Musings on Romance

Category: Uncategorized (Page 5 of 18)

March Round Up

on Paper/eBook

Tortoise Interruptus by JL Merrow – B+  This very short (27 pages), very cute and fun story features a tortoise shape-shifter who is tortoise-napped from his sister’s cafe on the Isle of Wight and his adventures, romantic and otherwise, in getting back home.  Very funny with Merrow’s trademark humour.  I liked it a lot.  Buy it on special though because it is pretty short.

Beyond Denial by Kit Rocha – B+  Free short/extended deleted scene from Beyond Control which was released by the authors during the DABWAHA March madness contest. Features Jared and Ace and sexytimes and gives a glimpse into what’s going on with Ace and Rachel and snippets of backstory of our dear Ace. A lot of fun and very hot but won’t make much sense if you haven’t read the other 2 books. 

 

Coming Soon

My review of Kit Rocha’s Beyond Control will be up soon, as well my review of Irregulars by Josh Lanyon, Astrid Amara, Ginn Hale & Nicole Kimberling.

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February Round Up

on Paper/eBook

Rule of Three by Kelly Jamieson – B  Very good m/m/f menage story where the characters actually talk about their relationship, their plans and (begin to) address potential traps which may arise.  Most of the book is spent developing the relationship and changing it from an m/f/m to an m/m/f.  As unrealistic as I gather they are (I understand from Twitter – my source of all the important information – that polyamory is mostly a couple who each (or maybe just one) have separate relationships with others – a triad is apparently kind of unusual), m/m/f are my favourite type of menage stories.  I felt there is more “equality” to the relationship where all three feel love and sexual desire for the other rather than the concept of the 2 guys “sharing” the woman.   The most unfortunately named Dag* is Chris’ best friend from college.  He has been out of town, having left after realising his unrequited love for Chris would remain so.  He believes Chris is relentlessly straight.  Even though they have shared a lot of women together, there has never been any touching of man bits.  Chris and Kassidy have been dating about a year and have just moved in together.  They are very much in love.  Kassidy develops feelings for Dag, he develops feelings for her and Chris eventually recognises his feelings for Dag.  Lordly it is a sexy book.  I devoured it in virtually one sitting.  The writing was good; Ms. Jamieson has a very entertaining style.  I would have liked more about their life together as a triad, a bit more about some of the practical difficulties and how they would deal together – this stuff was only just brought up at the very end and, while there were discussions, I wasn’t sure how it would work in practice and I wasn’t sure if Chris would actually talk more about his feelings (something he struggled with the whole book).  How would Kassidy’s parents react?  What would happen if there was some jealousy which arose?  Are interactions between 2 of the 3 okay or do all 3 have to be there?  To be fair, this was the getting together book, not the how it works book, but I can’t say I wasn’t curious.  Anyways, I enjoyed it quite a bit.
*I don’t know if it means the same thing here as in the US, but a “dag” is a bit of sheep’s dung caught up in the wool around their rear end and it’s NOT what I want to be thinking of in a sexy book. Especially a sexy book where there’s backdoor activity, if you know what I’m saying.
Hotel Pens by Geoffrey Knight – B  Very good m/m short about travel writer, Joe Jordan, who broke up with his lover some time ago and has been lonely ever since.  Because of his job, he’s always in hotels and he’s a keen collector of their pens.  While in New York for work, he meets Claude, a French ex-pat who is living at the Beacon Hotel and translating m/m romance books into French. Claude courts Joe and teaches him a thing or two about love, himself and New York by writing various messages in pen on Joe’s body in a kind of scavenger hunt.  I found the writing overall to be engaging and sensitive and I liked how as Joe rediscovered New York, he rediscovered himself also.  I was also happy that Joe had things to offer Claude and it wasn’t all one-sided.  The story was very short (56 pages) and ends in a HFN ending.  I wondered what would happen to the couple after – Joe is still a travel writer after all, but maybe there will be further stories for these two?  The author is Australian but I think he’s definitely been to New York, there is a great sense of place in the book.

