Saturday 31 May 2014

BOOK REVIEW (16): The Fate of a Marlowe Girl (Marlowe Girls #1)

Book Review:
The Fate of a Marlowe Girl

Such haunting eyes... But don't let them fool you! Tiffany is tough.
Although only a novella, this prequel/beginning of author Beth Fred’s Marlowe Girls duology is a short but sweet read! (And if you couldn’t tell, I’m biased because I love novellas!)



The Fate of a Marlowe Girl reads quickly, but that’s because I zoomed through the pages. For a couple hours I was glued to my phone hanging off the bed in all sorts of bone-aching positions wondering how Lucas and Tiffany could ever be together. (I even kept checking to see if this wasn’t part of a serial set, because the tension was just that great! And that’s a warning to you nail-biters.)


To be honest though, at first it took a while for me to warm to Tiffany’s personality—or thought process. She’s sarcastic, but totally a doormat when it came to her stupid little sister. I mean, I have a little sister and I can get how frustrating it can be when they don’t listen to you—but man, I wanted to hug and kiss my sister after this read because Tiffany had it WAY worse. Just imagine the most selfish brat out there and now picture you sharing blood with them. For reals! Tiffany really butt-lucked out when it came to the stork’s delivery of her sister, Kammy.

The whole opening made me cringe. Are there really such bad siblings out there in the world?

So poor Tiffany allowed herself to get pushed around for a bit... At least until the sexy and very no-nonsense Lucas enters her life. He embodied what I’d been raging about: her complicity to her sister and challenge her to see the error in indulging such shitty sibling relations. “I’m sorry. Just because we’re siblings doesn’t mean I get to wipe your arse every time you crap yourself.”

With Kammy’s responsibility temporary divested from her hands, Tiffany allows Lucas to show her Cancun. But after three nights in his apartment and company Tiffany realizes he’s shown her much, much more. Most especially how to value herself and particularly making sure that she learned to put herself first timing taken into consideration.

Then there’s a twist end which I won’t share—thank me after reading this book, because you won’t want it spoiled. (And if you do, go find some other spoilery review.)

My only gripe was anytime Kammy was mentioned.

But BUT--there is a second book. A longer second book I might add, and using my supa-dupa detective skills I’m guessing Book 2 of the Marlowe Girls stars the much-hated Kammy.

Does this mean I’ll be boycotting Book 2? No. Actually oddly enough—and it makes me question my level of sadism—I want to read Kammy’s story. I would love to see how she’ll redeem herself as at the end of this first story she is very irredeemable IMHO. 

My verdict:

✮.5

(4.5 stars)

Friday 30 May 2014

A Winning Month. (Big Dreams Blog Update #8)



Another month gone, another update day—Phew! Where does the time go?

At the end of every month a group of us over at the Big Dreams Blog Hop individually update our progress on our big dream of choice. Hosted by the amazingly talented duo Misha Gericke and Beth Fred who started by sharing their crazy dreams with us, and now there’s a total of 19 dreamers.

My goal is to inch closer to my million-word mark. I’m only counting completed works (and no, it doesn’t have to be published). These could be first drafts, shelf novels, etc., so as long as the story is complete its word count will be locked in my million word meter over on the right of the blog.

And if you have a crazy dream of your own, maybe a little too big to keep a secret, there’s always room to join! The more, the crazier—and the merrier, right? J

So May was a pretty eventful month for me. No, not call story, omg-I’m-getting-published eventful (not yet anyway!), but still busy in a great way.

Where do I start?

Well, I entered a contest.

It was one of my goals for 2014, although I don’t remember whether I stated this on the blog earlier this year. I might have kept it to myself, I’m not sure… But it was a goal!

Last year I chickened out of entering every RWA contest. I entered this year determined to combat my fear of showing my work—I mean my goal is to get published one day, so I figure chipping away at this fear now is probably a wise way to proceed.

So I entered a contest…and I didn’t win.

Well, I should say it wasn’t about the winning. In the end I did get a brief editorial email informing me on where I’d gone wrong, so that was a total win in and of itself!

But back to the contest: I was disqualified after the second round.

The Killer Voices contest is currently being hosted by Harlequin, and it’s related to the expansion of the big romance publisher’s inspirational romantic suspense line. They’re looking for new (agented or unagented) authors, so if you have a desire to write inspy romsuspense or already have an MS in the works, then you should consider Harlequin Love Inspired Suspense. (For any interested parties, here are the writing guidelines.)

