go to the library and hole up in her room with a pile of books.

Perfect for each other, right? Everyone seems to think so ...

Except for the Duke, who is far more intrigued with Marina's "companion" in spite of (or because of) her being his polar opposite ... and Marina, who really does not want to be married at all ... and Juno, the woman who is supposed to be bringing them together, because she's good at what she does and knows it would be a disaster if forced. And, of course, because she is also more than a bit intrigued by the Rigid Duke when it comes right down to it. 

It all plays out beautifully and the players end up being quite unexpected and I cannot wait to see what is next to come for the Matchmaking Chronicles.


****************************************************************

As always, Friday 56 (share a blurb from the 56th page or 56% mark) is hosted at Freda's Voice 
& Book Beginnings (share the first few sentences) is at Rose City Reader

02 March 2022

WWW Wednesday -- 2 March 2022



The Three Ws are:

What did you recently finish reading?
What are you currently reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?




Recently Finished : 

Educated by the Earl by Alexa Aston -- The "Currently Reading" from last week's WWW Wednesday and the book for the most recent Book Beginnings & Friday 56 post. I'm still day-dreaming about the oh-so-swoon-worthy hero of this one and anxiously awaiting the next in the series.

Mary Lancaster's Pleasure Garden series -- I have now read the first four in the series. Three of them were used for Sunday's I'll Sleep When I've Read... post, and the fourth was yesterday's Tuesday Intros & Teaser Tuesday. There is supposed to be only one book left, but I'm really hoping that Lancaster changes her mind or does a spin-off series or something of the sort because there are a couple of characters I'm more than a bit anxious to read more about. Heck, I would even read novellas and I kind of hate novellas.


Currently Reading:

Little Bird by Tiffany Meuret
Description from Amazon:

The skeletons in the closet have nothing on the one in your backyard.

Freshly divorced and grieving the death of her father, Josie Lauer has caged herself inside her home. To cope with her losses, Josie follows a strict daily routine of work, playing with her dog, Po, and trying to remember to eat a decent meal—and ending each night by drinking copious amounts of vodka. In other words, she is not coping at all.

Everything changes when Josie wakes to find a small shrub has sprouted in her otherwise dirt backyard the morning after yet another bender. Within hours, the vine-like plant is running amok—and it’s brought company. The appearance of the unwieldly growth has also heralded the arrival of a busybody new neighbor who insists on thrusting herself into Josie’s life. The neighbor Josie can deal with. The talking skeleton called Skelly that has perched itself in Josie’s backyard on a throne made of vines, however, is an entirely different matter.

As the strangely sentient plant continues to grow and twist its tendrils inside Josie’s suddenly complicated life, Josie begins to realize her new neighbor knows a lot more about the vines and her bizarre new visitor than she initially lets on. There’s a reason Skelly has chosen to appear in Josie’s suddenly-blooming backyard and insists on pulling her out of her carefully kept self-isolation. All Josie has to do is figure out what that reason is—and she has only a few days to do it, or else she might find herself on the wrong side of catastrophe.

LITTLE BIRD is a story about found family, no matter how bizarre.

I decided that I needed a little break from bodice rippers (very little ... like, the length of this book little) and the March challenge for the Alphabet Soup group on Facebook is Two-Word Titles and the book I was intending to use, as it turns out, is a spin-off from a series I haven't read yet with overlapping characters and my brain started to twitch .... so I hopped on to NetGalley in hopes of a Two-Worder in the Read Now listings. Then I saw the cover. And then I hit "Read Now." And then I read the description. It actually sounded pretty dang good.


Really, though. That cover is amazing.

The book itself started with lines well-worthy of your standard Book Beginnings & Friday 56 post.
The morning was always too bright after a bender. Well, perhaps not a bender, but a carefully controlled evening of adult beverages that had gone slightly off the rails.

And still under the assumption that this would be the perfect book for Friday's post, I checked out the 56% mark as well.

