Thursday, October 14, 2021

Loyal: Little Red Riding Hood retelling

 I received a free copy of Loyal by Kristina J Jordan via Storyorigin in exchange for an honest review.

It’s an interesting take on Little Red Riding Hood, although the beginning did have me question if it was a little red riding hood retelling (the silkworms and introduction to the characters threw me off).

Gunther is my favorite character because any guy who is willing to drop all of his duties to help you on your quest to find your mother despite you saying no and rescuing you from wolves is a keeper. My only major complaints are that a) there wasn’t a lot of build up to the romance and hardly any romantic tension especially since she was pretending that she despised him because he wasn’t hers. Which leads me to point b, I wished it had indicated that the person she saw was a girl because I thought Gunther was a closeted gay. In my defence, Katherine always talked about men after being all I saw Gunther with someone he can never be mine. He will always be loyal to Prince Frederick and forgive me if I spelled it wrong).

Also most of the names were very similar so the author would mix up the characters names (ex. Avella would become Althea and vice versa). That coupled with the fact it jumped around a lot led to a very fun, crazy, confusing ride.

Highly recommend for those looking for a different Red Riding Hood retelling.

4.25 out of 5 stars for all the moments between Gunther and Katherine.

Sunday, October 3, 2021

Daughter of the Sky Alison Blasdell

 I received a free copy of Daughter of the Sky by Alison Blasdell in exchange for an honest review.

This book was not for me. I wanted to try reading it because it sounded like Outlander, but more my speed and who doesn't love a book that has King Henry VIII in it with an illegitimate daughter?

Yeah, it was not what I thought it was because I was also under the impression that this was the first book and upon finding out it was not, well, I had hoped most of the issues had been resolved in the first book. It flip flopped between the past and present too much that I could not get a firm grasp on who the characters were, and Jen collapses way too many times in this book.

The pacing felt rushed and clunky in places to the point I skimmed the book and started skipping huge sections of it. It had potential, but it reminded me why I don't read books with historical aspects in it.

My one positive about this book was I loved the dogs.

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Married by Monday

 I received an e-arc of Married by Monday from the author (Cathryn Brown) in exchange for an honest review.

If you love books that have small towns, fake (real) marriages, wholesome characters, clean romances, a tight knit community, and discovering the beauty of chances then this is the book for you.

Married by Monday is too cute to put into words. The world building was gorgeous and the characters are perfection especially Micah and Bella. The two of them together are adorable and their relationship 😍 (why is there no emoji of clutching a hand to heart or swooning). This book made me swoon, laugh, cry, and shake my head. There were several “oh Bella, what are we going to do with you” moments. Yes, Bella I’m looking at you disappearing in the middle of the night instead of sitting down and talking to your husband. Goes to a sketchy motel instead *sighs*.

Micah’s grandfather who instigated the whole be married by Monday or become a law partner with him by Monday or else none of the children will see a cent of their inheritance. Oh, it gets worse but I’ll let you read the book and bask in how shred the grandfather really is.

And the picnic tables 😂 oh Bella only she would do something so out of the box even I didn’t think about that color. And the town’s reaction to it: priceless.

I could go on and on about this book’s praises from the how do we not sleep in the same bed to how can Bella save her business and the small town of Two Hearts.

It is such a delicious read and if you like your romances clean you will not regret this book. Highly recommend you snag a copy for yourself.

500 out of 5 stars.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Review for Brigand Children

 


I received an arc from the author in exchange for an honest review.

The Brigand Children by Lainey Delaroque is an interesting sequel. Honestly, I don’t feel like it should be labeled as a stand-alone because it relies heavily on things that happened in the first book to shape the characters. If you have not read the first book The Lavender Phantom you might struggle with this book a bit because it talks a lot about what happened in the first book but you need to have read the first book to understand why it affects them so much because I feel like it was downplayed in this sequel. That is the only negative thing I will say about the book.

Now onto the positives:

Sophie and Damien are so sweet and I love how they take care of each other. They will never do anything the other one is uncomfortable with, nor will they push for it. There are a couple kinky sex scenes, but it was okay reading then because of the love and respect that they have for each other. I love that because so many times authors feel the need to have the male be dominate and not respect the woman which makes those books not okay in my book. I’m glad Lainey did not feel the need to go down that route it made me love Damien even more. I was kind of hoping for more of Damien’s past* and feel like it could have been fleshed out more, but the little bits and pieces that we did get were beautiful. 

*I thought we’d get things like how he built the club in the first place, the meeting of Pen for the first time, their marriage etc. Those were the things that intrigued me, but I’m okay with learning a bit about his father and the birth of their son. I guess those things are important to Damien.

The world building was good. It didn’t really build much in this one and was mostly things we know in the first book.

There is just something about sequels that never seem to meet up to the expectations of the first book.

4 out of 5 stars.

