Friday 6 June 2014

Book Review (338): Say What You Will - Cammie McGovern


Say What You Will

Say What You Will is a young adult contemporary romance unlike any I've ever read, exceptionally written with very detailed descriptions of Amy and Matthew's disability/disorder, it gives you a look into how people inflicted with both Cerebral Palsy and OCD deal or not deal with their conditions.

The stroke of genius in this story is the fact that Cammie thought of putting these two characters who both have their own challenges together, both friendless they find in each other what they both needed all along, to be accepted for who they are and to help each other to have as normal a life as possible.

For Amy growing up with Cerebral Palsy, having to use a voice box to talk and a walker to get around, she has never had any friends whatsoever, not helped by the fact that all of her helpers have been adults, but this year being her final year of high school she is getting peer aides, people her own age to help her at school, one of those is Matt who has a steadily worsening case of OCD, with Amy's help he starts to get it under control as these two start to discover their feelings for one another run much deeper than just friends.

I adored these two characters, put together with this amazing story to form one of my favorite YA romances of all time.

I look forward to reading whatever Cammie releases next, I love her writing style and ability to tell a story that will definitely tug at the heart strings and leave you with a smile on your face.

Highly recommended.

I give this 5/5 stars.


Cammie McGovern was born in Evanston, Illinois, but moved to Los Angeles when she was seven years old. She is the author of three adult novels,The Art of SeeingEye Contact, and Neighborhood WatchSay What You Will will be published by HarperTeen in June, 2014. She currently lives in Amherst, MA, with her husband and three sons, the oldest of whom is autistic.

Website + Facebook Twitter + Goodreads


Wednesday 4 June 2014

Blog Tour, Excerpt & (ARC) Book Review (337): Take Back The Skies (Take Back The Skies #1) - Lucy Saxon


I'm delighted to take part in this blog tour for Take Back The Skies, this is a fantastic book from a young and talented author who looks set to have a bright future as an emerging writer, check out the excerpt that will be underneath my review

Be sure to stop by all these other blogs taking part in this blog tour as well.
Monday, June 2: Lili’s Reflections
Tuesday, June 3: Finding Bliss in Books
Wednesday, June 4: Head Stuck in a Book
Thursday, June 5On Starships and Dragonwings
Friday, June 6: Skye’s Scribblings
Monday, June 9: The Bookish Daydreamer
Tuesday, June 10Jessabella Reads
Wednesday, June 11: Hello Chelly 
Thursday, June 12: That Artsy Reader Girl
Friday, June 13: The Windy Pages


Take Back the Skies (Take Back the Skies #1)

by 
Take Back The Skies is the fantastic first book in what is sure to be a brilliant series from debut author Lucy Saxon.

Set in a world where skyships are a mode of transport, and children once they hit the age of thirteen are rounded up as part of the Collections, where firstborn's aren't taken however any siblings born after them are taken to be trained to be soldiers in the ongoing war.

Catherine 'Cat' is the daughter and only heir of Nathaniel Hunter the head of the Anglyan government, Cat's Father is a cruel man whom is disappointed that he never had a son, and any wrong move and Cat gets beaten for it, and her Mother who has been bed-ridden for most of Cat's life is dying and she will soon be left all alone with her Father whom she despises.

Cat is desperate to get away before her Father marries her off to a boy who only cares about the money she'll bring into the marriage, so one day she manages to sneak away from her Father to the shipyard where she climbs aboard the skyship 'Stormdancer', she soon finds herself feeling like a part of a family with all of the people onboard, as well as developing a crush on a boy named Fox whom she more often than not finds herself butting heads with.

After Cat discovers that not only is there no war, there hasn't been one in seven years she with the help of her shipmates plan to overthrow the government, and it's through the planning and sneaking into and around the government building that it becomes clear to Cat and everyone just what happened to those children who were supposedly sent to war, it's horrifying and nothing that I could have ever guessed in a million years.