To be honest it was a last minute—err, should I say last hour?—choice. I had been going back-and-forth on the decision and finally caved and entered my first page on the last day and the last hour of the first round. Surprise, surprise when two weeks later I found out—after a particularly bad day that morning—that I passed onto round 2, a.k.a. the Synopsis round.

I celebrated quietly after neurotically checking every other hour whether my name on the editor’s list was just my imagination. Of course once the editor congratulated us by name I knew I was one of the chosen synopsis participants. After I finished celebrating I realized that I had to write a 3-5pg. synopsis in a week and a half, and I’ve never written a synopsis longer than 500ish words.

But I belted out that synopsis and even crushed my fear long enough to play show-and-tell with my sisters and get their eyes on the good, bad and ugly of the synopsis before I hit send and waited for the Round 3 (or partial/3 chapter round) announcement at the end of April.

Between my hitting send and waiting for the announcement I had 3 weeks to prepare for the next stage and continue to write my MS. At the start of April (April 2nd to be exact) I only had that first page that got me through to round 2. It was untouched and needed a bit of work after some plot elements changed during my work with the synopsis.

I still remember that first day and get the chills. It was so hard to sit down and write my daily word count. So, so darn difficult! I cringe when I think about it now and shake my head in self-amazement. (“Who was that girl?”) Because I have to remember her whenever I think I CAN’T reach a goal.

At this time I also decided to jump into the April CampNaNo and for that first week my goal was to hit 30K on my Killer Voices* contest entry, Shotgun Dead. But after a slow and steady—as in writing daily—first week, I decided to re-evaluate my goal and reasonably made the choice to aim for 21K at the end of the month as opposed to 30K.

27 days came and went and it was the afternoon of the Round 3 announcement. I was seating at 19ishK and I had a little over 1500 words to hit my goal of 21K. I’m a morning writer (usually start at 6am, at least I was for this project) and I decided to set the goal to hit the 21K by the announcement time at noon. So I set to work. I learned over the course of those 3.5-4 weeks that I could set aside the need for perfectionism of my first draft and to dive into whatever scene I was writing. And usually that sort of determination got me to my daily WC goal of 1000-1500 in about 3 hours.

Suffice to say I hit my 21K and I treated myself to the announcement. I learned I wasn’t one of the chosen contestants for round 3 and I…sulked for days and since gave up writing forever. The End.


Haha. No, I’m kidding. ^_^

Actually it was, and I don’t mean this in any bad way, freeing. With the knowledge of the announcement and my not moving on to the next stage of the contest, I was relieved.

Why? I mean who in their right mind would be relieved by a rejection (although to be fair I don’t see it as a rejection)?

You see over the course of that month and a half journey (from March 14 to April 28) I learned I wasn’t cut out for the inspy world at all!

Now I still have my sights set on writing and publishing a romantic suspense one day, but despite loving to read Harlequin’s LIS line, I really didn’t connect writing-wise to this inspirational project. And the funny thing is that it came out in my writing. I found that the faith element was more a part of my characters rather than part of the narrative/plot as I’ve noticed published Love Inspired titles were.

After the announcement then I did the most sensible thing a new rejectee (that’s not a word, but wat-eva!) should do. I moved on.

My method was to scrap the project after I spent the majority of the rest of that day struggling to let go of Shotgun Dead, my KV entry. (May it rest in unfinished peace).

Now that I was projectless again I returned to my fanfiction novella (which now has a title, A Book Like Water). I had put it on hold in the middle of April because I found that juggling Shotgun Dead and ABLW for a couple of weeks was not ideal. I really don’t know how some writers do this. So I pulled ABLW out of its hiatus purgatory and worked away at it, aiming to be finished it by Mother’s Day.

12 days later…

Mother’s Day arrived and I started out the day by visiting a local author, Opal Carew. (Please check her out if you’re interest in erotic romances!) Got my books signed and although I forgot my camera Opal surprised me by asking to take a picture. I did look like crap, but who cares? Author photos FTW.

Oh, and by this point I was hours and words away from driving the “golden spike” in the story.

Later that day, 9:17 p.m.

I finish ABLW.

A little later after mellowing in quiet awe and locking the word count on my phone’s writing meter app, I went to sleep pondering what I’d start working on the next day.

It was a toss-up between another fanfic… OR a not-so new project, original piece what-have-you, that has been waiting its turn patiently for the last year and a bit. (Along with a bunch of other ideas… Lol.)

May 12: I’ve started my new project, and though I will remain tight-lipped at this point in time, I will state that it is a contemporary romance ala Harlequin’s shorter category lines.