Monday, September 6, 2021

Cover Reveal for Veritas by A L Woods


 I'm so excited to be part of the cover reveal for Veritas by A L Woods. All photos are not my own.

For your information, here is the information at Grey Productions was willing to provide.

Releasing October 6, 2021

Blurb

Maria

It was supposed to be a fling.
A one-night stand.
Then Jordan Kovacs asked for more.
A date. I don't dateI f*ck.
While he showered, I left.

The end.
Or so I thought. I have a problem.
My ex-f*ck buddy is getting married.
And I can't get out of goinglong story.
I need an arrangement I can understand from a man who only had me for a night.
But Jordan has other plans for me.
Things that will tip the scales in his favor.

Jordan

A tryst was what she was looking for.
A date was what I wanted.
A chance.
I understand Maria Tavares.
She's a beautiful lie.
Now she needs something from me: a favor.
So I'll function in a way she can understand: an arrangement.
Three months.
All in. Strings attached. No interferences. Titles exchanged.
The plan is simple, with only one ruleveritas.
Let's see if Maria's ex-f*ck buddy understands that, too.



Cover Designer: Ana Beatriz Cabús Rangel


Preorder today on Amazon!

US: https://amzn.to/3yfNnG4

WW: http://mybook.to/veritas


Goodreads: https://bit.ly/3emkJuZ


If you want information on the author or would like to connect with her (whatever you need to do before deciding to buy a book).


Meet A.L. Woods



A.L. Woods is an author of rollercoaster romances, caffeine aficionado, and collector of Sailor Moon paraphernalia.

She lives 40 minutes west of Toronto, Ontario with her partner, Michael, and their 8lb larger-than-life miniature dachshund, Maia-whom they lovingly refer to as their 'doghter.'

Woods can be found holed away in her office writing her next novel with a bowl of Nibs within arm's reach. When she's not writing, she's likely belting out an ad-libbed song, emotionally investing in a fictional bad boy with a strong jawline and fluency in sarcasm or inventing fresh ways to procrastinate.

She believes that burritos should be in their own food group, loves the fall, winged liner, and listening to metalcore at an offensive level.

 

Connect with A.L.

Website | amandawrites.ca

Goodreads | https://bit.ly/3oC8U67

Amazon | https://amzn.to/2YCdaYG

Facebook | https://bit.ly/3tr5G9k

Facebook Group | https://bit.ly/3oFL0qp

Instagram | https://bit.ly/2YxC6R0

Twitter | https://bit.ly/3cq2gxs

Pinterest | https://bit.ly/3oKl7G8

BookBub | https://bit.ly/3CgDnP8

Newsletter | https://bit.ly/2YCitrf


I hope this is enough information and that you will decide to give this book a go. You never know when a book might be the one you needed in your life until it is in your life.




Monday, August 30, 2021

The Crow Rider by Kalyn Josephson

I did receive a copy of The Crow Rider by Kalyn Josephson via NetGalley and the publisher, but the only reason I got a copy was because of a bookclub that no longer exists because it did bad things. The copy I am reviewing is the newer paperback edition with the two bonus stories. I'm sorry, but I felt bad and could not in good conscience read the e-arc given to me.
Rating with the bonus stories: 5 out of 5 stars.
Rating without the bonus stories: 4 out of 5.
I loved the bonus stories and how they added to the world through characters you don't get to read about (Ericen and Kiva).
This is the one problem with sequels is that the author is assuming the readers remember things in the first book (I thought Cayus was ten with the way she was describing him, and the only character I remembered was Ericen although I thought the ending was them standing on the dock while she was on the boat, but that apparently was not the case. The crows did all get murdered though and later rediscovered in the castle, that was the only thing I remembered correctly). I guess one of the positives is that the author did not bombard us with all the info from the first book like most books are inclined to do, but it was gradually throughout the book. Good news: it wasn't information overload. Bad news: as clearly stated earlier I could not remember things from the first book, so I was lost for a vast majority of the story. There was a lot of who is this character to her again? Oh, that's who that person was. I couldn't even recall the villain, guys. 
I'm not trying to make it out like the book sucked or anything, it's just a sequel and comes with the usual bouts of not being as great as the first (does anyone know of a second book being better than the first? I cannot name one, although if you do feel free to recommend in the comments below.)
The world building was okay, but I wished the author had expanded on things a little more like the holidays and celebrations because I had no clue what any of them were for and why they needed to get there before the celebrations commenced. I did love the training of Res though and found that adorable as he got put through his paces. I do love the explanation as to why he can access all eight abilities (Sella? Seela? blood anyone).
I did love those creatures as they reminded me so much of proper fae where they are just as likely to cause mischief as they are to help you and even their help might not be so helpful. I loved how each one controlled an aspect that correlates to a crow. (oops I might have spoiled something sorry, its crossed out now y'all).
My favorite characters were Ericen and Res because both are absolute sweethearts and will do anything to protect those they care about.
I could have sworn the Sella doors were in the first book and maybe the character did not remember it because I remember reading those exact words before even though this is my first time reading this book. 
This could be a good thing or a bad thing you interpret how you wish: the battle scenes felt like something out of the LOTR movies like I was expecting Gandalf to come riding down a hill with a herd of horses and men. Thankfully, that did not happen, but I could not shake that image out of my head especially since there are a lot of parallels which I will not tell you. You will only have to read the book to see if you draw the same conclusions or if it is just me because we do a LOTR movie marathon every year (hence why I cannot spell anything).
Besides the general confusion and LoTR like battles, I liked the book overall. I will read it again preferably right after the first one to see if maybe my memory will be a little bit sharper.
4 out of 5 stars. Recommend if you don't mind sequels (honestly I feel like we cannot expect much from sequels because of how frequently there is a disconnection between the first and second).
Oh, and the second one kind of starts off where the first one ends, which was helpful (very helpful indeed in making sure I knew that I did not remember as much of the first book as I thought I did).