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January Round Up

on Paper/eBook

Stand In Star by Rachael Johns – C  (arc via NetGalley) This book suffered for being my first read after 2 A reads in a row.  It’s a hard act to follow – I don’t give out A’s very often.  I also had something of an ick factor over Nate having been Daisy’s lover before he and Holly got together – and his discussion with Holly about their (his and Daisy’s) relationship was immediately before their (his and Holly’s) first kiss.   I also questioned whether Holly would really bare her  (and her family’s) soul about Daisy on international television. Many of Holly’s decisions seemed a lot more than merely naive and I didn’t buy the set up that she would stay with Nate, a complete (and surly) stranger, in the first place.
Still, I had a bad book hangover (from the joy of the previous 2 books) and I think I wasn’t in the best mood for this one. I can’t say that I saw in Nate what Holly did – apart from that he was gorgeous, he ran hot and cold and was grumpy and rude more often than not.   I’m afraid this one didn’t work that well for me.  But I’ve left the grade at a C because I feel like I brought unreasonably high expectations to the read and I’m sure that affected me.
Risque Business by HelenKay Dimon – C-  An erotic short which tried to be too much in too little time IMO.  Possibly my book hangover continued.  The sex was hot but the conflict was manufactured and the resolution too swift considering what an asshole the hero had been.  I like this author’s contemporary stories much better.

December Round Up

on Paper/eBook

Gayday! Gayday! by Kim Dare – C  Cute short about a bratty submissive who gets into trouble and calls his dominant friend (who he thinks is straight) to bail him out of a sticky situation.  Turns out his friend isn’t quite as straight as first though…

Rough Canvas by Joey W. Hill – B This erotic BDSM m/m romance came highly recommended by various Goodreads friends and I picked it up in a recent ARe sale.  Gallery owner Marcus and Artist Thomas were lovers but Marcus keeps secrets and Thomas has significant family responsibilities and neither had trusted the other enough for forever. There was a lot of sex which sometimes overtook the story, but it also had some moment so beauty and lyrical melancholy.  Some of the phrases were lovely but others you kind of had to look at sideways with a squint to understand them because they didn’t make a lot of sense when you read them straight out.  I enjoyed the book and believed the HEA and liked that the story ended up being more about Marcus’ pain than Thomas’ responsibilities.  (But, what happened to Daralyn?).  In any event, I liked it.
Needing a Little Christmas by Sylvia Violet – B-  This cute Christmas short features a sexy lumberjack type hero and really, what’s not to love about that.  Some of the early writing in the book seemed a little clumsy and info-dumping, but the story made me smile and I think Eli and Mac will be able to work out their locational issues and live happily ever after.

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O Come All Ye Kinky, edited by Sarah Frantz

Why I read it:  I picked this one up from NetGalley but Sarah Frantz had already whet my appetite with her Twitter stories of editing hijinks well before then.
Tree Topper by Jane Davitt – B-  Stan and Martin have been together for a while but things have started to pall.  Martin is an inexperienced Dom and thinks that is the reason Stan is pulling away. Things come to a head (pardon the pun) at Christmas when the men finally have a frank discussion and make a new plan.  Essentially, the conflict was a big misunderstanding which is one of my least favourite tropes in romance.  However, in a shorter format, that trope does tend to work a little better for me (less time for me to gnash my teeth) and while I find it frustrating, it seemed believable. When Martin took control (which fortunately was quite early on in the short story) and they began to talk and sort things out, the story became a lot more fun for me.  But I’d keep Martin away from the duct tape myself.  🙂
 