There was a little bit of romance, none of that insta-love just feelings developed over time which was so cute and sweet.

And then the end happened, which was a huge shock, and those of you who've read the book will know exactly what I'm talking about, I ended up shedding quite a few tears.

I'm intrigued to see where this series will go next, I assumed that the threat was pretty much taken care of in this book so it will be interesting to see what is planned for the next one, but I thoroughly enjoyed the concept and world-building in this story, the characters were entertaining and not at all annoying in any way.

I eagerly anticipate the next book so I can carry on enjoying this world that Lucy has brought to life.

Highly recommended.

I give this 4/5 stars.

Exercept.

 Chapter 1

Rain fell lazily from charcoal-coloured clouds as Catherine Hunter sprinted through darkening streets, her long hair tied in a tight braid and tucked beneath a black knitted cap. Her thick woollen coat and black work trousers disguised her gender quite nicely. She was practically unrecognisable; only the people who knew her well would have been able to tell who she was.
A faint smile tugged at her lips as she reached the familiar tree beside the high stone wall that surrounded the area in which she lived. It took barely any effort to swing herself up into its branches, the knots worn into footholds by constant use. With practised ease, she scrambled up as high as she could manage, edging on to an outstretched branch that just brushed the wall’s peak. From there it was just a short jump over the wall, her thud upon landing muffled by the grass. Taking no longer than a second to regain her balance, she resumed running, diving into a gap at the base of a bush. The fence panel behind it was open, as she’d left it, and she crawled through without a care for the mud on her clothes. Her father would never see them.
Flitting across the garden to the back door, she pulled a pin from her hair and slid it into the lock, opening it effortlessly. Leaving her boots at the very back of the hall closet, she shut the door soundlessly behind her, hurrying in socked feet towards the stairs. It was her habit to be silent, though she knew she was unlikely to draw her father from his office. Catherine would rather not risk it; the punishment for sneaking out was one she didn’t like to think about.
After a brief detour to her bedroom to change into more appropriate clothing, Catherine wandered down to the living room, pulling her hair loose as she did so. She was unsurprised to see the newscast screen on in the corner; rarely did her father turn it off, even if he was nowhere near it. She sank on to the plush grey carpet, pulling her knees up to her chest and trying to regulate her breathing. Her father probably wouldn’t want her to join him for dinner, but if he did decide to summon her and she gave herself away by looking out of breath, she could expect to be unable to sit down for at least a week.
She sighed to herself as upbeat music began to blare from the newscast screen and another recruitment broadcast played out. She wished that, just once, they might show something other than the war. Yes, she understood that the war with Mericus was important and people wanted to know what was going on – but didn’t people also want to know what was going on in Siberene, or how the storms were in the East?
‘Your child will be one of many, expertly trained to protect their country,’ the cast told her in a proud, tinny voice. She sighed once more, tightly hugging her knees. Had she been a common child she would have been one of those sent to fight so the adults could stay behind and keep the country from crumbling. She wasn’t sure whether to be thankful for her birth, or dismayed by it. Surely even war was better than the life of pseudo-freedom she had now. No amount of sneaking out to roam the streets could change the fact that she was trapped by her father’s demands and expectations.
Gears whirred and she looked up to see the family servant – a mecha she had affectionately named Samuel – walking jerkily into the room, a tray of food in his claw-like hand.
‘Is Father not eating dinner with me, Sam?’ she asked, standing to accept the tray. The purple-white glow in Sam’s eyes dimmed.