Now that it’s Day 19 with “Currently Untitled WIP”, I’ve found a great balance with my schedule of other life commitments and my own insecurities (yes, I even let the Internal Editor stay and keep house). But I’ll still knock on wood as I type this and hopefully in another 3 weeks I’ll be this much closer to being complete.

In the meantime, and if you’re interested, keep an eye on the writing meters on the side. I update them every month, but sometimes mid-month whenever I’m posting a book review and I remember them.


The endless TBR pile.


Speaking of reviewing, I set a goal this month to hit the 50% mark of my 30 book reading + reviewing challenge for 2014. And I did it! 17 books read to be exact, and 15 of those 17 reads have reviews up and live on the blog, so scroll around and find them. And about that… I should probably compile the reviews in one, easy accessible manner. I’ll see to this soon!

I think I’ve covered the basis for May. I’m looking forward to June and another similarly delightful post with next month’s update day.

Keep dreaming and enjoy your Friday everybody!



*If you have the time, please wish 22 contestants moving onto the final round all the best! 

Sunday 25 May 2014

BOOK REVIEW (15): The Coffin Club (Vampire Kisses #5)

Book Review: 
The Coffin Club

After completing the first 5 stories in Ellen Schreiber’s Vampire Kisses series I’m beginning to see a trend with my ratings of the books. But the 3ish stars best describes my feelings so far with the series. It’s a more “good enough, don’t feel like I wasted my time” read.

Let me explain it this way: I found the VK series after Ms. Schreiber published book 3 back in 2006. I was young and still unaware (and unaffected) by theTwilight books/phenomenon. (That would come a year and a bit later…)

The “vampire-meets-human” plot wasn’t novel to me back then, as I was reading some adult paranormal works (i.e. Anita Blake, Vampire Huntress), but nothing really “teen-related” or of the YA flavour. In fact I was plotting my own vampire story and the books were kinda like research tools.

What I’m trying to say/write in this long prelude is that I don’t designate the 3ish stars out of mindless habit. I found these stories 8-9 years ago, so it’s much harder to swallow today. Sure it was still cheesy then, but it’s just gotten cheesier.

Anyways, on with the review:

The Coffin Club continues to follow Raven and her immortal heartthrob. Summer fun had rolled in, but Raven lamemts Alexander’s departure at the end of Book 4. (I won’t reveal why he’s left…)

Most of this story takes place outside Dullsville in a more Goth-friendly town, Hipsterville. I really liked this. Dullsville can get tremendously boring…err, dull. Hipsterville isn’t new though. Readers are introduced to the Goth club in book 2 (I think). This time, however, Raven ends up sleuthing her way to an underground hangout with a nefarious secret (I won’t share this secret *zips lips and throws key away*). No, you’ll just have to read the book and find out what this secret is. Dun dun dun dunnnnnn.

Haha. A club within a club…

Okay! What I DISliked:
*the dialogue wasn’t nearly as cheesy and unoriginal between Raven and Alexander. But the conversations between Raven and her two new Goth friends, Scarlet and Onyx (props to Schreiber on the cool names!) is just plain weird and not at all how I expect teens to talk.

*Jagger needs a life. I don’t even care how sexy he sounds. I’m willing to break up with my underage book boyfriend, because he gets worse and worse in every book where he makes an appearance. Why is he so obsessed with Raven and Alexander and their family and friends?

*Also, since I’m on the topic of obsession, why is Raven obsessed with Alexander and their relationship? Give the boy a breather—he’s a teen immortal. Forever comes as a given.

What I liked:
*Alexander continues to mature in every book—he’s levelheaded and easily my favourite half of the main couple

*Aunt Libby is a pleasant change. Not that I hated the Madisons. Raven’s aunt just offers a sort of pizazz her parents and brother lack. There’s more dimension to her character. Actually she kind of reminds me of another character (Aunt Arabella from Meg London’s SN Mysteries series). Both women are into the Boho-thing. They seem calm and collected, and they’re also diehard romantics despite being single well into their second half of the general life expectancy. (Lol. Yeah. I just wrote that.)

*the twist end! Seriously, the book is short—Renaissance Learn calculates it at ~39K—but the last 10 pages of this 200ish page novel are a blood mine!

My verdict:

✮.5

(3.5 stars)

BOOK REVIEW (14): Wicked Ink (Wicked Ink #1)

Book Review:
Wicked Ink


Yet another paranormal romance—I seem to be firmly entrenched in this genre. NOT that that’s a bad thing…

So Wicked Ink came as part of a special launch bundle with three other UF/PNR books from Harlequin’s fairly new Digital First line. I don’t believe the four-bundle is available any longer, but the stories will be available for purchase as standalones sometime June. (Again, don’t take my word as law).