‘Twas the Night by Ava March – B    Set in 1820, Percy, a barrister’s clerk goes to visit Michael.  Percy loves to submit and Michael gently challenges him to ask for what he wants.  The story is sweet and sexy.  I really liked how Michael got Percy to open up (pardon the pun) about what he wanted and how that led to both men being more forthcoming about their feelings.
Fireworks by Katie Porter- B-  Rachel and Emma have been meeting regularly for two years but New Year’s Eve will be their last night together – Rachel is moving to Tokyo for a 2 year assignment and continuing their long distance relationship is not practical.  Emma wants more but Rachel has refused.  Rachel believes she is not long term relationship material; that eventually everyone will leave her, so she does the leaving first.   I’ve not read very much f/f but I found this story to be sexy and enjoyable (albeit that the tongue biting was a bit ouchy for me) – which, given that I’m a hero-centric reader and there was nary a hero in sight in this story, says something.  I did think that Rachel’s motivation for being so relationship averse was a bit underdeveloped and she did make a quick turnaround in the circumstances, but I think both of those things are probably more about the length of the format.  What I did like especially, was the way it was shown that the pain in their sex play was a quite different pain to the emotional pain Emma was experiencing at the imminent death of their relationship – I’ve probably not worded that well, because it sounds so obvious reading it back, but I can’t come up with a better explanation I’m afraid.
Candy Caning by LA Witt – B  Nate and Stephen have been together for a few years but Christmas is a time of tension because of Nate’s mother’s passive-aggressive viciousness.  Stephen has lost his Christmas joy and Nate holds himself responsible – if he didn’t have to deal with Nate’s mother (“you can do better, Nathan”) Christmas wouldn’t be so stressful.   Stephen is perhaps less bothered than Nate thinks but has picked up on Nate’s own misgivings and devises a clever kinky plan involving a very large candy cane (three feet long and thick as a cock) to take his mind off his problems.  I thought the story did a good job of depicting the compromises we often have to make at Christmas – put up with someone whose company you don’t enjoy/who is actively hurtful and miss out on seeing other family or don’t see them at all? – and the sex was certainly very hot.  The family issues aren’t ones that could be solved short of Nate’s mother disappearing off the face of the earth so the solution they reach isn’t perfect.  But then, what is?
Submissive Angel by Joey W. Hill – A-  I think this was the best of the stories in the anthology.  Robert is a big burly former soldier, now the proprietor of a vintage toy shop.  Six months earlier he had found Ange in the alley by his shop, the victim of an assault. Robert takes Ange to the hospital, offers him a place to stay and a job in the shop.  Ange is sweet and shy, with an affinity for the vintage toys Robert loves and an almost magical knack for communicating with children and patrons of the store. For a little while I wondered if the story was going to take a paranormal turn (because of something Ange says early on about elves) but that wasn’t ever really developed.   The story is deeply erotic and moving, with Ange’s quiet strength and submission reawakening Robert to life and love.  (Robert had been grieving the death of his parents).   I did have a little trouble picturing a big muscly guy wearing suspenders and a bow tie in a vintage toy shop but other than that, the word pictures conveyed in the story were lyrical and lovely.   There was an atmosphere to the story which made it not so much arousing as erotic and somehow… sacred I guess is the word that comes to mind.  After I finished the story, I realised there were some things left undeveloped (a casualty of the short format I think) but during the reading, it was just beautiful.
 
