I’m over at Dear Author with a review of The Bromance Book Club by Lyssa Kay Adams. I laughed out loud many times while reading and enjoyed the style quite a bit but I think there was just a little bit lacking in the substance department.
Tag: contemporary (Page 31 of 118)
I’m over at AudioGals with a review of Arctic Heat by Annabeth Albert, narrated by Iggy Toma. The Frozen Hearts trilogy wraps up with a sexy and sweet cabin romance.
I’m over at AudioGals with a review of Trashed by Mia Hopkins, narrated by Gomez Pugh. Steamy contemporary featuring an ex-con and chef. It works.
I’m over at AudioGals with a review of All Roads Lead to You by Jennifer Probst, narrated by Stephen Graybill & Amy Landon. Kind of a slow start but in the end an enjoyable enough listen about about two lost souls with a passion for animals. Content Advisory: discussion of animal abuse, depiction of high school bullying.
I’m over at AudioGals with a review of Three Part Harmony by Holley Trent, narrated by Danny Boston, Sean Crisden & Natalie Eaton. Great book with interesting and distinct characters. The narration was a bit of a mixed bag.
Why I read it: I pre-ordered this one as soon as it was up and recently carved out time to actually read it.
Content Advisory: Anxiety
What it’s about: (from Goodreads) They’re pretending. Until they aren’t.
Thomas McKinney has never wanted a woman the way he wants Callie Adesso. Since she started working alongside him at the Colonial Marysburg Research Library, he’s spent his desk shifts fumbling pencils, tripping over his own feet, and struggling to remember both the Dewey Decimal System and the existence of her inconvenient boyfriend. Now, however, Callie is suddenly single–and in need of a last-minute faux-boyfriend for an episode of HATV’s Island Match. Thomas is more than happy to play the part…and in the process, convince Callie that a week together isn’t nearly long enough.
Callie has never found a man as irritating as she finds Thomas. He may be brilliant, kind, and frustratingly handsome, but the absent-minded librarian also makes every workday an anxiety-inducing exercise in stress. Even seven days in paradise by his side won’t change her opinion of him. Really. No matter how attentive he is. And gentle. And sexy.
One plane ride later, the two of them are spending long, hot days under the sun and on display, pretending to be in love for a television show. This may be a vacation, but it’s also an act–as well as Thomas’s last chance to persuade the woman of his dreams to include him in hers. And soon, the island heat isn’t the only thing steaming up HATV’s cameras…
What worked for me (and what didn’t): Thomas McKinney was such a delightful hero. It was something of a surprise actually because initially I only had Callie’s description of him and he was certainly making life very difficult for her at work. It all came from a place of good intentions and being lovestruck and it could also have easily turned into way-not-okay stalker territory. Callie has only been at the library for six months. She struck up a friendship quickly with Thomas but became frustrated with him because he’s very bad at multi-tasking and tended to get caught up in whatever question he was asking for a patron and taking ages to do it. This left Callie doing most of the actual work and not getting many of the interesting questions to answer. Callie has been trying to work with other librarians for the past few months but for some reason she is always on shift with Thomas. This has meant she has had little chance to build relationships with anyone else and has been very isolating for her. So, initially, Thomas comes across as a bit of a jerk. Continue reading