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Thursday, July 30, 2020

Review: One Hot Italian Summer



Ready for a hot summer read? Karina Halle has you covered with her latest book, One Hot Italian Summer. This is the read we all need during a pandemic when we can't travel yet want (need?) to escape. I had a wonderful time with Grace and Claudio in sunny Italy and I think many other readers will enjoy it as well.

Here's the synopsis:
After the death of her best friend and writing partner, Grace Harper is struggling both with grief, and with her next novel, the first one she’ll have to write alone.
Fortunately, her new powerhouse agent, the formidable Jana Lee, has a solution for her. She can stay at her villa in Tuscany for a month, soak in the sunshine, relax, and find her confidence again. After all, Jana has a lot riding on Grace’s next book, and the last thing she wants is for her reputation as a “super-agent” to be tarnished.
At first the villa is a dream come true for Grace – that is until Claudio Romano shows up one day with his ten-year old son, Vanni, in tow. Turns out, this is Claudio’s house, and Claudio happens to be her agent’s ex-husband from long ago. Thanks to their annual father and son bonding trip being cancelled, Claudio and Vanni are here to stay.
So is Grace.
With the three of them sharing the same house, Grace’s writing plans are thrown out the window. But even if she’s not pounding the keyboard, she’s still finding beauty and inspiration... in none other than Claudio. He's unlike any man Grace has met before. He’s smart, charming, and wickedly sexy, plus a great father to Vanni. He’d be the perfect summer fling – if only he wasn’t completely off-limits.
But as the hot Italian summer wears on, Grace and Claudio are destined to succumb to the heat, no matter how hard they try to resist each other. One steamy encounter with Claudio could affect Grace’s chances of starting her career over.
Or he could be exactly what she needs.
This is a slow burn romance. You know (and hope) Grace and Claudio will get together but it takes almost half the book before they give into the tension between them. Sometimes slow burns drive me nuts but Halle does this one so well. I wanted the pair to finally hop into bed but the teasing and flirting and figuring out what they really want and need in life? Ooh, it was a delight to read just as much as the start of the physical relationship.

The setting of this novel was as much a part of the story as the characters, I thought. Italy was a fresh start for Grace, who was finding Edinburgh hard to deal with after the death of her best friend and writing partner. I've never been to Italy but I know Halle has so I really trusted the picture she was painting...with her words (that's weird to write but you know what I mean, right?). Perhaps it helped that it was incredibly hot in my part of Canada as I was reading this but I felt like I was right there at Villa Rosa with Grace, Claudio, and Vanni. In fact, Halle's powers of persuasion were so great that I decided to pour a glass of wine (or three) instead of cracking open the beer I had fully planned on having. It just seemed wrong to enjoy a craft brew when Grace was drinking a cold glass of white wine.

Grace had a lot of issues she needed to work out before she could give into Claudio (which helped with the slow burn...I knew it would be so much better for the waiting). She was still dealing with an immense amount of grief and hadn't really been able (or willing) to release it. Not only that, but she was feeling a bit like a fraud when it came to her writing. Her confidence was pretty much non-existent, which Claudio helps with. She does accuse him of trying to "fix" her but I thought he responded well and rationally. She was in a spiral and couldn't see that he wasn't controlling her or making her into something she wasn't (not the kind of dudes Halle writes). He could see what was inside her and was helping that part of herself emerge - just like he would with his sculptures.

Like almost all of Halle's novels, there's a balance of sweet and (very) sexy as well as light and dark. There's humour but there's also a lot of heavy topics - death of a loved one and feelings of abandonment being the two most prevalent. I love how Halle is able to write so many of these scenes and feelings so well and it's part of why I keep reading her new titles.

One Hot Italian Summer is a must-read for anyone who likes books with a romance. I'd also recommend Karina Halle's latest novel to anyone who just likes a really good story. There's a depth to this novel I know many people won't expect and I encourage you all to give it a try. The time you "spend" in Italy will be thoroughly enjoyed. 

About Karina
Karina Halle is a former travel writer, music journalist & screenwriter, and The New York Times, Wall Street Journal & USA Today Bestselling author of over 55 bestselling novels, ranging from horror and suspense to contemporary romance. She lives on an island off the coast of British Columbia with her husband, and her adopted pitbull Bruce, where she drinks a lot of wine, hikes a lot of trails and devours a lot of books.
Halle is represented by the Root Literary Agency and is both self-published and published by Simon & Schuster, Hachette & Montlake. Her work has been translated and published in 20 languages. 
Hit her up on Instagram at @authorHalle, on Twitter at @MetalBlonde and on Facebook. You can also visit www.authorkarinahalle.com and sign up for the newsletter for news, excerpts, previews, private book signing sales and more.