Open Return by Elyan Smith – B-  Zach (formerly Hannah) returns home to confront ghosts from his past, and to see if anything can be salvaged from his relationship with Laura and Seth.  The trio grew up together (I gather Laura was a kind of foster sister) and Laura and Seth both dominated (then) Hannah and Hannah loved it.  However, Zach was dealing with issues involving his gender/identity and found it necessary to leave Illinois and he took off to Australia.   I’m not sure exactly how Zach funded his transition from female to male (this wasn’t addressed in the story) – to be fair, there wasn’t really room for it, but I kind of felt a little behind, because most of the journey from Hannah to Zach was glossed over and what there was was only in flashback.  It wasn’t something really discussed with Seth and Laura.  However, there was much hotness between the trio and I found the sex scenes to be pretty hot (if a little drool-y) and I had no disconnect between Zach’s male identity and his vagina. I don’t know if I was expecting there to be but I noticed I didn’t have that reaction so I thought I’d mention it. It was only my second trans* romance so I’m hardly an aficionado of the genre but this one worked much better for me in terms of the romantic aspects and I felt the gender and sexual identities of the players were well defined, regardless of what body parts were/were not present.  I wonder if a longer format would have been better though because it seemed there was too much to cover in this story – the ending seemed a little abrupt and while there was an HFN, there was much left unresolved I felt.
Ring Out the Old and In the New by Alexa Snow – B+/A-  Two months prior to the start of this story, Evan was mugged on the (London) Tube and suffered a severe facial laceration.  He’s understandably traumatised and he’s extremely sensitive about his scar.  He was an artist’s model prior to the assault and his physical appearance is something he based much of his self worth on.  On the one hand, I thought that maybe Evan’s extreme sensitivity to his scar was more about the trauma because he didn’t come across as particularly vain and on the other, I’d probably be pretty upset about a significant facial scar so what do I know.   Russell, Evan’s long time partner and Dom, has been treading carefully around Evan since the attack, but in this story, Russell tries a different approach – directing Evan to tell him things and thus allowing Evan some relief in submission.  I thought this was beautifully portrayed actually.  This story came a close second (pardon the pun) to being my favourite in the anthology.  Again, it had an atmosphere of gentle melancholia, great love and sensuality which really got to me.
His Very Last Chance by Kim Dare – B  Kingsley overheard his sub, Drew talking on Christmas Eve and found out that Drew doesn’t think he’s romantic or particularly in touch with his feelings.  Kingsley plans a special New Year’s Eve to show Drew just how romantic he can be.  Drew however, thinks that he has to prove himself to Kingsley on this night (that the last chance of the title is his) and is terrified that he’s going to blow it.  Drew’s realisation during the story of his own deep feelings for Kingsley was a bit of a surprise – I kind of thought he would have known that already and it’s the big misunderstanding again which I generally don’t love.  However, what was very clever and sexy about the story was the way Kingsley made traditionally romantic (and sappy) things into kinky sex toys.   Although I will say rose thorns and penises ought never meet IMO!
Overall: Apart from all having BDSM aspects, the other thing all these stories have in common is that all of the couples are established.  I think short stories work better when the couples start off together and it certainly worked here.  All of the stories were enjoyable, a couple of them exceptional in my opinion and they were certainly all very kinky.

Grade: B

November Round-Up

 On Paper/eBook 

New York to Dallas by JD Robb – B+  I listened to this one on audio when it first came out and finally got around to reading the print version.  I missed the secondary characters less in print – possibly because I knew that they weren’t going to be there much going in.  I loved the Eve/Roarke angst in this one.

Favourite Quotes: 

“Hell it’s so bad I even miss Summerset.”

When Roarke made some sound, she turned narrowed eyes on him.  If you ever tell him I said that, I’ll shave you bald in your sleep, dress you in frilly pink panties and take a vid that I’ll auction and sell for huge amounts of money.”

“So noted,” he said that thought: There’s Eve.  There she is. 

and

 …Your point of view is so noted.  Now let me tell you just the way it is.  If McQueen or anyone, got lucky, I’d pay whatever I had to pay to get you back.  And while I paid, I’d hunt him down.  And I’d find him.  When I did, he‘d come to wish I ended him.”

I love it when Roarke gets all alpha. *sigh* 

Hot Down Under

A Room with a View by Kylie Scott – C – very short story (21 pages) set in the same post-apocalyptic universe as her full length release (which is on my TBR) Flesh.  I reviewed this one for ARRA.

A Real Online Fantasy by Cara Ellink – B  another super short erotic story which reviewed for ARRA. Two people who have been chatting (and sexing) online for a year decide to meet.

The Final Wish by Tracey O’Hara – B/B+ Super short story I reviewed for ARRA about a djinn who‘s fallen in love with her master.  But he has one wish left before she leaves him. 
Beneath the Light of a Silver Moon by Mel Tescho – C- The least successful of the 5 novellas, I had a bit of trouble buying that a battered wife would be interested in sex with anyone.
A Sporting Chance by Rhyll Biest – B/B+  A fun story about a barmaid and her boss and a sexy bet.  The longest of the 5 books, I enjoyed this one quite a bit.  Although, why anyone would have a pet cane toad is beyond me.