‘No, Miss Catherine. Master Nathaniel is working,’ he answered in his gravelly voice. Nathaniel was always working. Not that Catherine minded, as she liked being able to eat without being interrogated or insulted.
Sam reached out a thick bronze arm to straighten the silk throw over the back of the sofa, puffs of pale purple steam spilling from the thin chimney on his shoulder in time with the mechanical tick of his metal insides. ‘And Mother?’ she asked, setting her plate on the low table and sitting on the floor to eat. 
‘Mistress Elizabeth is sleeping.’
Her mother was always sleeping these days. Sleeping, crying or having a shaking fit. Her father kept telling her that the doctors were doing their best, but she couldn’t remember the last time she’d seen a doctor at the house.
They had probably given up, just like her father, and were waiting for Elizabeth Hunter to die.
‘Thank you, Samuel. You may leave.’
Catherine half-heartedly forked potatoes into her mouth. From the living room, there was a very good view of the shipyard, second only to the view from her bedroom. She spent a lot of time staring at the shipyard, watching skyships lifting gracefully into the air with canvas wings outstretched, the propellers beneath giving enough momentum for the ships to quickly latch on to the fierce updraughts that wound through the docks. How she wished to fly in a skyship: the freedom, the boundless space, with no expectations from anyone but herself and her crew. The ability to travel to countries she only dreamed of seeing, meeting new people and immersing herself in different cultures . . .
But that was all a fantasy.
She was destined – as her father had reminded her many times – to marry a high-born man, and produce many strong, healthy little boys and beautiful, gentle little girls to continue the family line. Though her father educated her like he would a son, that didn’t extend to learning about the family business as a proper heir should. She was to serve her husband in every way, obey his orders, and swear fealty to the Anglyan government – just as her mother had. No one asked her whether she wanted to swear fealty, or raise lots of children, or even marry a respectable man, she thought resentfully. What if she wanted to marry a scoundrel? Gods, how she wished she could be a commoner! She would give up some luxuries for freedom of choice –
‘Are you watching those silly ships again, Catherine?’
She jumped at the familiar sharp voice, almost spilling gravy down her blouse. Turning, Catherine tried not to grimace upon seeing her father’s tall, imposing form in the doorway, his jaw set and his dark blue eyes stern.
‘Yes, Father. And they’re not silly! They’re beautiful,’ she insisted petulantly, for once, sounding much younger than her fourteen years.
Her father laughed coldly.
‘Rusting piles of gears and timber, that’s all they are. You’d best remove all that fanciful dreaming from your head now. It won’t get you very far.’
Catherine didn’t say anything; she knew better than to argue by now.
‘I need to tell you something,’ Nathaniel declared, and she refrained from rolling her eyes. Storms forbid her father talk to her just because he wanted to.
‘You will be accompanying me to the dockside office tomorrow morning. I have a meeting with Thomas to discuss cutting rations, and he wishes you to be present.’
‘Of course, Father,’ she agreed, trying to hide her distaste. The only reason Thomas Gale wanted her there was to discuss her betrothal to his loathsome son Marcus. He was an arrogant, bull-headed boy whom she despised with every fibre of her being, but her opinion mattered little. It
was a good match from a political perspective and her own feelings were irrelevant.
‘Good. Wear your best dress, I want you presentable,’ her father instructed, eyeing with distaste her plain white blouse and tatty leather breeches. ‘I intend to formally offer the betrothal contract, though I can’t submit it as you’re not yet a woman.’
Catherine nodded dutifully, thanking her lucky stars for her late development, and Nathaniel left the room, no doubt to go back to his office and continue working. Sometimes she wondered if he ever actually slept.

