Romance reader and writer shares her thoughts on what she's reading, what she's writing, and what she's finding tangential to romance reading and writing.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
To-Be-Read 2011
We haven’t bid an official farewell to 2010 yet, but I already have well over a hundred books on my To-Be-Read list for 2011. Some of the books I most anticipate aren’t on the list because despite my diligent research, I was unable to find titles and/or release dates for them. I do the happy dance every time I remember that Manda Collins’s debut book will be in bookstores near me in 2011—or maybe 2012. I know Tessa Dare has another trilogy in the works, beginning with A Night to Surrender in early fall 2011, and Sophia Nash is introducing a new series sometime this year as well. I have my fingers crossed that 2011 also brings new books from Joanna Bourne, Connie Brockway, Anne Gracie, Teresa Medeiros, Pamela Morsi, Deanna Raybourn, and Sherry Thomas among others.
I believe 2011 has wonderful things in store for all of us. I’m sure it’s going to be another stellar reading year. Just cast your eyes upon the wonders I’m awaiting. While these are all books I long to read, some do fill me with a special eagerness. My most anticipated book is a mystery, Julia Spencer-Fleming's One Was a Soldier. It's been a long time between books for Spencer-Fleming fans. I'm thrilled that Tracy Grant will have a new book (Vienna Waltz) out this year, albeit under a different name (Teresa Grant) and with a new set of characters (sort of). Mary Balogh said ages ago that she would write the story of Lady Angeline Dudley, Tresham (More Than a Mistress) and Lord Ferdinand's (No Man's Mistress) sister, and of Edward Ailsbury, Earl of Heyward. I can't wait to read that one. Julia Quinn's Smyth-Smith book is another one that I, along with many others, have been looking forward to for some time. Madeline Hunter and Kate Moore will be ending series with characters that already have my allegiance. Of course, if I had world enough and time, I could give you a reason that I look forward to each book on my list.
Do note that this list makes no pretensions to be a comprehensive list. It’s a list of books I plan to read based on my reading preferences. There are subgenres that I read rarely or not at all. Most of the books on the list are romances, but there are also mysteries, women’s fiction, YA, and general fiction. I’ve given my best effort to seeing that titles and release dates are accurate, but both—especially for books scheduled for publication in the second half of the year—may change. You will note that I found few titles for the last four months of the year and most of the ones I did find have only the month of publication. The bolded titles are books I’ve read as eARCS that I expect to purchase as paperbacks.
Finally, I promise a blog next week that is not a list. :-)
JANUARY
Sophie Gunn How Sweet It Is 1/3
Karina Bliss Here Comes the Groom (HSR) 1/4
Beverley Kendall A Taste of Desire 1/4
Debbie Macomber Family Affair 1/4
Christie Ridgway Then He Kissed Me (Three Kisses, Book 2) 1/4
Kaki Warner Chasing the Sun (Blood Rose Trilogy #3) 1/4
Sabrina Jeffries How to Woo a Reluctant Lady (Hellions of Halstead Hall, Book 3) 1/18
Susan Elizabeth Phillips Call Me Irresistible 1/18
Lauren Willig The Orchid Affair (pink carnation, Book 6) 1/20
Catherine Anderson Here to Stay 1/25
Robyn Carr Wild Man Creek (Virgin River, Book 12) 1/25
Cara Elliott To Tempt a Rake (Circle of Sin, Book 3)
Barbara Freethy At Hidden Falls (Angel’s Bay, Book 4) 1/25
Laura Lee Guhrke Scandal of the Year (Abandoned at the Altar, Book 2) 1/25
Elizabeth Hoyt Notorious Pleasures (Maiden Lane, Book 2) 1/25
Eloisa James When Beauty Tamed the Beast 1/25
Courtney Milan Unveiled 1/25
Susan Wiggs Marrying Daisy Bellamy (The Lakeshore Chronicles, Book 8) 1/25
FEBRUARY
Elizabeth Bevarly The Billionaire Gets His Way (SD) 2/1
Jo Beverley, Sally Mackenzie, Vanessa Kelly, & Caitlyn O’Riley An Invitation to Sin 2/1
Tiffany Clare The Seduction of His Wife 2/1
Julia Justiss Society’s Most Disreputable Gentleman (HH) 2/1
Sarah Mayberry The Last Goodbye (HSR) 2/1
Molly O’Keefe His Wife for One Night (HSR) 2/1
Janet Mullany Mr. Bishop and the Actress 2/3
Carla Kelly Borrowed Light 2/8
Emily March Angel’s Rest (Eternity Springs, Book 1) 2/15
Jill Marie Landis Heart of Lies 2/15
Robyn Carr Harvest Moon (Virgin River, Book 13) 2/22
Julia London A Light at Winter’s End (Cedar Springs, Book 3) 2/22
Julie Anne Long What I Did for a Duke (Pennyroyal Green, Book 5) 2/22
Anne Mallory One Night Is Never Enough 2/22
MARCH
Jo Beverley An Unlikely Countess (Malloren World, Book 11) 3/1
Julie James A Lot Like Love 3/1
Janice Kay Johnson Bone Deep (HSR) 3/1
M. J. Putney Dark Mirror (YA) 3/1
Margaret Rowe Any Wicked Thing 3/1
Jennifer Greene Yours, Mine, and Ours (SSE) 3/22
Kristin Hannah Night Road 3/22
Emily March Hummingbird Lake (Eternity Springs, Book 2) 3/22
Cheryl Reavis The Music Box 3/22
Katharine Ashe Captured by a Rogue Lord 3/29
Mary Balogh, Jacquie D’Alessandro, Candice Hern, & Stephanie Laurens It Happened One Season 3/29