All right-y, side-tracked a bit. Wicked Ink by Misty Simon’s was an entertaining read. I particularly enjoyed the brevity (whatever 9 chapters translates into word count-wise). The hero and heroine have officially become one of my favourite couples thus far in my 2014 reading foray.

Heroine Dory isn’t so successful with the whole “cooking one’s way to a man’s heart” approach, and hero Garrett doesn’t have people skills—it’s a perfect recipe for a boy/girl-next-door trope. They both have their flaws. Some they see and some that need to be pointed out.

Wicked Ink didn’t get a 5-star rating for some reasons. There were story elements I didn’t like or that caught me off guard in an unpleasant way. First, I want to warn anyone who’s going to dive into this story expecting a sizzler. What you can expect is a simmer. An itty-bitty sexual tension, I wouldn’t even call sexual tension is all that is offered. This doesn’t detract from the story, unless you’re looking. I just think it was a bit misleading, because this story is placed in the box set offered by Harlequin DF right after Lisa Medley’s Reap and Repent and that story is much sexier. It’s just that you’re in for reading a mild paranormal romance. Which is actually a nice change from the more prominent sexier adult romances.

Secondly, it lacks in-depth mythos. One question I still have, and I’m not sure if I just missed because of my own poor reading skills or something, is a full explanation on the tattoo-weapons origin. I mean we’re told how Garrett came to have his body riddled with these tattoos, but that’s about it. I understand the story is a novella, but I think a bit of an explanation could have really rounded the paranormal plot thread.

And finally, the main antagonist was a let-down. They didn’t put up a fight at all, even though there was this huge build-up of how they were an assassin, cold-blood killer and the present fact of their controlling a group of mean and dangerous thugs. Ugh.

But overall, I recently found out that there is a Book 2 to this series. Protective Ink doesn’t have a release date, but I imagine it will be out later this year as it is also going through Harlequin’s eBook program. And if the H/h is anything like Dory + Garrett my excitement knows no bounds.

My verdict:


(4 stars)

Saturday 10 May 2014

BOOK REVIEW (13): Dance with a Vampire (Vampire Kisses #4)

Book Review:
Dance with a Vampire

Oh la la.  Pretty dress makes an appearance in book. :)
Back in Dullsville with Goth Girl & co. (i.e. Raven Madison, Alexander Sterling, friends and mortal and immortal nemeses) the fourth adventure kicks off right where Book Three, Vampireville, left off with the arrival of Maxwell twins Jagger and Luna’s ickle brother, Valentine.

Dance with a Vampire is much the same run on the whole human-vamp forbidden love plot I predict will overarch the other five books remaining in this series.  Joy! –sarcasm-

I did enjoy that the story focused on a new relationship dynamic, that of Raven and her little brother, Billy/Billy Boy/William/Plain Old Billy/Nerd Boy.  And this especially when Valentine is searching for his own A.W.O.L. siblings.

On the Raven and Alexander front we learn that despite it being her childhood dream come true, Raven isn’t 100% on board with the whole vampire thing.  It felt so refreshing when her concern turned to her loving family and how her immortaility wasn’t a selfless act—in a big, BIG way she’d be changing the lives of her loved ones as well.

But Alexander has his own fear.  All this time he’d been waxing poetry about the beauty of immortality, denying Raven a one-way ticket to never age land-slash-vamplandia (a.k.a. Romania, apparently #1 country for vampires) when in fact all he wants is to chomp on his lady love’s neck and make Raven his vampy mate.

I’ll let you wave together how that goes down when the air is cleared of cobwebs.

What I didn’t like remains the same from Book 3 (and the un-reviewed Books 1 + 2):
-the whole over-the-top Goth thing
-why does Raven keep calling Jameson, the Sterling household butler, Creepy Man even after four books?  (Real rude.)
-everybody wants in Raven’s torn fishnets.  Seriously, there are at least 3 guys vying for her attention thus far.  For a girl who’s introduced and remains having one best friend, and the town’s freakiest resident after her vampire boyfriend, she’s extremely rare commodity to teenage hormones.
-a lot of convenient plot workings whenever Raven wants to get somewhere or do something, everything just falls into place.  (For instance, at one point she wants to skip school but the principal refuses her because she’s used up 130 “sick” days out of the 140 days of school thus far.  And then he’s like, okay, 131 and that’s it.  After this you can’t go home anymore.  Are you stupid or something, Principal guy?)