Saturday, August 28, 2021

Cover Reveal of The Brigand Children by Lainey Delaroque


 Cover Reveal 📕

I'm excited to be a part of the cover reveal of the second book to the Lavender Phantom by Lainey Delaroque.

I'm also excited because this is the rare times my blog has let me upload a photo onto a blog post.


✨Cover Reveal and info from the author✨
The Brigand Children: Club Lavender Duet #2 
.
Book 1 Free on KU https://bit.ly/TLD1TLPzon
Preorder Book 2 https://bit.ly/TLD1TBCzon
Blog Tour for Book 1 https://bit.ly/TLD1TLPtour
His ex stole his dream and his people. Now this fallen gang leader will rally new allies 
against an old enemy.
The Brigand Children is a romantic thriller with:
A tortured hero
A fierce heroine
A gang war
Lavish kink parties
Romance and steamy scenes

***Blurb***

After being a prisoner in his own home, Damien Grey tastes freedom for the first time in six years. Yet his
criminal past, gangster ex-wife and an unfair police charge mean that he is far from free. When he learns
some of his underlings have gone missing, he grabs the chance to investigate, prove his innocence and
come out into the light.
But the case requires Damien to enlist the help of the father he put in prison and face his deepest
insecurities. Unable and unwilling, he finds solace in the company of Sophie Taylor, a former thief and a
newcomer in Damien Grey’s life.
They choose to explore their connection while the clock dangerously ticks away. Will high-octane action
and kinky play bring them together or pull them apart? When one of the missing women turns up dead,
Damien realizes the time of reckoning is nearing faster than expected.
How long can Damien ignore his past before it catches up with those he's sworn to protect?


I do not know about anybody else, but I'm excited to read more about Damien. He's broken, but that is okay. Go grab a copy while you can.
Warnings: there will most likely be rope play, violence, abuse.
I will let you all know more about the warnings after I've read it, so people know what they are getting themselves into. However, if you are one of those people where not much fazes you then definitely grab a copy of the first one or preordered the second if you have already read the first book.

Friday, August 20, 2021

An Unmarked Grave: Is this even English

 I received a copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Let's start out with the positives, shall we? The cover to die for like it is gorgeous. The description of the book "oh good lord, it sounded like my kind of book". The title: had me hook, line and sinker.

I never made it past 2% of the book because I realized after the fifteenth mention of table that I would only  be wasting my time. The book did not do any of the positives justice and I am not convinced the book was proper English. For an author who has written several books, let's just say I was hoping for a better writing than whatever that was like most of the sentences were incomplete or had random ellipses (...) in them. Like what the heck? If I had to tell anybody about what the beginning was about I would not be able to do it. I wished the beginning did not exist because I could not even get past it to get to the knight protecting the High Priestess which sounded incredible. Alas, a book that I thought was my cup of tea got poured down the toilet and flushed.

1 out of 5 stars.

Fable by Adrienne Young

 I received a copy from NetGalley and Wednesday Books in exchange for an honest review.

Seeing as this is the first book I have read from Adrienne Young Fable is a great book, but nobody quiz me on anything about the book please 🙏 

It is a very detailed book and normally I am all for it, but I still have no answers to the world building. 