Eileen Dreyer Never a Gentleman (Drake’s Rakes, Book 2) 3/29
Gaelen Foley My Irresistible Earl (Inferno Club, Book 3) 3/29
Teresa Grant Vienna Waltz 3/29
Kristan Higgins My One and Only 3/29
Susan Mallery Already Home 3/29
Jill Shalvis The Sweetest Thing (Lucky Harbor Book #2) 3/29
Roxanne St. Claire Shiver of Fear (The Guardian Angelinos #2) 3/29
Susan Wiggs The Goodbye Quilt 3/29
APRIL
Beth Pattillo The Dashwood Sisters Tell All 4/1
Sherryl Woods Driftwood Cottage (Chesapeake Shores, Book 5) 4/1
Christina Dodd Taken by the Prince (Governess Brides, Book 9) 4/5
Erica Ridley Too Sinful to Deny 4/5
Jodi Thomas Texas Blue (Whispering Mountain, Book 5) 4/5
Nora Roberts Chasing Fire 4/12
Amanda Quick Quicksilver (The Looking Glass Trilogy, Book #2) 4/19
Luanne Rice The Silver Boat 4/19
Anna Campbell Midnight’s Wild Passion 4/26
Liz Carlyle One Wicked Glance 4/26
Rachel Gibson Any Man of Mine 4/26
Madeline Hunter Dangerous in Diamonds (The Rarest Blooms, Book 4) 4/26
Kris Kennedy Defiant 4/26
Kieran Kramer Cloudy With A Chance of Marriage (Impossible Bachelor, Book 3) 4/26
Debbie Macomber A Turn in the Road (Blossom Street, Book 8) 4/26
Sarah MacLean Eleven Scandals to Start to Win a Duke's Heart (Love by Numbers, Book 3) 4/26
Emily March Heartache Falls (Eternity Springs, Book 3) 4/26
Mia Marlowe Touch of a Thief 4/26
Julia Spencer Fleming One Was a Soldier (Clare Fergusson/Russ Van book 7) 4/26
Roxanne St. Claire Face of Danger (Guardian Angelinos #3) 4/26
Mary Jo Putney Nowhere Near Respectable (Lost Lords, Book 3) 4/26
Kathryn Smith When Tempting a Rogue (Victorian Soap Opera, Book 3) 4/26
MAY
Beth Andrews The Prodigal Son (Diamond Dust Trilogy, Book 2) 5/3
Kate Carlisle Murder Under Cover (Bibliophile Mystery, Book 4) 5/3
Vanessa Kelly My Favorite Countess (Book 3 in series) 5/3
Mary Alice Monroe The Butterfly’s Daughter 5/3
Kate Noble Follow My Lead 5/3
Wendy Wax Ten Beach Road 5/3
Karen White The Beach Trees 5/3
Jill Barnett In the Mood 5/6
Libba Bray Beauty Queens 5/24
Tiffany Clare The Secret Desires of a Governess (Book 2 in series) 5/24
Elizabeth Boyle Lord Langley Is Back in Town (Bachelor Chronicles, Book 9) 5/31
Karen Hawkins Scandal in Scotland (Hurst Amulet, Book 2) 5/31
Julia Quinn Just Like Heaven (Smyth-Smith Quartet, Book 1) 5/31
Sherryl Woods Beach Lane (Chesapeake Shores, Book 7) 5/31
Sara Lindsey A Rogue for All Seasons (Westons, Book 3)
JUNE
Grace Burrowes The Soldier (Book 2 in series) 6/1
Mary Kay Andrews Summer Rental 6/7
Christie Kelley One Night Scandal 6/7
Susan Sey Money Shot (Book 2 in series) 6/7
Erica Bauermeister Joy for Beginners 6/9
Lerner, Rose A Lily Among Thorns 6/11
Ann Brashares Sisterhood Everlasting (Traveling Pants, Book 6) 6/14
Dorothea Benton Frank Folly Beach 6/14
Sophie Littlefield A Bad Day for Scandal (Stella Hardesty Mystery 3) 6/21
Brenda Novak Inside (Bulletproof Series, Book 1) 6/21
Anne Stuart Shameless (House of Rohan, Book 4) 6/21
Jane Graves Black Ties and Lullabies 6/28
Loretta Chase Silk Is for Seduction 6/28
Meredith Duran A Lady’s Lesson in Scandal 6/28
Jane Graves Black Ties and Lullabies 6/28
Lorraine Heath Waking Up with the Duke (London’s Greatest Lovers, Book 3) 6/28
Bobbie Ann Mason The Girl in the Blue Beret 6/28
Sarah Strohmeyer Kindred Spirits 6/30
JULY
Rice, Patricia The Devilish Montague (Rebellious Sons, Book 2) 7/5
Christie Ridgway Can’t Hurry Love (Three Kisses, Book 3) 7/5
JoAnn Ross One Summer (Shelter Bay, Book 2) 7/5
Kaki Warner Heartbreak Creek (Runaway Brides, Book 1) 7/5
Mary Balogh The Secret Mistress (prequel to Mistress series) 7/26
Carlyle, Liz The Bride Wore Scarlet 7/26/11
Neville, Miranda The Amorous Education of Celia Seaton (Burgundy Club, Book 3) 7/26
Warren, Tracy Anne The Bed and the Bachelor 7/26/11
Diane Whiteside, Maggie Robinson, and Mia Marlowe Improper Gentlemen 7/26
Helen Brenna The Pursuit of Jesse (Mirabelle Island, Book 5)
AUGUST
Jennifer Haymore Confessions of an Improper Bride 8/1
Jennifer Ashley The Many Sins of Lord Cameron (MacKenzies, Book 3) 8/2
Meg Benjamin Long Time Gone (Konigsburg, Book 3) 8/2—print release
Christina Dodd Secrets of Bella Terra (Scarlet Deception, Book 1) 8/2
Louisa Edwards Too Hot to Touch (Recipe for Love, Book 4) 8/2
Donna MacMeans Redeeming the Rogue 8/2
Julie Garwood The Ideal Man 8/9
Maggie Robinson Mistress by Marriage (Courtesan Court Trilogy, Book 3) 8/30
Susan Andersen Playing Dirty
Beth Andrews Feels Like Home (Diamond Dust Trilogy, Book 3)
Helen Brenna Her Sure Thing (Mirabelle Island, Book 6)
SEPTEMBER
Jane Graves Heartstrings and Diamond Rings 9/1
Jeanne Adams Deadly Little Lies 9/6
Helen Brenna Redemption at Mirabelle (Mirabelle Island, Book 7)
Debbie Macomber 1105 Yakima Street (Cedar Cove, Book 11)
Kate Moore To Seduce an Angel (Sons of Sin, Book 3)
Brenda Novak In Seconds (Bulletproof, Book 2)
OCTOBER
Courtney Milan Unclaimed
NOVEMBER
Toni Blake Holly Lane (Destiny, Book 4)
Elizabeth Hoyt Scandalous Desires (Maiden Lane, Book 3)
Brenda Novak In Close (Bulletproof, Book 3)
What books are you most looking forward to reading in 2011?