Text copyright © 2014 by L. A. Saxon




Lucy Saxon is 19 and lives in Hertfordshire with her parents. She describes herself as a cosplayer, con-goer, book-lover and all-round nerdgirl. 

Lucy wrote her first novel, Take Back the Skies, at the age of sixteen, finding a home for it with Bloomsbury at seventeen, and is now working on the rest of the series. 

When not writing, Lucy spends most of her time on the internet, reading books and slaving over her sewing machine.



Sunday 1 June 2014

(ARC) Book Review (336): Nantucket Red (Nantucket #2) - Leila Howland

T

Nantucket Red (Nantucket #2)

Publication: 13th May 2014
Publisher: Disney-Hyperion
Pages: 288
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Age Appropriate: Young Adult
Cricket Thompson's lifetime of overachieving has paid off: she's headed to Brown University in the fall, with a spot on the lacrosse team and a scholarship that covers almost everything. Who knew living in the dorm cost money? An Ivy League education seems to mean living at home for the next four years.

When Cricket is offered the chance to earn enough cash to afford a real college experience, she heads back to Nantucket for the summer. But the faraway island challenges Cricket in ways she hadn't anticipated. It's hard to focus on earning money for next year, when she finds her world opening up in entirely new ways-to art, to travel, and, most unexpectedly, to a future completely different from the one she has been working toward her whole life. A friendship blossoms with Ben, the gorgeous surfer and bartender who encourages Cricket to be free, even as she smarts at the pain of seeing Zack, her first love, falling for her worst enemy.

But one night, when Cricket finally lets herself break all her own rules, she realizes she may have ruined her carefully constructed future with one impulsive decision. Cricket must dig deep to fight for her future, discovering that success isn't just about reaching goals, but also about listening to what she's been trying to ignore-her own heart.
My Thoughts.
Nantucket Red is the second book in the Nanucket series by Leila Howland, a fun, fresh and addictive contemporary romance read.

We catch up with Cricket, home from her previous Summer at Nantucket and ready to tackle life at Brown University, after a misunderstanding where she asks Zack if they could put a pause on their relationship she soon discovers that Zack  the brother of her best-friend Jules is dating Parker, a mean girl who has known both Jules and Zack from their many years spent together on Nantucket during Summer.

Heartbroken at the loss, she makes her way back to Nantucket to raise the money she'll need to stay in the dorms at University, she soon makes the acquaintance of Ben, a bartender at Breezes where she has scored herself a job as a waitress, they find they are kindred souls as they have both recently ended relationships, but Cricket finds herself struggling to let go of her first love and it doesn't get any easier when she realises that Zack is on the island with Parker and she tries her best to avoid them as much as possible.

With her friend Lisa suffering from relationship woes as well and falling into a state of depression, Cricket finds herself running the inn as well as waitressing, exhausted with no days off she makes the mistake of letting her hair down and getting drunk, and making a mistake that will jeopardise her place at Brown University, Cricket comes to realise that what she thought she wanted may not be what she actually wants after all.

I really enjoyed this sequel, it was just as good as the first book Nantucket Blue, I enjoyed catching up with all of these characters and this book wrapped the series up perfectly, I'll definitely be on the lookout for future releases from Leila, I thoroughly enjoyed her writing and I look forward to more books from her.

I give this 4/5 stars.


LEILA HOWLAND loves to read, explore L.A., and engage in funny and meaningful conversations with her friends and family, especially her brother who calls from Washington D.C. whenever he’s waiting for the bus. A lot gets discussed in those phone calls, but they tend to end abruptly when the bus shows up. She can really cut the rug, but wishes she could sing without people covering their ears. A graduate of Georgetown University, Leila spent five years acting in New York where she was a company member of the award-winning Flea Theater in Tribeca. It was a lot of fun and she often talks about “getting back into it.” The closest she has come was a stint as an extra on The Young and the Restless in 2010. Leila now lives in Los Angeles with her husband and two dogs. NANTUCKET BLUE is her first novel.



Wednesday 28 May 2014

(ARC) Book Review (335): Rebel (Reboot #2) - Amy Tintera


Rebel (Reboot #2)

**Warning Contains Spoilers From The First Book**

Rebel is the second book in Amy Tintera's amazing Reboot series.

Told through the dual perspectives of Wren (one-seventy-eight) and Callum (twenty-two), we pick up right where we left off at the end of Reboot, Wren and Callum have escaped their HARC facility whilst also breaking out all the Reboots from the Austin facility as well.

Making it to the Reservation, a place that was believed to be more myth than reality, they all find themselves overjoyed to finally be free from HARC and in a place where it's just Reboots, with no humans to be seen.