Why is it the way that it is? Why is it a world built for men? Who are the guilds and who decides who gets to be in charged of what? Why is it called the Narrows? Was the misnomer for the Unnamed Sea intentional? Why does Ceros have bridges leading up to the roofs, but no other port does? Why are storms so frequent in this world? What are gem sages and how does one become one? Is it a type of magic? (It's a cool magic if it is, but I was not clear). Why are there only coppers for monetary? How much would a copper be worth? Why is everyone so ruthless? Why can you not trust anyone with your relations or love or literally anything? Why is everyone trying to kill everyone? What is the main goal of this world? Was it always like this or did something happen to make it change? What came first the Narrows or the Unnamed Sea? Were there any people who were on the islands first? Why is Jeval considered the island of thieves when there are thieves on all of the islands? Is the Tempest Snare coral reefs or is it a carving of rocks/ice? Is the Tempest Snare supposed to be a deterrent to the people in the Narrows to stop them? Why is it so hard to navigate? How have people made it through it in the past if that is the way to the Unnamed Sea and many people have made it through there before? Is Ceros supposed to be a poor port or a middle class port because it talks about people being on the streets, but a vast majority of them were on the bridges? Is it something they do because they know the more wealthier people take the bridge? What would people do if they had no copper and had things to trade, but nobody else had any copper? Why is everybody stealing everything from everyone? Is this supposed to be like a Hunger Games but in the sea? What is the deal between Saint and Zelo (I probably totally butchered his name. This is how memorable he was to me apparently) and why are people starting wars with each other? What is so special about the city in the Unnamed Sea that has made people so cutthroat? Do they think that it will grant them favour with the guilds? And what is the deal with Holland? She gets mentioned a few times, but there is no clear explanation and you do not meet her in the book at all. I kind of wished we did just to get a better understanding of why people seem to fear her. (I don't know why they do.)

Also Auster's skin is mentioned as ivory and then a couple of pages later it is the color of wheat. What color is his skin? Because ivory is white and fair and you burn easily so technically if he was in the sun a lot it would not be ivory more of a reddish brown and wheat is more of a golden brown. It made it hard to picture him. Actually it was hard to picture any of them because sometimes it feels like the author got bogged down in the details only to throw most of it to the raging sea. This is why I am hoping nobody quizzes me on the book because it was too much detail but not enough to be like "ask me anything I can tell you anything even things that are not in the book". Honestly, I got confused quite a few times muddling through all of the details like it could give Victoria Aveyard a run for her money on the amount of detail in this book.

As someone who is directionally challenged I really wished there was more description on what was starboard and all the other sides of the boat. It was getting tiresome having to look things up because it's a great book and I finished it in a day and a half, but again those pesky details that never gave the right details. I had to look up poisons in corals and of course those pesky details, it was all forgotten about after a page. Fable mentions she will be sick and have fever and all this stuff, but she never actually gets sick or has any problems after she eats the stew. Also, after reading that the poison in the coral is enough to kill 80 people it is kind of hard believing that she was okay. She got more sick from drinking three glasses of rye than anything else in the book.

The only twist I did not see coming was at the very end and it ended on that twist (now I'm debating if I should read Namesake or not. What do you guys think for those who have read it; is it worth it?). All the other twists are so predictable and I could see them coming a mile away.

I know it sounds like I am hating on this book, but I am not trust me I became invested at around the 85% mark of the book because at that point I could not put the book down. I needed to know what Saint would do. I wanted to know if she could avoid the bad guy, Zelo/Zalo/Zaro (clearly he is so memorable to me guys that I can't remember his name after I just finished reading the book and it was the second to last name in the book:P)

West and Fable are so cute together and I will not spoil anything because the moments between them are *chef's kiss*. Willa I want to hug her and tell her she is brave. I want to smirk over Paj's and Auster's antics. I want to shake my head while hiding a smile from Hamish because secretly he is a teddy bear.

I loved all of the characters I just wished there was more because if the bad guy is any indication they didn't quite stand out from my mind. If to save my life I had to point out something unique about each character my chances of survival will be nil.

With all of that being said it is definitely a book I would consider rereading (preferably the corrected copy of it because some of the grammar made no sense "I words made me still" being an example. On it's own it could make sense but reading it in the book it was like West was talking and now you're saying I words... what do I know 🤷). Lord knows it made the inner English student in me very happy if the questions are anything to go by. English classes make me rip things apart I have no control over it anymore. It has been engrained into my brain and makes reading interesting.

4 out of 5 stars.

Thursday, August 19, 2021

Sing Me Forgotten: All Hail the Opera Ghost

 Thank you NetGalley and Inkyard Press for allowing me to read a copy in exchange for an honest review. And a huge thank you to Jessica S. Olson for writing Sing Me Forgotten. This review might contain some spoilers read at your own risk.

If anyone loves The Phantom of the Opera you will love this book. I adored it because there are so many odes to The Phantom of the Opera while still making it its own. From the chandelier falling down to Isda living in the catacombs under the opera house. This book gave me so many feels especially any interaction between Isda and Emeric.