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Reading Beside the Christmas Tree, 2010
My favorite read this Christmas season is not a Christmas book at all but a novella-length fairy tale that has one of the most unexpected opening scenes that I’ve encountered in my decades of reading romance fiction. I loved every scene of Eloisa James’s latest gift to her readers, Storming the Castle. That gem of an opening scene is detailed in my reading journal, so the next time someone asks about breaking the rules of romance . . . The ending is a perfect fantasy that reminded me of the fairy tales I read as a child and of the 12th-century lais of Marie de France. Like many of those who read A Kiss at Midnight, I finished the novel longing for an HEA for Jonas Berwick, familiarly known as Wick, the bastard brother of Gabriel, the hero prince of AKAM. It’s not giving anything away to say that in STC Wick gets his HEA with an endearing heroine and Kate and Gabriel and their colicky baby add a note of realism to the concept of happily ever after. If you want a full review, check out PJ’s at The Romance Dish. This is not a review. It’s my announcement that I’ve already received one perfect gift this season from the imagination of one of my favorite authors, and I didn’t have to brave the chilly weather and rampaging shoppers to get STC. I downloaded it from an online retailer for $1.99.
I’m less enthusiastic about a true Christmas book, as opposed to a book read and/or released during the season, from another favorite author. I have loved Lisa Kleypas’s contemporaries as much as her historicals, and I was so eager to read Christmas Eve at Friday Harbor, the first in a new series, that I didn’t even consider waiting to get it from my local library, my usual practice with hardback releases that I am unwilling to delay reading until paperback publication. And I loved much about this book. The setting is as dimensional and gorgeous as the cover suggests, the premise of the story (bachelor uncle becomes father, falls in love with heroine who bonds with his new charge) is one I enjoy, and I found the characters from the H/H to the orphaned niece to the hero’s brothers (one charmer, one brooder) to the heroine’s father (a minor note) interesting and engaging. But I ended up feeling cheated. The story and the characters deserved more than even the gifted Kleypas could give them in just over 200 pages. Mark Nolan’s life was transformed by the death of his sister and the guardianship of his niece, as was the life of Maggie Collins by the slow death of her young husband. These are characters dealing with real issues that resonate with many readers. Whether loss comes in an instant in an accident or over long months of a fearful disease, it is a messy experience with uneven progress toward recovery from grief. Kleypas shows her readers that grief makes Mark and Maggie into different people, but their journeys and the journey of Holly, the little girl who loses her mother, seemed simplistic to me. (Forgive my pedanticism, but I see “simplistic misused so often I feel I must add that calling something “simplistic” is not the same as praising its “simplicity.” The latter can be powerful; the former is oversimplifying something by ignoring complexities.) Christmas Eve at Friday Harbor is not a bad book. I don’t regret reading it, and I look forward to the stories of the other Nolan brothers. But it was less than I expected from this author, and I do wish I’d waited for the library copy.
A Christmas story that did not disappoint was Karina Bliss’s novella in the Harlequin SuperRomance anthology That Christmas Feeling. The other stories in the anthology—Brenda Novak’s “A Dundee Christmas” with an illegal immigrant as a heroine and Kathleen O’Brien’s “We Need a Little Christmas” about an old man, his estranged grandson, and the woman who works to see them reconciled—are warm, feel-good stories, but Bliss’s “Kiss Me, Santa” has the something extra that carries a story to the A level for me. This story too is a story about grief. I don’t think I’ve consciously noted before how many Christmas romances have grief as a theme. Mike Ward sounds the Scroogy note in a community chorus of holiday harmony that manifests itself in elaborate Christmas decorations. A widower who feels responsible for his wife’s death, Mike has come to New Zealand to escape solicitous family and friends, and he has no interest in holiday celebrations. His neighbor Erica Owens and her son Will are grieving the loss of their family. Her ex-husband’s infidelity led her to divorce him, and she’s trying to create a new life for herself and her son. The thing I love most about Bliss’s writing is that she leads me to believe in her characters. I understood Mike’s guilt, however irrational, and I cried with Erica when she put her son on a plane to spend Christmas with his father and went home and surrendered to the pain of the holiday without her child. Because I cared about these characters, I rejoiced to see the relationship between them develop from reluctant attraction to love. It was a moving, heartwarming story.