My verdict:


(3 stars)

Sunday 4 May 2014

BOOK REVIEW (12): Vampireville (Vampire Kisses #3)

Book Review:
Vampireville



This is the third book in Ellen Schreiber’s Vampire Kisses series following 16-year-old Goth + vampire aficionado-turned-confidante, Raven Madison and her dreamy, pre-Twilight forbidden romance with vampire boyfriend, Alexander Sterling.

After their young love survives a town gossip mob and an angsty, revenge-bent vampire teen, no Raven and Alexander are facing off against said angsty teen vampire’s twin sister, and she’s less revenge, more jealousy.

So I’m gonna cheat and type this review out point-form. (Hehe.)

What I liked:

*the dialogue – Ms. Schreiber really rocked with the back-and-forth banter in this book then she did with the first two books.  I loved it!

*scenes with Raven and her family and friends (and even a particularly endearing moment with Luna, semi-evil vampire’s twin sister)

*Alexander’s character development à sure he’s still sickeningly described by Raven who readers unfortunately have to stick with in the first-person narrative, BUT Alexander’s reluctance with his vampire nature really hits home with this third Vampires Kisses tale.


What I disliked:

*the over-the-top Goth description... –sigh-
I’m too old for this s*?!.

*Raven’s kinda a wish-washy heroine.  For instance she describes some characters in a way that leaves me wondering how she feels towards them (i.e. her “nemesis”, Trevor).  Now this point is my own need for closure of some sort, so I don’t blame Ms. Schreiber entirely.

My verdict

✮.5

(3.5 stars)

BOOK REVIEW (11): Controlled Curves (Alpha Doms #1)

Book Review:
Controlled Curves



Okay I gotta get this out there: this story would only work as a novella.

Christin Lovell’s Controlled Curves is the first in her indie-published Alpha Dom series of mostly novellas + one big novel.

It features a BBW heroine, Suren and her sexy new pack Alpha Maryk—who also happens to be her mate.

So you see it’s not the right time for Suren and her body issues.  Understandable as those issues are as she’s a big-boned werewolf, or in other words an anomaly in her pack and she faced her fair share of ridicule for it.  Maryk wants her to accept her body the way he does.  His idea is to show her in the way a horny male wolf near his mate can: screw some sense into her.

Cue extended sex scene. (Go read it for yourselves, kiddies. J)

The novelette (~8000 words) is told in oscillating points of view of Suren and Maryk. Heads up!  There’s a lot of fondling, groping, stroking, groaning and moaning to last you the rest of the month.  I didn’t necessarily like the whole shifting back and forth, and the description and narrative forced an eye roll or two.  While I thought Suren’s character was fleshed out (she had her insecurities to deal with), Maryk was just Maryk.  He came as an extension of Suren’s fear and desire nothing more.  Basically Maryk is a flesh-and-blood (and fur) extension of Suren’s combat with poor self-esteem.

But I did like it for all its short worth!  It was sexy, fun, and not bogged down by secondary plots and characters.  You get what you see with Controlled Curves: a short erotic paranormal romance.

My verdict:



(4 stars)



BOOK REVIEW (10): Laced with Poison (A Sweet Nothings Lingerie Mystery #2)


Book Review:
Laced with Poison


Laced with Poison is the second book in Meg London’s Sweet Nothings Lingerie mysteries, and I have to admit I liked it better than the first!

One thing I immediately noticed: it had me guessing until the last few chapters as to whom the culprit/killer was and I was grateful for that. I go into my cozies hoping for a good whodunit, so the first book failed on that front.

I liked the tension in this sequel as well.  Emma, her aunt and their lingerie business are no longer the focus for a murder mystery, but the spotlight has switched to two friends of the aunt-niece duo.

For a moment it felt like Emma would have to take the sides when it came to her two friends, but it smoothed itself out into another pattern. I would have hated if the concord in the group was broken so easily.

There was plenty of self-doubt bandied around, and the secondary cast came to life in this book. Liz Banning, for instance, was no longer just Emma’s childhood best friend, but a woman with her own life problems. And so on, so forth…

Removed from the murder, Emma might not have any directly personal stakes, but she cares for her friends enough to flush out the truth in the mystery and the real killer.  The story behind this murder is really funny and original. I promise you’ll enjoy Sweet Nothings a second time around.

Lastly, I loved loved LOVED (do you get it yet?) Detective Walter.  Now excuse me while I drool to death.

Step out of Emma’s way Brian-who-I-keep-calling-Brain and let her make room for this new sexy southern law enforcer.  Equal parts sweet-tongued and unabashed flirt, Walter definitely exudes the aura of a character who will make his appearance in following books.

So my only complaint would be not enough Walter + Emma story time? –grumble, grumble-

My verdict:

✮.5

(4.5 stars)