Assumption of Desire by Elizabeth Brooks – B-  Cute sexy short novella about an accountant who goes to a gay bar and meets up with a twink wearing a pink feather boa – not his usual type.  But, looks can be deceiving and love can be found in the strangest places.

 

 

 

When I Say When by Tia Fielding – B I picked this up at ARe for free and something about it made me decide to read it straight away (even though I bought 17 books at the same time!).  It’s short – less than 25 pages and it has its flaws, but I really liked it.  I decided not to think about the flaws too much – they really only bothered me afterwards. Maybe I was just in the right mood.  Who knows? Maybe it’s because I like the Foo Fighters.  The title is a line from the Foo Fighters song classic Everlong (the Foo Fighters are one of the very few bands where the Venn diagram of my musical taste and that of my husband intersects and we saw them in concert last year).  

 Busy Jordan goes to a male hooker for sex and is surprised when said hooker turns out to be a face from his past.  

Still to come

My review of Jill Sorenson’s Aftershock will be up next month, as will my review of Sarah Mayberry’s The Other Side of Us.  I will also have a review of Katie Allen’s Private Dicks.

on Audio

Caught Running by Madeleine Urban and Abigail Roux, narrated by Jeff Gelder – D+ The book is good but the audio is pretty ordinary.  The narrator doesn’t leave gaps between sentences, frequently tripped over his tongue, mispronounced words (“fervishly” instead of “feverishly”, “tearst” instead of “tryst”, “wict” instead of “wicked” and “gravely” instead of “gravelly” – are just a few examples.  The tone of the narrator’s voice often didn’t match the cues in the text.  When a character says something reverently, it should sound that way – not angry or abrupt.  There was little to no vocal differentiation for the characters and I had to rely on dialogue tags to know who was talking.  It was better than the narration in Promises (by Mack L. Jones) in that I was able to persist and finish the end of the book but only marginally.I don’t plan on listening to anymore Dreamspinner audiobooks until they get better narrators.

Kindred in Death by JD Robb, narrated by Susan Ericksen – A-  I enjoyed this one in print and just as much (possibly) on audio.  One of the things that has always impressed me about La Nora is her ability to make me care about a character with just a few sentences.  I found myself feeling deeply for Deena McMasters (the first victim) and her parents and there were even a few teary moments.  I’ll be caught up on my audio listen of this series soon I think.

Coming soon

A review of French Silk for Sandra Brown week at AudioGals. I confess I’m struggling I struggled with this one.  Next up is Hard Evidence by Pamela ClareAnd then, Iced by Karen Marie Moning.

Links

Here’s what you may have missed.

Cost of Repairs by AM Arthur
Leave Me Breathless by Cherrie Lynn 
Ride With Me by Ruthie Knox 
Celebrity in Death by JD Robb
2/3 of the Midnight Scandals anthology
The Art of Seducing a Naked Werewolf by Molly Harper, narrated by Amanda Ronconi
Dirty Thirty by Cara McKenna
Red Hot Holiday anthology by KA Mitchell, Leah Braemel and Anne Calhoun
Attachments by Rainbow Rowell 
Suddenly You by Sarah Mayberry
Men of Smithfield: Adam and Holden by LB Gregg
My brief DNF reviews of Unleashed and Promises (audio)
If I’d Never Known Your Love by Georgia Bockhoven
Extreme Exposure by Pamela Clare, narrated by Kaleo Griffith
Pressure Head by JL Merrow 

Also, I guested at ARRA with a review of Sylvia Day’s Reflected in You and Nalini Singh’s Archangel’s Storm

And at  AudioGals with audiobooks reviews of Flat Out Sexy by Erin McCarthy. and A Lot Like Love by Julie James. 

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