My favorite Christmas story this year is not a romance but a cozy mystery. Margaret Maron is my favorite mystery writer. Julia Spencer-Fleming is a very close second, but Maron has the advantage of being Southern. Colleton County, North Carolina, the setting of Maron’s Deborah Knott novels, is just closer to home for me, geographically and emotionally, than is Spencer-Fleming’s New England town. Christmas Mourning is Maron’s sixteenth mystery featuring Deborah Knott, district judge and only daughter in a complicated family of twelve siblings. I read Maron’s books as much for the family dynamics and the love story as for the mystery, and Christmas Mourning gave me exactly what I expected. The mystery reiterates the Faulknerian wisdom that in the South the past is never really past, and the larger story offers another look at the extended Knott family, at Deborah and Dwight about to celebrate their first wedding anniversary, and at Christmas in Colleton County.
I also loved Emily March’s A Callahan Carol, downloadable free on her website. It has warmth and sentiment, family ties, and an extraordinary angel—some of the ingredients I love to see in a Christmas story--and it has the added benefit of linking the old and beloved, Geralyn Dawson’s Callahans in Brazos Bend, Texas, with the new and anticipated, Emily March’s characters in Eternity Springs, Colorado.
Of course, I’ve been rereading too—Diane Farr’s Once Upon a Christmas; Jo Beverley’s Winter Fire; the stories of Debbie Macomber’s mischievous angels Shirley, Goodness, and Mercy; the first two books of Marilyn Pappano’s Bethlehem series; Mary Jo Putney’s stories in Christmas Revels; Jeanne Savery’s The Christmas Matchmaker; and more by Mary Balogh, Carla Kelly, Barbara Metzger, and Edith Layton than I can list.
What are your favorite Christmas stories of 2010? Do you reread old favorites at Christmastime?
Whatever holiday you celebrate, may it be bright with laughter, warm with love, and filled with the people and the books that matter most to you.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Tis the Season . . . for Book Lists
Tis the season of lists. For the grands, it’s lists for Santa. For me, it’s lists of the year’s top books.
There’s Booklist’s Top 10. I’ve only read half of these. Some of them I’d never even heard of until I saw the list. (The starred titles are the ones I’ve read.)
1. Barely a Lady.* By Eileen Dreyer.
2. The Clouds Roll Away. By Sibella Giorello.
3. Down River. By Karen Harper.
4. Last Night’s Scandal.* By Loretta Chase.
5. The Lone Texan.* By Jodi Thomas. 2009.
6. Secrets of a Scandalous Bride.* By Sophia Nash.
7. Sixteen Brides. By Stephanie Grace Whitson.
8. Steamed. By Katie MacAlister.
9. The Wicked Wyckerly.* By Patricia Rice.
10. Wolf in Tiger’s Stripes. By Victoria Gordon.
Publishers Weekly announced a Top Five. I did much better here. I’ve read three, a fourth is on my TBR shelf, and the fifth is on my TBB list.
1. The Forbidden Rose,* Joanna Bourne
2. The Iron Duke, Meljean Brook
3. The Heir, Grace Burrowes
4. Barely a Lady,* Eileen Dreyer
5. Trial by Desire,* Courtney Milan
Library Journal also has five, and I’ve read four of them.
1. Bourne, Joanna. The Forbidden Rose.*
2. Brockway, Connie. The Golden Season.*
3. Dreyer, Eileen. Barely a Lady.*
4. Kinsale, Laura. Lessons in French.*
5. McDonald, L.J. The Battle Sylph.
The Smart Bitches’ list in Kirkus Reviews is a list after my own heart. It has 21 titles on it, and they range from a book by Nora Roberts, who has been turning out winning books for more than two decades now, to the debut book of Sarah MacLean. I’ve only read ten from the Kirkus list, but I like the idea of 21 top books. Ten is classic, but five seems rather stingy to me.
1. Last Night’s Scandal* by Loretta Chase
2. Hot Finish by Erin McCarthy
3. The Summer of You* by Kate Noble
4. Something About You* by Julie James
5. Maybe This Time* by Jennifer Crusie
6. Exclusively Yours by Shannon Stacey
7. Iron Duke by Meljean Brook
8. Butterfly Swords by Jeannie Lin
9. His at Night* by Sherry Thomas
10. Raised by Wolves by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
11. What the Librarian Did* by Karina Bliss
12. Archangel’s Kiss by Nalini Singh
13. Scoundrel by Zoe Archer
14. All I Ever Wanted* by Kristan Higgins
15. Happy Ever After* by Nora Roberts
16. Bayou Moon by Ilona Andrews
17. The Forbidden Rose* by Joanna Bourne
18. Nine Rules to Break When Romancing a Rake* by Sarah MacLean
19. Naked Edge by Pamela Clare
20. Strawberries for Dessert by Marie Sexton
21. Seven Nights to Forever by Evangeline Collins
Amazon went for the classic ten, and I’ve read eight of them.
1. Lady Isabella's Scandalous Marriage* by Jennifer Ashley
2. Burning Lamp (An Arcane Society Novel)* by Amanda Quick
3. Pleasure of a Dark Prince (Immortals After Dark, Book 7) by Kresley Cole
4. Sin Undone (Demonica, Book 5) by Larissa Ione
5. Married by Morning (Hathaways, Book 4)* by Lisa Kleypas
6. A Hellion in Her Bed (Hellions of Halstead Hall)* by Sabrina Jeffries
7. Finding Perfect* by Susan Mallery
8. Burning Up* by Susan Andersen
9. The Summer Hideaway (The Lakeshore Chronicles)* by Susan Wiggs
10. Ten Things I Love About You* by Julia Quinn
The big winners are Eileen Dreyer’s Barely a Lady, which appears on the lists of Booklist, Publishers Weekly, and Library Journal, and Joanna Bourne’s The Forbidden Rose, which appears on the lists of Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, and Kirkus Reviews.