"Years. She's going to live in my yard for years?"
"I doubt that. I've known her long enough to know this behavior is different. Her deal with you, the ferocity of these vines, her constant lingering in your yard. Something is happening, something big."

"Oh, that's just super."

So that short little break from bodice rippers is going to be significantly shorter than I had first expected because it's a short and fast read. It's not the greatest book I've ever read, but it's not awful. Of course, I still have 22% left since I took most of Tuesday off from doing more than binge-watching Alice in Borderland on Netflix. Pretty sure that the only reason I'll get through the last 22% before my shift ends this morning is that Netflix is blocked on the work computer and I neglected to bring the Kindle. 

Let's just say that so far the cover and the two blips I would have used if it had made it to Friday were some of the best bits. It's listed as "horror" on NetGalley and Amazon and GoodReads and I just don't get it. Yeah ... there's a random talking garden skeleton, but unless Skelly starts slaughtering pets and people really soon I would simply tag this as "strange" rather than "horror."   


What's Next?

Back to the bodice-ripping I go! 

I have the first two books in Abigail Bridges' Ashton Park series waiting for me, as well as the first book in a new series from Darcy Burke. I already have this Sunday's I'll Sleep When I've Read... post all set to publish because of a release blitz something or other I signed up for eons ago. It's a sweet book so come back then ... and on Friday to find out which I've decided on for the upcoming Book Beginnings & Friday 56. Very early next Wednesday morning I'll be leaving on a mini-vacation (which was supposed to happen last month) so I'm not sure if there'll be anything else until I come back.

For now, the Friday debate continues: 

Abigail Bridges' To Stop a Scoundrel :
She wants to protect the innocent. He wants to regain his reputation. Will working together bring redemption—or ruin?

Welcome to Book 1 in the fabulous new series from Abigail Bridges.

Spinster Lady Rose Timmons has one purpose in life: protecting the vulnerable young women in London's Society from the scores of scoundrels who would prey on their innocence. She has an extensive network of informants who keep her up to date on all their misdeeds and schemes, and she will take any action needed—even public humiliation.

Thomas Ashton, Lord Newbury and heir to the Duke of Kennet, is one of those Lady Rose has in her sights. Despite being a childhood friend—and a man she has long been fascinated with—Lady Rose is determined not to let his rakish behavior spoil the debut season of her beloved sister or any other woman.

Lord Newbury, however, has his own ulterior motives about rejoining Society after years as a rogue. He desperately needs an heir—and an heiress. Society, however, is not so eager to welcome home a prodigal son. When he crosses paths—and wits—with Lady Rose, he proposes an unexpected bargain: if she will help him regain his reputation, he will help her destroy the one scoundrel she has never been able to touch, a man who has hurt dozens of people, including Rose herself.

Lady Rose, intrigued and as fascinated by Newbury as ever, accepts the challenge. But even as they are drawn ever closer to each other, they remain unaware that their efforts to bring down a ruthless man could endanger more than their reputations—it could cost them their lives.

OR 

Darcy Burke's A Rigid Duke:
As a refinement tutor, Mrs. Juno Langton helps young ladies develop the skills and confidence to secure an advantageous marriage. Her cheerful disposition never wavers no matter how challenging her assignment. When a house party provides an opportunity to match her difficult charge with a duke, Juno will go to any lengths to satisfy her employer and ensure the young lady’s future. Too bad the duke is an unsmiling, rigid grouch, albeit an irritatingly handsome one.

The Duke of Warrington dislikes social gatherings and despises the Marriage Mart which makes it nigh impossible to find a wife. He plans to secure his future duchess at a house party, but she’s being managed by a thoroughly meddlesome—and provocative—Mrs. Langton, who is determined to find his better nature. He’ll do anything to avoid her sunny charm and room-brightening smiles, but she’s breaking through his shell and the only way he can think to keep her quiet is to kiss her. He must marry the young lady, not desire the companion.

But now he’s rethinking his wife choices.