While I adored this book there are a few things that did not make it a five star book for me. One of the reasons is that it repeats a lot and it started to get annoying after a while and I wanted to shake or throttle Isda (the only thing that stopped me was that Emeric needs her). Another is that I wanted to know more about the Les Trois instead of being told the same thing like they were terrifying and their names. Also, I wanted to know more about Rose and her lover like were they like Emeric and Isda? What made Rose's lover decide to kill all three of them? I have so many questions and feel like maybe there should have been a prologue that was in Rose's or her lover's pov that could have built into the world more because as it stood I was confused on why people feared them so much. So they were disfigured and could pull memories out of people; why did that get the reaction it did from the people? Why do they drown the babies because they think they have magic? What happens if the baby was not magical but deformed? How did they become magical? Could nonmagical people gain this magic somehow? How big is this world? Is it everywhere in this world? What made the Les Trois decide to overrun the world? Is there another solution that did not involve killing people or draining people of their memories?

Most of the questions will never be answered because it is from Isda's POV and she is kind of trapped in the opera house, so getting the answers are hard to come by. Even when she gets things that should give her answers like Cyril's book or his journal. We do not really get any answers and it makes me sad because I want to know everything about this world. Yes, they have French words, but then the King's name is Charles which has me thinking of U.K. and beheadings. It also does not help that they say no and not non. Like it was strange for me that they would be like "No merci" I kind of wish there was more French in the book even though I am atrocious at French it would be more immersive of the world.

The ending broke me because of what happened between Emeric and Isda like I had to gulp down glasses of water to prevent myself from ugly crying. As much as I loved it the ending felt rushed and unfinished as it kind of ends with her leaving, but I wanted to know where she went and did Emeric find his sister? Do the monsters get a chance to be free and independent or did her stunt ensure that they will forever be cemented as monsters? Like it felt unsatisfactory in everything, but emotional suicide. It is a stabbed in the heart, dragged through hell, and swallowing broken glass and rusty nails with a healthy dose of arsenic hurt. I won't say what exactly happens, but there is no hea in this book. Although it kind of reminded me of the ending of The Phantom of the Opera (now that had me sobbing no matter how much water I gulped down because once again the people I wanted to get together did not). Although the title and cover made so much sense with the ending.

This book reminded me of Grim Lovelies by Megan Shepherd, Fairest by Gail Carson Levine, and of course, The Phantom of the Opera. If you love/like any of these books then you will love Sing Me Forgotten.

Highly recommend.

4.5* out of 5 stars.

 *It is mostly due to the formatting of the book that it is at 4.5 and not 4. Because I am aware that this was an e-arc so the weird f ormatting and the random spaces between the f's which made it hard to interpret what was happening in the story. Plus, it would have two people talking in the same paragraph with no dialogue tags so I could not follow half of the conversations. I am hoping that the final copy has fixed all of that, so I gave the book an extra half star.

Ace of Blades

 I received an e-arc of this book via the author in exchange for an honest review.

Thank you Michael Knightly for writing Ace of Blades because it is such an enjoyable read. 

Nox is such an enjoyable character to read because he is rough around the edges and a male Bella who can actually hold his own (sort of) it is kind of hard when your enemy is fae/elf/vampire and Nox used to be in the army before becoming a trauma surgeon. He used to be a girl and the ways it is portrayed in the book is hilarious. The best thing is that the author does not feel the need to remind you that Nox is part of the LGTBQ+ community every two pages. It is gradual and little things like when he is afraid and his voice reaches an octave he has not reached in a long time or the whole lack of a cock situation (you'll have to read it to understand because I do not think it is appropriate to write on my blog). Nox is a delight because unlike Bella he actually does things throughout the book (apologies to any Twihards out there, but it is true as much as I love the book it would be better if Bella took a page out of Nox's book).

For those confused about why I keep referring to Bella is because this book reminds me so much of Twilight and the unfortunate part is that once I started to see it I could not unsee it. Except it is adult and LGTBQ+ with Curtis being a vampire/fae/ elf (I'm not too sure what he is because these terms were interchangeable throughout the book). and the boyfriend Drew is a Grim a shapeshifter that can change into the shape of patron in Drew's case he was a mountain lion. 

At first, I was against Drew because I wanted Nox and Curtis together, but toward the end of the novel he started to grow on me. I will say that he at least tried, and I love the friends reaction to Nox talking about Drew being back in his life.

Curtis is lovable and made me laugh so many times throughout the book. At least he is a thoughtful stalker and can acknowledge that he is way older than Nox and unlike Edward, he is okay with Nox being in another relationship, so long as Nox understands the consequences. I love the agreement Nox and Curtis have with each other and the contract that Nox violates within a day of having it.

I will not say much because I do not want to spoil the preciousness that is Curtis because it is too good to spoil for anyone. Ah wellness checks (read the book and you will get this).

Warning: there is kinky things that happen in this book. It is not sex more like biting/kissing (I don't know how to explain this without giving away too much). There is also violence in this book and it contains mature themes.

If you are okay with these kinds of things then you can either preorder the book on pretty much any book retailer or you can still get an e-arc from the author by going to his instagram page (I believe the book comes out in October of this year).

50 out of 5 stars.