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*An egalley of this novel was provided by the author via Valentine PR in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Blog Tour: The Friendship List



I've only read a couple of Susan Mallery's novels throughout the years but she is pretty big in the romance world. She's written a bananas number of novels (seriously, I tried counting on her website, got to 40, and gave up) and, now that I've read her latest, The Friendship List, I've read just four of them. And one was a cookbook. And...I hate to say it because I know she's well-loved but...I think I'm done. Between this book and the last one I read (Meant to Be Yours, which I reviewed here), I haven't been thrilled. 

Here's the synopsis:
Ellen and Unity have been best friends basically since birth, but they couldn’t be more different. Unity married her childhood sweetheart just after high school and became an Army wife, moving from base to base…until her husband's shocking death in the line of duty leaves her a widow. Grief-stricken, it’s time for Unity to come back home to Ellen—the only person she can trust to help her rebuild her life. But Ellen has troubles of her own. Boys never seemed to notice Ellen…until one got her pregnant in high school and disappeared. Her son is now 17 and she’s wondering what to do with herself now that he’s heading off to college and he's literally her entire world.

But now that Ellen and Unity are reunited, they’re done with their stale lives. It’s time to shake things up and start living again, knowing that they'll always have one another to lean on. So they create a list of challenges they have to accomplish--everything from getting a tattoo to skydiving to staying out all night. And whoever completes the most challenges is the winner. But with new adventures and love just around the corner, there’s no such thing as losing…
As I said, Mallery is known in the romance world. But like a lot of romance authors, she's been writing a few more titles that are being marketed as women's fiction. I don't like to use that genre term these days but I have yet to figure out a better descriptor. Contemporary is the best I've come up with. Some of these authors are doing pretty well with writing stories that aren't "simply" romances (Sarah Morgan is one whose contemporary novels I'm enjoying as well as her romances). And some? Not so good.

This story is supposed to be about two friends who have realized they're stuck and create a list to push themselves out of their comfort zones. The list means less as the novel goes on, and that's fine, because they realize that getting a tattoo or going skydiving is really the least of their issues. Unity, especially, has a lot of baggage to take care of. My problem was how much the romantic relationships took over the story. Romance and dating is a part of life and I'm a big fan of love stories in every single thing I read or watch but something about the romances played out in this novel drove me up the wall. Keith and Ellen have been friends for years and it's always been platonic. But as soon as Ellen buys some new clothes that don't hide her figure, Keith is all, "Holy shit, she has a body and breasts and now I can't stop thinking about sleeping with her." Just because she wore clothing that fit her body and made her feel good. That's a whole lot of nope from me. Thaddeus, the love interest for Unity (and what is that name? Sorry to anyone who is or knows or birthed a Thaddeus but I just can't do it as a male hero name), is gorgeous and super duper successful and could sleep with any super duper attractive woman and he just can't understand why Unity, who's "pretty enough", has gotten under his skin. In both instances, Ellen and Unity, who are great women, are reduced to their looks and I couldn't get over it even though both men are, for the most part, really good men. 

Ellen and Unity are both 34 which is just a year older than I am. Now, I did not have a child at 17 (or any age after) and I haven't been married and then widowed. So I don't really know how much those incidents would mature a person. I do know that these women did not act like 34 year olds. That's part of their problem and the reason they're making their lists but I felt like I was reading about characters who were a good decade older and I had to constantly remind myself that, nope, they're basically the same age I am. I could be in the minority but it really felt like the story should have been written for older characters but that age is the only one to really work for a young pregnancy and then also being able to have more children, if the character(s) chose to. It's a hard one to explain but I would love to know what other readers who are in their early thirties felt about the portrayal of Ellen and Unity.

The characters Mallery created were ones I wanted to read about and that pushed me to finish reading this book. I really did like Ellen and Unity. I could feel their pain and frustration even if I had never been in their shoes before. Ellen's son, Cooper, and Keith's daughter, Lissa, were wonderful and I would totally read a YA book about their side of the story. And Dagmar, Unity's friend and Thaddeus's great-aunt, was a total joy and I want to be like her when I'm in my seventies. 

I really wanted to love The Friendship List. The cover and initial description of Susan Mallery's latest novel really intrigued me. The end product though? Left a lot to be desired. For me, anyway. Sometimes books just don't click for a reader and that's why there are so many different kinds of books out there for us to read. 

About the author
SUSAN MALLERY is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of novels about the relationships that define women's lives—family, friendship and romance. Library Journal says, “Mallery is the master of blending emotionally believable characters in realistic situations," and readers seem to agree—forty million copies of her books have been sold worldwide. Her warm, humorous stories make the world a happier place to live.
Susan grew up in California and now lives in Seattle with her husband. She's passionate about animal welfare, especially that of the two Ragdoll cats and adorable poodle who think of her as Mom.