Run by a Reboot named Micah (one-sixty-three) who was experimented on by HARC for many years, anti HARC and humans, he believes himself superior because of his number, but he soon starts to show his true colors, when one of Wren's friends finds herself being punished by him for not seeing things his way Wren and Callum realise how cruel he actually is.

Micah doesn't take to kindly to Wren stopping the punishment, added to the fact that she and the rest of the Reboots she arrived with are against his plans of eliminating all humans and it isn't long before he gets his revenge.

In the absence of Wren, Callum really steps it up in this book, with everybody looking to him for guidance and leadership, he finally feels like he's more than just Wren's boyfriend, although he'd much rather leave the fighting to her.

With quite a few new characters to love or loathe, Rebel is as exciting as Reboot was, and while I'm unsure as to whether or not this series is a duology or a trilogy I'm pretty happy with the way this book ended, whether it's the end or not I look forward to reading whatever Amy writes and releases in the future, she has definitely become an auto-buy author for me.

A wonderful series with excellent world building and a plot that will keep you intrigued and thirsty for more, there's nothing that I can fault, brilliant all round.

I give this 5/5 stars.


Hi! I’m Amy Tintera, and I write novels for young adults. I grew up in Austin, Texas and graduated from Texas A&M University with a degree in journalism. After receiving a masters in film at Emerson College I moved to Los Angeles, where I promptly discovered I didn’t enjoy working in the film industry, and went back to my first love, writing.
REBOOT and REBEL are published by HarperCollins/HarperTeen. Film rights have been optioned by Fox, and the books have sold in ten countries.


Monday 19 May 2014

(ARC) Book Review (334): After The End (After The End #1) - Amy Plum


After the End (After the End #1)

Publication: 6th May 2014
Publisher: HarperTeen
Pages: 336
Genre: Paranormal
Age Appropriate: Young Adult
She’s searching for answers to her past. They’re hunting her to save their future.

World War III has left the world ravaged by nuclear radiation. A lucky few escaped to the Alaskan wilderness. They've survived for the last thirty years by living off the land, being one with nature, and hiding from whoever else might still be out there.

At least, this is what Juneau has been told her entire life.

When Juneau returns from a hunting trip to discover that everyone in her clan has vanished, she sets off to find them. Leaving the boundaries of their land for the very first time, she learns something horrifying: There never was a war. Cities were never destroyed. The world is intact. Everything was a lie.

Now Juneau is adrift in a modern-day world she never knew existed. But while she's trying to find a way to rescue her friends and family, someone else is looking for her. Someone who knows the extraordinary truth about the secrets of her past.
My Thoughts.
I loved this book, it was filled with action, magic, betrayal and romance.

After The End is hard to put into any one genre, I know from the cover and the title that most people think that it's a dystopian (and I did too before reading it myself) but that can't be further from the truth.
It certainly has it's paranormal aspects but it's also a contemporary as well.

Following Juneau (I have no idea how to pronounce this name so in my head it's Juno) who lives with her Father and a clan of people in Alaska close to Mount Denali, safe from the rest of the world after World War 3 and it's destruction, they live a quiet life led by their clan leader Whit, the children are taught from an early age about connecting to the Yara (a magic dependent on nature and connection to the Earth) to be able to conjure and read things, Juneau is training to one day be the Sage (clan leader) and so is depended on for all sorts of tasks, which is how she finds herself off hunting one day and on her return discovers that the whole clan has been kidnapped, so she sets off to find and rescue them.

Stepping over the boundary of their land which they've been forbidden to do in case of nuclear fallout from the war, Juneau soon discovers that what she and all the rest of the clan were told and were led to believe was one big lie, there was never any war and the rest of the world has been going along as per normal all that time, ever since Whit moved them all to their home in Alaska in 1984, realising that her whole life has been a lie, she commandeers Miles a boy whose name she got from an Oracle to transport her to where she needs to go, not knowing that he is the son of the head of a large pharmaceutical company and he's planning on delivering her to his Dad who is one of a group of two people who are after her for the knowledge she has about some drug that her clan used and they will stop at nothing to get it.