Saturday, July 17, 2021

Ten First Dates: Anthology

 Ten First Dates is a cute anthology of love, romance and it has a little bit of everything for everyone whether you like enemies-to-lovers, friends-to-lovers, young geniuses trying to discover what feelings are, second chance romances, fake love etc.

Warning: This anthology is for a limited time in ebook format. I do not know if the books are available separately, but feel free to look them up. All opinions are my own.

I am going to be honest out of the ten books, I only DNFed one and that was the one with the young genius who is experimenting on how emotions and feelings are part of relationships. Imperfect Chemistry by Mary Frame is not a bad story, it is just not a trope I can get behind regardless of who writes it or what it is about. Young geniuses who are robots are just not my thing, but if it is yours I would recommend looking it up.

Books I loved:

On the Rox by Kat Addams is adorable. It is not what I consider a rom-com because the only thing I found hilarious was this Aussie being terrified of a squirrel (yes, Jay, I am looking at you). And Rox is dealing with past domestic abuse from the men in her life that she had dated for things to be taken as funny. Do not worry the author does have a trigger warning at the beginning of her book. Honestly, it was more romantic than comedy, which is okay. I loved how the girls stuck together and the moment when jay gave himself permission it was *chef's kiss* 4.5 out of 5 stars.

Love, Lacey Donovan by Jill Brashear is too adorable. Bookish Lacey Donovan is convinced that nothing beats book boyfriends (I mean she isn't wrong) until she sees Beckett and that is when the fun begins because she is trying to not get her heart broken. Can she succeed?

It is adorable the banter between her and Beckett. I did not see some of the twists coming although one of them was an "oh hey wouldn't it be funny if..." moment. Beckett can be my book boyfriend any day. As per Lacey's review he would be a five book boyfriend bowtie. I am not sure what the fire hydrants imply so I won't attempt that. I cannot express enough how freaking adorable this book is and I would highly recommend reading this book if you are into bookish love. 5 out of 5 stars.

Loved You Once by Claudia Burgoa is an adorable second chance romance sort of. To be honest, I kind of wished the book was longer or had started sooner because we are left with so many questions at the end. I love second chance romances, but this one it started out with Hayes being all let me make amends to you and then suddenly they were a couple again. I wanted a little more grovelling or something especially with how he had ended things which he knows as he chastised himself over it repeatedly. The entire premise of the story is follow the will, save the town, but it ends before you even know if the town is saved. I'm hoping this is more than one book, so I am reserving judgment. 4 out of 5 stars.

Love Under Construction by M.C. Cerny is too fricking adorable. Hunter Hart works construction and he is trying to help renovate an old house for his friend Taylor Jane Bryant so she can do interior design and win a contest. He is dead set against it, but somehow found himself saying yes. Oh the friend to lovers romance was *chef's kiss* and I love how Hunter tries so hard to help Taylor especially with the whole owl episode and him needing to prove that he is a man. I won't say much because honestly this book is pure gold when it comes to comedy. I still giggle thinking about certain scenes. 5 out of 5 stars.

What I'm Looking For by Karen Grey is an adorable rom-com from the late eighties. Kate Bishop is trying to get a promotion from the investment firm that she works in while Will Talbot is a starving actor who reluctantly takes Kate's advice to go into commercials and tv shows. Of course, with that it means a tighter schedule for his beloved theatre and he might flip out because change is happening. Also, he might have had family issues with money as a child. 

I love how they are so different and yet the love they have for each other had me hugging my kindle. I love how the author used her own experiences in the movie industry during that time period in the book because it gave authenticity to the plot line. I laughed and I cried. I celebrated Kate's little victories and felt embarrassed with her during those awkward moments of stage fright and anxiety. I commiserated with Will when he thought he was going to be doing the entire project by himself and I also wanted to throttle both of them when they broke up because of things from their past getting in the way of their future happiness. 4.5 out of 5 stars

Mixed Signals by Mia Heintzman is cute. Julie and Nico are adorable together, but Julie already made assumptions about him based on one conversation she overheard about a net of broken hearts and is convinced she despises him which is too bad especially after she saw him in his truck during a traffic jam. And she might have had a shower fantasy about him when he stood in the rain trying to give her shirt back to her through the window. This book is so aptly named and I will not say much because it is one of those books that you need to read without any filters to appreciate what goes on in this book. 5 out of 5 stars.

Too Tempting by Bethany Lopez is a genius of a book and I did not see that twist or conflict coming. It was quite refreshing and disturbing the longer you tried to think about it so it is best not to think too much about it. Gabriel "Gabe" Lewis is a retired NFL player who has his own camp for kids to play football away from all the hustle and bustle. Zoey Zahn is an introverted writer who got the dates mixed up so she came to the camp a week early and she does not know that Gabe is that Gabe and keeps her own identity a secret. Will it tear them apart or draw them together? Honestly, I loved every word of this book and wanted to reread it as soon as I finished reading it because Gabe is such a sweetheart. Highly recommend, and the twist is not what you think it is. 5 out of 5 stars.