These are just the lists that have garnered the most attention. I’ve lost count of how many lists I’ve read, and I’ve lost count of the time I’ve spent considering my own top romance novels. I gave 31 romance novels an A this year (about 12 percent of those I read), a grade that for me means “This was a great read, and I know I’ll read it again.” I tried to narrow my list of A books to a top ten, but the best I could do was a top twelve. I made my task easier by eliminating all books written by my Vanette pals since I couldn’t choose among them and including them all would have left no room for other books. Some of the following you’ll recognize from other lists. Some of them others have loved less than I do. But that’s ok. This is my list. Maybe I should call it “The Romance Novels I Loved Most in 2010.”
My Top Twelve
(in alphabetical order by title)
1. The Accidental Wedding by Anne Gracie
I love romances that somehow manage to render the conventions of the genre in a fresh way, romances that move me to laughter and tears, romances that have characters I believe in and root for. TAW has all of these plus a scene inspired by Katie Melua’s “When You Taught Me How to Dance,” a song I love.
2. The Dangerous Viscount by Miranda Neville
I loved the hero makeover, loved the book connection, loved Diana’s quirky family. In fact, I pretty much loved everything about this book. It made Miranda Neville an autobuy author for me.
3. The Forbidden Rose by Joanna Bourne
I had sworn off spy books before I read Joanna Bourne’s books. Now as soon as I finish one of her books, I’m impatient for the next one. This one may just be my favorite in the series. It’s a perfect blend of history and romance written in prose that has a glorious simplicity and lucidity.
4. The Irish Warrior by Kris Kennedy
I used to say I never read Medievals, but then I read Kris Kennedy. I think I liked TIW even better than The Conqueror. I found the legend of the dyes fascinating, and the relationship between Finian and Senna was one that had many dimensions. And Finian! Wow, what a hero!
5. A Kiss at Midnight by Eloisa James
A fairy tale with a feminist edge written with the usual intelligence and grace of Eloisa James, a never-fail author for me--how could this one not be on my list? The ending with the heroine’s surprising admission is one of my favorite endings ever.
6. Last Night’s Scandal by Loretta Chase
This was one I both longed to read and feared to do so. I loved Olivia and Peregrine in Lord Perfect, and I wanted their story to fulfill all the promise of the intelligence, intrepidity, and opposition of the young characters and their relationship. It did. Chase once again proved she is a nonpareil.
7. Marrying the Royal Marine by Carla Kelly
Carla Kelly’s extraordinary ordinary characters are unique in romance fiction. Polly Brandon and Lieutenant Colonel Hugh Philippe d'Anvers Junot join a long list of unforgettable Kelly heroines and heroes whose love stories are shown developing amid the horrors and the wonders of life lived by people never found in the ballrooms and clubs of the Ton.
8. A Matter of Class by Mary Balogh
Charming is the best word I can think of to describe this short romance that gives the familiar tale of marriage between the progeny of a cit and an aristocrat the most delightful twist imaginable. Reginald, the son of a coal merchant, Annabelle, the daughter of an earl, are endearing characters. Remembering their story makes me smile—and sigh.
9. Money Honey by Susan Sey
This book has a suspense plot, but it felt like a straight contemporary to me. The focus is definitely on the romance--and it's a terrific romance. Liz and Patrick have history, chemistry, and substance. And I can’t express my delight that they have a real relationship, not just lusty romps.
10. The Redemption of Tyler O’Neill by Molly O’Keefe
I chose the second book in the series, because while I loved them all, I loved one a bit more than the others. But the books in this trilogy (The Temptation of Savannah O’Neill and The Scandal and Carter O’Neill are the others) are like three acts in a single play that reveals the stories of a troubled family. O’Keefe demonstrates wonderfully just how complex and compelling a story a gifted writer can tell within category limits.
11. Something about You by Julie James
I’ve been a Julie James fan since I read her first book, but this one is my favorite. Cameron and Jack are whole characters. They have lives—jobs, friendships, backgrounds, and a history with one another that credibly complicates their relationship. And sexual tension? Whee! Julie James could write a book on what I feared was becoming a lost art.
12. What the Librarian Did by Karina Bliss
I read this story of an arrogant rock star who wears purple boots and a librarian who wears vintage clothing in one gulp and then went back and reread it. It was a delight to read, but this is not to say that it is froth. The story has significance; it also has one scene that makes my list of all-time funniest scenes. It set me on the biggest glom I’ve been on in years.
What do you think about best-of book lists? How many have you read on this years' big lists? Will an apperance on the list persuade you to try a book? What were your top romances of 2010?
Thursday, December 9, 2010
After Christmas Treats: Coming to a Bookstore Near You
December 28 has long been marked on my book calendar as one of those terrific, tantalizing Tuesdays that promise a bounty of books that I’m longing to read. I’ve already read three (all A reads for me), and I am eagerly awaiting the others.
Toni Blake--Whisper Falls (Destiny, Book 3--Avon)
Nobody is better than Toni Blake at giving a reader engaging characters in a story that is both sizzling and sweet. She does it again in Whisper Falls, the third book in her series set in small-town Ohio. If you’re as weary as I am of heroines (and heroes) whose loves are blighted beyond recovery because some past love betrayed them, you will probably find heroine Tessa Sheridan as refreshing as I did. She is battling Crohn’s disease, and it’s a tough fight. Tessa felt real to me. Chronic illness has had both physical and emotional costs, but she’s determined to enjoy life. She’s also an interesting combination of caution and risk-taking.