After a while Miles starts to have second thoughts about taking her to his Dad, although at first he believes she's crazy he soon starts to believe her story, and it's not long before they develop feelings for one another.

But with two different groups after her, and the betrayal of a clan member will she ever be able to get to the rest of her clan to rescue them, or will Juneau find herself captured before then, unable to save anyone?

The concept that Amy has created is so well done, it will keep you on your toes and after the ending you'll find yourself desperate to get your hands on a copy of the second book.

A fantastic story with well written characters and even better world building, a great start to this new series.

I give this 4/5 stars.


Amy Plum is the author of DIE FOR ME, a YA series set in Paris. The first three books—DIE FOR ME, UNTIL I DIE, and IF I SHOULD DIE—are international bestsellers, and have been translated into eleven different languages. The fourth book is an eNovella, entitled DIE FOR HER. The first book of Amy’s new series, AFTER THE END, releases in May 2014.
After being raised in Birmingham, Alabama, in a rather restrictive environment, AMY PLUM escaped to Chicago to an even more restrictive environment at a university that expelled people for dancing. (And where she was called to the dean’s office for “wearing too much black”.) After all of that restrictiveness, she was forced to run far far away, specifically to Paris, France, where she only wore black and danced all she wanted.
After five years in Paris, she ventured to London, where she got an M.A. in Medieval Art History, specializing in Early Sienese Painting (1260-1348) mainly because it promised almost no hope of finding a paying job afterward.
Amy managed to find work in the world of art and antiques in New York. But after almost a decade of high-pressure lifestyle in the Big Apple, she swapped her American city for a French village of 1300 inhabitants.
After signing with HarperCollins for the DIE FOR ME series, Amy left her job as an English professor at Tours University to write full-time. She now lives in Paris with her two children.
She is a huge fan of Edward Gorey and Maira Kalman (and collects both of their books and art), as well as David Sedaris, Amadeo Modigliani, and Ira Glass.
Website  You can also post questions and comments on my Facebook page.
My Goodreads page is here. My HarperCollins author microsite is here. My Amazon page is here. And here are my Tweets!

Saturday 17 May 2014

(ARC) Book Review (333): Her Perfect Mate (X-Ops #1) - Paige Tyler


Her Perfect Mate (X-Ops #1)

Her Perfect Mate is a blend of action/adventure, romance with a paranormal aspect featuring shifters working for a secret government department named EVA, all rolled together to bring to life this fresh, exciting, edge of your seat story.

Ivy is a feline shifter who has not had much luck with work partners, after her previous two partners scorned her for what she was, she had no high hopes for her new partner Landon of special forces pulled from a mission to work with Ivy, but the sparks soon fly and the chemistry is hot between these two, if only there wasn't a rule forbidding them to be together.

Sent on various missions together which helps each other trust one another more, they battle their intense attraction to one another as well as the interference of fellow shifter Buchanan who has the hots for Ivy, unfortunately for him she doesn't reciprocate his feelings which only leads to fights between him and Landon, but when they are sent on a mission to investigate the rumors of a bioweapon being built are true, they find themselves in more trouble than they can handle, can they survive long enough to finally admit their feelings for one another or will it all be too late.

Paige has crafted a story that will have you intensely focused on nothing but this book, the characters are well written and fleshed out and the world building is so well done you don't feel like you've missed out on knowing anything, the concept was executed well and left me wanting more.
I look forward to continuing on with this series, I'm really anxious to know who's book is next.

Great book, highly recommended.

I give this book 4/5 stars.