Some Call It Love by Sarah Peis is adorable and makes me feel like a horrible person. I am just saying if I was in Willa's shoes I would have stopped helping my drunk gambling father out of jail a long time ago. Oh Willa, the story was so much fun with your constant trying to bail your father out while trying to not get on Jameson's bad side. The back and forth between the two of them was 😍. 1000% recommend this book. It is too funny and adorable and honestly Willa and Jameson make the story. 5 out of 5 stars.

Moonshine and Magnolias by Abigail Sharpe is an adorable book that makes me wished I knew more about Gone with the Wind to get all the little Easter eggs sprinkled throughout the book (all I know is the line "frankly my dear I don't give a darn"). Wendy, I want to hug her because she has control issues and thinks everything needs to be done a certain way and trying to get her to bend is like trying to move a solid oak trunk with your bare hands. Rob is looking for a way to end the family curse that ends with nobody ever being able to have a fulfilling relationship (yikes). It is adorable how the treasure hunt brings depth to the world and I love how the peaches play an integral role in the story. It is so 😍. (5 out of 5 stars.)

Total accumulation of stars: 43 out of 45 stars. I am not including the one I DNFed as it does not have a star rating which is intentional because I want people to give it the benefit of the doubt if it is a trope they enjoy or are not sure they will enjoy.

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Worth the Fight by Rachel Brownell

 I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review. (honestly, I cannot remember whether I got it from signing up for a newsletter, a giveaway, or from another author. The only thing I know is that it is in the documents section of my Kindle where all the books that aren't paid for go, but I'm planning on rectifying that and buying any book from this author that I can).

Worth the Fight is worth the read. It is a cute, swoon-worthy, friends-to-lovers novel. It is a fresh of air after some of the books that I have read because I love how even when Liam and Cass agree that they are worth the risk to be together they still take it slow. There is sex in the book yes, but the author has enough class to go into enough details so you know what is happening but it is not a freaking play by play of what each movement the characters are doing. Honestly, I prefer the books where yes they have sex, but it is more of a "I'll show you the beginning and then fast forward to the aftermath" over the "let's go over every single detail and call my v card the petal of my sex or some other creepy thing that has me questioning the sanity of the author".

So, thank you, Rachel, for not doing the latter one. It is part of what made me want to continue to read/buy your books and kept me glued to my reader. So if you do pick up a copy make sure you have all the necessary tissues, snacks, water (or the beverages of your choice) and that no one can disturb you because you are not going to want to put this book down.

Liam is so *chef's kiss* and he has now set my standard up again for men because anyone who is willing to do half the things he does is worth hanging onto. Also, it was very obvious that they were going to be a thing from the very beginning of the book even if you did not read the blurb and I was totally talking to Cass like "Oh stop moaning you two are going to be together and you are going to like it". Also, sorry hon, but if any guy treats you like that on your wedding day is not worth a second of your time, a lick of your salt, or whatever saying fits your fancy. I was so glad when Cass realized that and she started sticking to her principles of this is what people should do and they didn't do this so I should not give them any more time, which is a lot easier said than done. I love how Liam was there for her every step of the way and all the little twists like just when you think you have all the pieces another one sneaks on in.

I love how each character has a unique personality, but they all fit so well into the group and I am extremely jealous and wished that I had friends like that.

Kevin is the more reasonable adult in the group trying to get them to not fight while his significant other Sasha is all about egging them on (I feel like we would make such great friends), Aaron is the giant lovable joking teddy bear and I want to give him a great big hug, Liam is the leader and he gets people to listen, Cass never said much about her role in the group except she was the tomboy but I think she is more the glue to the group, and then there is the one who should not be named (no that is not her name but she is not worthy of having her name sully these pages and giving her more attention than she deserves) who is the spoiled princess, the slut who loves calling other people sluts to makes herself feel better and always has to be the centre of attention and I will stop before I start getting nasty (shows how much I despise her because she put all of the characters through hell and has no remorse.

I finished this book in three hours and have no regrets. If you love the friends-to-lovers trope than you will love Worth the Fight.

500 out of 5 stars.

Stampede of Love by Erin Wright

 I received this copy by signing up for her newsletter (it's her gift to subscribers).

Stampede of Love: A Long Valley novel by Erin Wright is a tale about a bull rider named Rex who is determined to win the rodeo so he can get back on Bodacious the bull that nearly killed him two years ago (that is a special kind of crazy right there) and Kimber-not-Kimberly who meet at a bar and are totally drunk so they have a one night stand (or did they?).

Rex was on his way to the next rodeo when his truck broke down and he walked all the way back to Sawyer where as fate would have it Kimber's dad owns the mechanic shop. It is all gold from down there.