Lucky is a dark, dangerous biker bad boy, the kind your mother always warned you about but you kept sneaking looks and having fantasies ‘cause he was so-o-o sexy. And he is all these things, and much more. He’s a guy who made some bad choices, but he’s trying to right old wrongs and make choices now that are best for all concerned. He’s a Romo (brother to Mike, whom you’ll know if you read Book 2), and he has family issues that have to be resolved. He also has a past, and we romance readers know that the past is rarely fully past.
I like my romances with rich contexts, and Blake provides plenty of that. I especially liked the way characters from the earlier books were woven into this one. Their presence had purpose in the story. I never got the feeling they were making cameo appearances to satisfy the series addicts (like me). This book stands on its own quite well. Readers new to the series or to Blake should have no problems with it.
Whisper Falls was another TB winner for me. I'm already wondering what’s happening in Destiny next.
I’m always happy to visit Virgin River. It’s filled with interesting people. Clay Tahoma and Lilly Yazhi are terrific additions to the community. Clay has just arrived in Virgin River, and he’s looking to settle down and build a life here. He’s also trying to cut some troublesome ties with his immediate past. Lilly has a past too, one that has taught her to be wary of strong, sexy Native American males. She’s the only one in Virgin River not delighted to have Clay join the community.
I really liked these characters. Their different responses to their cultural heritage seemed genuine to me. One of the things I liked best was that Lilly reconnects to parts of who she is because of her relationship with Clay. The scene where she meets his mother left me teary-eyed. In fact, I loved the family connections in this book—the fierce but imperfect love between Lilly and her grandfather and Clay’s extraordinary history with his son and his close ties with his sister and her family.
Clay and Lilly are good together too. Lilly may be guilty of stereotyping (a certain irony there) when she first meets Clay, but she has good reason for her reservations. The mistake Clay makes with Lilly seemed in character to me, and his propensity to delay the difficult reminded me of some men I’ve known. And Robyn Carr could give lessons in how to make a hero admit he’s wrong and how to atone for his errors.
I’ve read all the Virgin River books, and I have enjoyed them, some more than others. I’d rank this one very close to the first three, which continue to be my favorites.
Note: The count for the series says Promise Canyon is Book 11, but if you include the two novellas, it’s really story #13. I admit I made a chart, so I can keep track of all the character connections in the series. For any of you who are as obsessive as I am with keeping track of such details, the story of Clay’s friend and employer, veterinarian Nate Jensen, and his fiancée, Annie McCarty, can be found in “Under the Christmas Tree,” a novella in That Holiday Feeling (2009).
Laura Lee Guhrke--Wedding of the Season (Abandoned at the Altar, Book 1--Avon)
This is the first book in a new trilogy from Laura Lee Guhrke, and if they are all three as good as the first one, this series should rival Guhrke’s Bachelor Girl series in popularity. I should start by saying that I had three reasons for a predisposition to like Wedding of the Season before I read the first line: (1) It’s written by an author whose books routinely earn keeper status from me; (2) it’s set in the Edwardian period, a time I think we see too little of in romance fiction; (3) it’s a reunion story, my favorite theme. Sometimes having high expectations of a book can lead to a proportional disappointment. That was definitely not the case with WOTS.
Beatrix and Will are a couple with a history. Six years ago, each of them makes a choice that puts a period to their long relationship. She’s engaged again and looking forward to a wedding that will take place--and then Will reappears. The opening scene is marvelous. It sets up the tension between the H/H beautifully, plus it gave me the same feeling I get from the opening scene of my favorite romantic comedies of the 30s and 40s.
The plot is fairly predictable. There’s the heroine with a grievance, the hero with a purpose, the proper new love, and a set of circumstances that force the H/H into one another’s company with the expected result of reunion and HEA. What sets Guhrke book apart from hundreds of other books with the same plot is the skill with which she creates characters with whom the reader falls in love. Beatrix’s determination to have the life she believes she must have and her reluctance to take risks may be maddening to some readers, but she had my sympathy from the beginning. I thought the roadster worked masterfully to show that there is more to Beatrix than even she understands at this point. Will is a great hero, but he's not faultless. His interest in the Egyptian excavation is consuming. Their flaws make these characters interesting, credible, and endearing.
I can’t praise the setting highly enough. Not only is it refreshingly different from the usual Georgian/Regency fare, but it is tied directly to action and character in this novel. The opulent lifestyles of the privileged, the technological advances, the shifting social roles—all these things are part of WOTS. They are part of who these characters are. Wedding of the Season is not only a fun read with a wholly satisfying romance; it’s also an intelligent book. I love that!
December 28 releases I haven’t read but that are on my To-Be-Bought list are:
I've been waiting for Lady Most Likely for ages. Three favorites in one book--how often does that happen? In Too Deep introduces a new series, but it's still an Arcane Society book--and I'm hooked. Mistress by Midnight is the second book in the Courtesans Court series. I think that court was a brilliant idea, and I can't wait to read another book by my friend Maggie.
(Rose Lerner’s second book, A Lily Among Thorns, was on my list for December 28, but according to her website, the release date has been changed to March 2011 for the ebook, June 2011 for the pb. I had wondered how the changes at Dorchester would affect this book. I’m glad it’s just a delay in release.)