Paige is a USA Today Bestselling Author. She graduated from The 
University of West Florida with a degree in education in 2000, but 
decided to pursue a full-time career as a writer in 2004. Since then, 
she’s written over fifty books in several genres, including paranormal, 
contemporary, western, sci-fi and erotica. She loves writing about 
strong, sexy, alpha males and the feisty, independent women who fall 
for them. From verbal foreplay to sexual heat, her stories of romance, 
adventure, suspense, passion and true love will leave you breathlessly 
panting for more.

She and her very own military hero (also known as her husband) live 
on the beautiful Florida coast with their adorable fur baby (also known 
as their dog). Paige graduated with a degree in education, but decided 
to pursue her passion and write books about hunky alpha males and 
the kickbutt heroines who fall in love with them.

When not working on her latest book, Paige enjoys reading, jogging, 
P90X, Yoga, Pilates, going to the beach, watching NFL football, 
watching movies and hanging out with her husband (not necessarily in 
that order!)

Some Fun Facts about Paige…
She loves anything and everything Disney related, and has pictures with every Disney character to prove it.

Her favorite Disney characters are Tigger, Pooh, Goofy and Tinkerbell.

She's addicted to dark chocolate, Pinterest and Sephora.

She'll tell you she's not exactly the outdoor type, but yet she loves the beach.

She studied ballet for twelve years.

She went to art school, and yes, figure drawing was her favorite class (probably because all the nude models were male!)

She collects Barbie Dolls, plush animals and Jim Shore Disney.

She's just as likely to have Rhianna, Lady Gaga, Pitbull, Ke$ha, Black Eyed Peas and LMFAO on her iPod as she is Billy Idol, 
Foreigner and Golden Earring (if you can dance to it, it's probably on there!)

Must-See TV :
Current Shows –Supernatural (she has a huge thing for Sam and Dean!)Bones (she has a thing for Booth, too!)The Walking Dead
Teen Wolf
Psych
Shows That Should Still Be On –Buffy the Vampire SlayerAngel (no other vamp comes close!)Charmed
Stargate Atlantis
 (one word - Ronan!)Kim Possible

On Her Bookshelf:Suzanne Brockmann’s Troubleshooters SeriesTracie Puckett's Just a Little SeriesJohanna Lindsey’s Book (all of them!)
Kat Martin’s 
Hot Rain and Nothing But VelvetShelley Thacker’s Into the SunsetStephanie Meyer's Twilight SeriesKelley Armstrong’s Otherworld SeriesJ.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter SeriesTracie Puckett's Jast a Little SeriesLisi Harrison's Monster High Series

Favorite Movies:Lord of the Rings Trilogy
Disney's The Little Mermaid
Disney's Beauty and the Beast
Disney's Frozen
Hidalgo
Avatar
Thor
Marvel's The Avengers (Mostly because Thor was in it!)
Star Trek (the reboot rocks!)

Guys She’s Got a Thing For (Besides her hubby, of course, but that’s obvious!)Viggo Mortensen
David Boreanaz
Jensen Ackles
Jared Padelecki
Jason Momoa
Chris Hemsworth




Friday 16 May 2014

(ARC) Book Review (332): Frisky Business - Tawna Fenske


Frisky Business

Publication: 6th May 2014
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
Pages: 352
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Age Appropriate: Adult
Marley Cartman is fed up with arrogant rich guys who treat her like garbage, so she vows to only date men with modest paychecks and a little dirt under their nails. 

Her new boss, William Barclay, is exactly the kind of man she's trying to avoid: an eccentric millionaire with duct shape shoes and an unexplained vendetta against her. 

But as Will and Marley butt heads over grumpy badgers and phallic artifacts, they discover that sometimes the opposite of what you want is exactly what you need.
My Thoughts.
Frisky Business is a hilarious romp of a contemporary romance, laugh out loud funny with a cast of characters that will leave you grinning and eager to read more.

I don't very often get to read romance books that have an element of comedy scattered throughout, the combination of that and the burgeoning relationship between our leads Marley and Will is what makes this book stand out.