I laughed when I found out what Rex's real name and now I want to read the book because I have never heard of it. The relationship between Rex and Kimber was magical because I loved how yes they had sex, but it was not the entire premise of their relationship (yeah who else is exhausted with the whole oh we had sex so that is now all we can do in our relationship?) It was a breath of fresh air and I found myself enjoying this novella quite immensely because of it. Also, because Kimber was all oh he is a bull rider my heart is going to get broken and Rex is all I found home.

This book made me laugh and cry and sometimes together. I loved how the author did draw from her own experiences and put it in the book. It felt so real like if you went into town you would come across this wonderful cast of characters.

The only other thing I will say besides you should all sign up for her newsletter so you can all read this book is that I dread to know what the first two videos were like for bull riding catastrophes.

Let me put it this way, Rex's video was number three and he got his skull smashed in by the bull's skull and got stomped on like a child having a tantrum on a rag doll by Bodacious (so I guess you could see his drive to beat the bull). Anybody who can watch those videos must have an iron stomach because I would not be able to do that I would be peeking through my fingers like it is a horror movie. Why do they even exist? Is it so mother's can pull it up and be like "now watch child if you continue down this road this is all the things that could happen to you" or is it more of a humans are sadists and need to see other people suffer to thrive?

This book is adorable and I highly recommend this book.

500 out of 5 stars.

Monday, June 28, 2021

Haven Enduring (Book 2) by H.B. Reneau

 I am honoured to have received an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review. Review might contain spoilers, read at your own discretion.

First off, thank you to the author for writing this book. I did not read the first book before I read this one, and it did not impair anything from my enjoying of this book. The author gives enough breadcrumbs that the reader can follow along even if like me they have not read the first book, which is the sign of excellent writing because I don't know about anybody else, but usually the second books that I read in series either have all the information dumped about what happened in the first book within the first few pages and you forget everything you were told after fifteen pages in or there is no information and you are left floundering trying to figure out what you missed. I was worried that Haven Enduring would be like that, but to my relief it was not. The information is spread out and feels like it is part of the second book. It felt so natural like it was new information even when it was in fact old that we should have known if we had read the first book (or maybe you did but it was a long time since you read it and wanted to dive into the world right away). It doesn't matter because this book will not make a fool of you except for maybe the ending, but we will get to that later.

I loved Danny, Kiera, and Cyrus as they felt the most natural characters to me who grew throughout the book. I love how Kiera tried so hard to save Danny by doing everything she could to keep everybody else at arms length before realizing that that strategy was not quite working for her and she tried to change and let people in to help her. I loved how Danny was in the past and he was trying so hard not to change the future enough because he didn't want Kiera to not exist (like awww 😗) and the things that Danny does had me rooting for him because he has a good heart, but he might have been paving the wrong path with his good intentions and quest for the truth and knowledge (like Faust guys, which had me falling in love with the book because why Faust might creep me out it is an intriguing concept and this Devil was not one to be trifled with 👿). Poor Cyrus, he tries so hard yet falls a little short, but I do love how he is willing to do whatever it takes to protect the ones he cares about even if he might have to give them some tough love (sorry Kiera). Honestly, I fell in love with all of the characters but those three resonated with me the most when reading the book.

I loved the world building and watching the places that the characters take for granted in the present being built in the future. I would love to know how long a person can survive in the world because I know they are technically dead and do not age, but they can die again, so how does all of it work? The magic system is on point and I loved how Kiera started to learn about different branches of it and how she wanted to learn healing pneumos so she could try and bring Danny back from wherever they go when they die.

My only issue with the book was the people in the Southern Shield and their obsession with the word "be". It had to be in every single sentence they spoke, and at first it was cute, but you would think after a while they would learn to expand their vocabulary? I used to work as a cashier, so I met all kinds of people and even those who did not speak English very well used "be" as much as those people from the Southern Shield did like it was starting to go from "oh, this is cute trying to demonstrate that they don't have a firm grasp on whatever language Kiera and her kind are speaking" to "this is becoming insulting and starting to feel like the characters have no intelligence left even though I know they do". I bet if anybody looked it up "be" would most likely be about fifty percent of the book or at least that is how it felt because it was in there a lot like I was shocked the two times Raina managed to not use "be" in one of her sentences (I was so proud of her, until the very next sentence had be in it all the time 😞).

Other than that I would highly recommend this book for anyone looking for a YA book with magic, political intrigue, betrayal, weird family dynamics, found families, and the dreaded cliffhanger ending.

Ah yes, I forgot, we were going to touch base on the ending (duh, duh, duh). It is a cliffhanger ending with very interesting plot twists at the ending that has me wishing there was a third book already so I could find out what happens.

499 out of 5 stars.

Xmas Break by J E Rowney

 I received a copy of Xmas Break: A Christmas Thriller  by J E Rowney in exchange for a honest review. I feel like the best way to put this ...