Toni Blake--Whisper Falls (Destiny, Book 3--Avon)
Nobody is better than Toni Blake at giving a reader engaging characters in a story that is both sizzling and sweet. She does it again in Whisper Falls, the third book in her series set in small-town Ohio. If you’re as weary as I am of heroines (and heroes) whose loves are blighted beyond recovery because some past love betrayed them, you will probably find heroine Tessa Sheridan as refreshing as I did. She is battling Crohn’s disease, and it’s a tough fight. Tessa felt real to me. Chronic illness has had both physical and emotional costs, but she’s determined to enjoy life. She’s also an interesting combination of caution and risk-taking.
Lucky is a dark, dangerous biker bad boy, the kind your mother always warned you about but you kept sneaking looks and having fantasies ‘cause he was so-o-o sexy. And he is all these things, and much more. He’s a guy who made some bad choices, but he’s trying to right old wrongs and make choices now that are best for all concerned. He’s a Romo (brother to Mike, whom you’ll know if you read Book 2), and he has family issues that have to be resolved. He also has a past, and we romance readers know that the past is rarely fully past.
I like my romances with rich contexts, and Blake provides plenty of that. I especially liked the way characters from the earlier books were woven into this one. Their presence had purpose in the story. I never got the feeling they were making cameo appearances to satisfy the series addicts (like me). This book stands on its own quite well. Readers new to the series or to Blake should have no problems with it.
Whisper Falls was another TB winner for me. I'm already wondering what’s happening in Destiny next.
I really liked these characters. Their different responses to their cultural heritage seemed genuine to me. One of the things I liked best was that Lilly reconnects to parts of who she is because of her relationship with Clay. The scene where she meets his mother left me teary-eyed. In fact, I loved the family connections in this book—the fierce but imperfect love between Lilly and her grandfather and Clay’s extraordinary history with his son and his close ties with his sister and her family.
Clay and Lilly are good together too. Lilly may be guilty of stereotyping (a certain irony there) when she first meets Clay, but she has good reason for her reservations. The mistake Clay makes with Lilly seemed in character to me, and his propensity to delay the difficult reminded me of some men I’ve known. And Robyn Carr could give lessons in how to make a hero admit he’s wrong and how to atone for his errors.
I’ve read all the Virgin River books, and I have enjoyed them, some more than others. I’d rank this one very close to the first three, which continue to be my favorites.
Note: The count for the series says Promise Canyon is Book 11, but if you include the two novellas, it’s really story #13. I admit I made a chart, so I can keep track of all the character connections in the series. For any of you who are as obsessive as I am with keeping track of such details, the story of Clay’s friend and employer, veterinarian Nate Jensen, and his fiancée, Annie McCarty, can be found in “Under the Christmas Tree,” a novella in That Holiday Feeling (2009).
Laura Lee Guhrke--Wedding of the Season (Abandoned at the Altar, Book 1--Avon)
This is the first book in a new trilogy from Laura Lee Guhrke, and if they are all three as good as the first one, this series should rival Guhrke’s Bachelor Girl series in popularity. I should start by saying that I had three reasons for a predisposition to like Wedding of the Season before I read the first line: (1) It’s written by an author whose books routinely earn keeper status from me; (2) it’s set in the Edwardian period, a time I think we see too little of in romance fiction; (3) it’s a reunion story, my favorite theme. Sometimes having high expectations of a book can lead to a proportional disappointment. That was definitely not the case with WOTS.
Beatrix and Will are a couple with a history. Six years ago, each of them makes a choice that puts a period to their long relationship. She’s engaged again and looking forward to a wedding that will take place--and then Will reappears. The opening scene is marvelous. It sets up the tension between the H/H beautifully, plus it gave me the same feeling I get from the opening scene of my favorite romantic comedies of the 30s and 40s.
The plot is fairly predictable. There’s the heroine with a grievance, the hero with a purpose, the proper new love, and a set of circumstances that force the H/H into one another’s company with the expected result of reunion and HEA. What sets Guhrke book apart from hundreds of other books with the same plot is the skill with which she creates characters with whom the reader falls in love. Beatrix’s determination to have the life she believes she must have and her reluctance to take risks may be maddening to some readers, but she had my sympathy from the beginning. I thought the roadster worked masterfully to show that there is more to Beatrix than even she understands at this point. Will is a great hero, but he's not faultless. His interest in the Egyptian excavation is consuming. Their flaws make these characters interesting, credible, and endearing.
I can’t praise the setting highly enough. Not only is it refreshingly different from the usual Georgian/Regency fare, but it is tied directly to action and character in this novel. The opulent lifestyles of the privileged, the technological advances, the shifting social roles—all these things are part of WOTS. They are part of who these characters are. Wedding of the Season is not only a fun read with a wholly satisfying romance; it’s also an intelligent book. I love that!
December 28 releases I haven’t read but that are on my To-Be-Bought list are:
I've been waiting for Lady Most Likely for ages. Three favorites in one book--how often does that happen? In Too Deep introduces a new series, but it's still an Arcane Society book--and I'm hooked. Mistress by Midnight is the second book in the Courtesans Court series. I think that court was a brilliant idea, and I can't wait to read another book by my friend Maggie.
(Rose Lerner’s second book, A Lily Among Thorns, was on my list for December 28, but according to her website, the release date has been changed to March 2011 for the ebook, June 2011 for the pb. I had wondered how the changes at Dorchester would affect this book. I’m glad it’s just a delay in release.)
Note: I received free ecopies of Whisper Falls, Promise Canyon, and Wedding of the Season from the publishers through NetGalley, but my reviews were unaffected by their generosity. As evidence, I offer the information that I'll use my own $$ to buy copies of all three along with the other books on my list on December 28.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
A Little Something
I’ve been writing 14-18 hours a day, trying to make my December 1 deadline on a series of articles. I missed it. :( It looks as if I’ll be in the deadline dungeon another couple of days. I’ll be back next week with a new post. For now, I hope you enjoy this short, short Christmas story. It’s one I wrote for the 2008 Christmas anthology on the EJ/JQ bulletin board.