From the first time these two meet I knew I was in for an enjoyable reading experience, the sexual innuendo's that were thrown into nearly every conversation were gold, to be able to do this tastefully takes some talent and Tawna has definitely managed to do this here.

Marley has a new plan for dating, only date those with a modest income more blue collar than the men she's dated or prime example her ex-fiancee, so of course when she meets Will scruffily dressed wearing slippers that are held together by duct tape volunteering at an animal shelter she's instantly attracted, of course it doesn't help that he's extremely attractive either, so after a bit of flirting and Marley adopting a dog they go their separate ways, Will soon discovers she forgot some paperwork and her dog's free kibble and offers to deliver them to her house, and it's not long till these two are making out.

So it comes as a bit of a surprise that on the first day of her new job as a Development Director at the Wildlife Sanctuary/Historical Society that she's in a meeting with the board of directors and the head of the board is none other than Will, or to be more precise William Barclay The Fifth, millionaire!
And to discover that there is no fraternising allowed between board members or directors, between that rule, the fact that Will is not as blue collar as Marley was led to believe although he acts and dresses as one, then that he has severe trust issues and if that wasn't enough some artifacts that Marley was waiting to have appraised go missing and she gets blamed for it, in amongst all that can they somehow find a way to make a relationship work?

I adored this story, Tawna is a terrific author and I'll be sure to check out her other books, one of my favorites of the year.

Everybody needs to pick this one up!

I give this 5/5 stars.



When I was six, my mom caught me thumbing through The Joy of Sex while watching Saturday morning cartoons.
When I was ten, I got summoned to the principal’s office for making anatomically-correct clay models of Huck Finn and Jim during a unit on Mark Twain.
When I was 22, I celebrated my English Lit degree by filling a giant black trash bag full of romance novels and dragging it everywhere until I’d read them all.
When I was 32, my cat died, my publisher canceled the line scheduled to release my debut novel, and my employer threatened to fire me for refusing to wear pantyhose—all on my birthday—and I sat down on my back deck with a glass of wine, smiled at the sunset, and thought, “if I can find the humor in this, I can find it in damn near anything.”
In a nutshell, that’s how I became an author of quirky romantic comedy.
I traveled a career path that meandered from newspaper reporter to English teacher in Venezuela to medical marketing geek to PR manager for my city’s tourism bureau.
I have a degree in English Lit, a membership in Romance Writers of America, and a habit of spilling food on my boobs. When I’m not writing, I’m usually busy sipping wine, reading, experimenting in my kitchen (either on gourmet meals or as research for one of my risqué scenes), hiking, snowshoeing, standup paddleboarding, or contorting myself into odd positions (either for yoga or for the aforementioned research).
An avid globetrotter and social media fiend, I blog at Don’t Pet Me, I’m Writing, routinely overshare on Facebook, and can be found making tasteless jokes in 140 characters or less on Twitter.
My debut romantic comedy with Sourcebooks, Making Waves, was nominated for Best Contemporary Romance in the 2011 RT Book Reviewers’ Choice Awards, and the Chicago Tribune noted, “Fenske’s wildly inventive plot and wonderfully quirky characters provide the perfect literary antidote to any romance reader’s summer reading doldrums.”
My second romantic comedy, Believe it or Not, prompted Library Journal to write, “Fenske’s sophomore effort…is another riotous trip down funny bone lane, with a detour to slightly askew goings on and a quick u-ey to out-of-this-world romance. Readers will be enchanted by this bewitching fable from a wickedly wise author.” Naturally, that prompted me to hug the reviewer until she peed.
In addition to my romantic comedies, I write novellas and novels for Entangled Publishing, as well as a series of interactive romantic capers for Coliloquy (think choose-your-own-adventure meets romantic comedy).
I currently live in Bend, Oregon with my fiancé, his offspring, and more pets than I can admit to without frightening my neighbors.
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