“Marissa Carlington, did you hear a word I said? Be sure to tell your mama that Sam Sullivan had a heart attack, and I’ll be calling her about taking dinner to the Sullivans tomorrow. Gina will have enough on her mind without worrying about Christmas dinner.”
Mr. Sam? Is he— Marissa could not bring herself to finish the question. She had thought until six weeks ago that Sam and Gina Sullivan would be her in-laws.
“It was a mild one, but Gina won’t leave him even so. Don’t forget to tell your mama.” Gladys bustled away, looking for more Women’s Society members to enlist in her dinner project.
The hush in the hall meant that Santa was due. Santa? Oh no, Mr. Sam was always Santa, enjoying himself hugely and keeping everyone laughing with his quips. Who—but there he was, a tall Santa with a rich laugh. Brady, of course. A bit on the slim side for the traditional image, but the children clustering around him were not bothered. The stars in their eyes were brighter than the one on the tree.
Funny, she could remember the look on his face when she had stormed out, but she couldn’t remember what their fight was about. She didn’t even remember how it started, just that it was one of those escalating arguments that ended with her throwing the ring at him and his accusing her of expecting too much.
“Youngest first, youngest first,” Pastor Don cautioned. Marissa grinned, watching her sister Amy forcibly removed Ryan, a boisterous six-year-old, from the front of the line while trying to comfort a shrieking Carli.
“Can I help?” She hardly had the words out before Amy was shoving Carli at her and turning to recapture the elusive Ryan.
“Here, my dear,” Pastor Don with a firm hand steered Marisa to the front of the line.
Marissa didn’t have time to panic. One minute she was coaxing Carli to look at Santa, the next she and the toddler were perched on Santa’s knee. In the way of the very young, Carli took an unexpected fancy to the man in red. “Ho, Ho, Ho,” she chortled, launching herself against Santa’s chest. He caught her easily, joining her in a duet of “Ho, Ho Hoes” before handing her back to Marissa.
Marissa was overly conscious of his left arm curved around her waist.
“Have you been a good girl?” Was the question for her or for Carli, Marissa wondered.
“Baby!” Carli announced as Santa pulled a doll from his pack.
He pushed another, wrapped package into Marissa’s hand and gave Carli a quick kiss.
Amy rushed over to take Carli, chattering madly. Marissa didn’t hear a word. She was conscious only of the present from Santa. Her hands trembled as she pulled away the wrapping and opened a small box. It was another box, a tiny silver one. Inside was an even smaller piece of paper that read “I only want you for Christmas.”
“Marissa, where are you going?” Amy called.
Marissa smiled over her shoulder. “Tell Santa that I’ve gone to find a ribbon for his Christmas gift.
Have you ever written a Christmas story? What’s your favorite Christmas story to reread?
A Gift from Santa
“Marissa Carlington, did you hear a word I said? Be sure to tell your mama that Sam Sullivan had a heart attack, and I’ll be calling her about taking dinner to the Sullivans tomorrow. Gina will have enough on her mind without worrying about Christmas dinner.”
Mr. Sam? Is he— Marissa could not bring herself to finish the question. She had thought until six weeks ago that Sam and Gina Sullivan would be her in-laws.
“It was a mild one, but Gina won’t leave him even so. Don’t forget to tell your mama.” Gladys bustled away, looking for more Women’s Society members to enlist in her dinner project.
The hush in the hall meant that Santa was due. Santa? Oh no, Mr. Sam was always Santa, enjoying himself hugely and keeping everyone laughing with his quips. Who—but there he was, a tall Santa with a rich laugh. Brady, of course. A bit on the slim side for the traditional image, but the children clustering around him were not bothered. The stars in their eyes were brighter than the one on the tree.
Funny, she could remember the look on his face when she had stormed out, but she couldn’t remember what their fight was about. She didn’t even remember how it started, just that it was one of those escalating arguments that ended with her throwing the ring at him and his accusing her of expecting too much.
“Youngest first, youngest first,” Pastor Don cautioned. Marissa grinned, watching her sister Amy forcibly removed Ryan, a boisterous six-year-old, from the front of the line while trying to comfort a shrieking Carli.
“Can I help?” She hardly had the words out before Amy was shoving Carli at her and turning to recapture the elusive Ryan.
“Here, my dear,” Pastor Don with a firm hand steered Marisa to the front of the line.
Marissa didn’t have time to panic. One minute she was coaxing Carli to look at Santa, the next she and the toddler were perched on Santa’s knee. In the way of the very young, Carli took an unexpected fancy to the man in red. “Ho, Ho, Ho,” she chortled, launching herself against Santa’s chest. He caught her easily, joining her in a duet of “Ho, Ho Hoes” before handing her back to Marissa.
Marissa was overly conscious of his left arm curved around her waist.
“Have you been a good girl?” Was the question for her or for Carli, Marissa wondered.
“Baby!” Carli announced as Santa pulled a doll from his pack.
He pushed another, wrapped package into Marissa’s hand and gave Carli a quick kiss.
Amy rushed over to take Carli, chattering madly. Marissa didn’t hear a word. She was conscious only of the present from Santa. Her hands trembled as she pulled away the wrapping and opened a small box. It was another box, a tiny silver one. Inside was an even smaller piece of paper that read “I only want you for Christmas.”
“Marissa, where are you going?” Amy called.
Marissa smiled over her shoulder. “Tell Santa that I’ve gone to find a ribbon for his Christmas gift.
Have you ever written a Christmas story? What’s your favorite Christmas story to reread?
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