Connect with the author

Buy the book
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Kobo * Walmart * Target * Bookshop.org

*An egalley of this novel was provided by the publisher, Harlequin, via NetGalley in exchange for a review for the purposes of a blog tour. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Monday, July 27, 2020

Review: She's Faking It



By now we all should know that what we see on social media is not necessarily true to life. Of course, that doesn't really stop the comparisons and wondering why your life is not like those you see on your feed. In Kristin Rockaway's latest, She's Faking It, which was released at the end of June, she peels back the layers on what it means to be an Instagram influencer and why reality is always better than a social media life.

Here's the synopsis:
You can’t put a filter on reality.
Bree Bozeman isn’t exactly pursuing the life of her dreams. Then again, she isn’t too sure what those dreams are. After dropping out of college, she’s living a pretty chill life in the surf community of Pacific Beach, San Diego…if “chill” means delivering food as a GrubGetter, and if it means “uneventful”.
But when Bree starts a new Instagram account — @breebythesea — one of her posts gets a signal boost from none other than wildly popular self-help guru Demi DiPalma, owner of a lifestyle brand empire. Suddenly, Bree just might be a rising star in the world of Instagram influencing. Is this the direction her life has been lacking? It’s not a career choice she’d ever seriously considered, but maybe it’s a sign from the universe. After all, Demi’s the real deal… right?
Everything is lining up for Bree: life goals, career, and even a blossoming romance with the chiseled guy next door, surf star Trey Cantu. But things are about to go sideways fast, and even the perfect filter’s not gonna fix it. Instagram might be free, but when your life looks flawless on camera, what’s the cost?
I quite enjoyed Rockaway's last novel, How to Hack a Heartbreak (review here) so was totally on board with reading whatever she published next. On a Sunday in June, I sat down on the back patio with She's Faking It and a can of cider and barely moved until I had the book finished. Bree and her life completely captivated me and I had so much fun reading about all her ups and downs (so many downs!). 

When the reader first meets Bree she is having a really shitty day. Her car's broken down right in front of the house of a former (asshole) professor and without a car, she can't work as a food delivery driver. It seems like the last straw in a long list of bad luck and bad decisions. Luckily, Bree's sister has her life together and can help with the immediate needs, like getting Bree's car fixed. That's just the start though. Bree needs to overhaul her life because she's stuck and is far too young to be stuck. But, on the flipside, she is a bit too old to be wandering aimlessly with no plan because she's too scared to face her issues and do what she'd really like to do (whatever that is and I personally know how difficult it is to figure that out).  

While it was pretty painful to read about Bree's misadventures in the world of being an "influencer", I think it was done really, really well. So many people want to become Insta-famous (in both senses of the word) just so they can get free stuff. Some people do become well known for who knows what reason but a lot of those major influencers (even micro influencers) got to where they are because they have a story and a focused platform. Just getting a whole bunch of random items to post about and review is not going to make your Instagram page go viral. As Bree learns. 

Rockaway also shines a light on those people who seem to have it all together and sell their expertise to "help" those who want to grow their following. And the light doesn't always show something good. The famous influencer Bree connects with isn't doing it for the right reasons (does anyone else always think of The Bachelor(ette) when that phrase is used?). She's just profiting off people who want to get famous and isn't teaching them anything of value. It was a hard lesson for Bree, and her sister, to learn but it was a good one. And it made for some highly dramatic and humorous scenes. 

While I hate to use the cliched term, Bree's "journey" throughout the course of the book was a really good one. In part because it sure as hell wasn't easy. Also because she was adjusting every part of her life - personal, professional, familial, romantic, and friendships - it wasn't a fix one thing and the rest of her life fell into place. She had to fix everything. Or, if not fix, fine-tune. She had solid friendships and a relationship with her sister but there were some issues there too that were keeping those relationships from being the best they could be. Finally, she isn't perfect by the end of the novel. She still has some work to do but she knows she does and is in a much healthier place. It was a super realistic and lovely Happy For Now (even though I like to pretend it is a Happily Ever After because I'm a romantic sop like that).

She's Faking It is a great read for summer, especially this summer when we're all spending even more time online and on social media (who knew that could be a thing that could happen). Kristin Rockaway has written another real and really enjoyable contemporary novel with characters you'll love and a story you'll have a great time reading.

*An egalley of this novel was provided by the publisher, Graydon House/Harlequin, via NetGalley in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Review: Beach Read



I'm sure you've been seeing Beach Read by Emily Henry everywhere. I sure have. I first heard about it well before it's publication date (which was this past May) when a few bloggers I know in the US got advance copies. They were raving about it and, since I trust their opinions when it comes to contemporary titles, I knew I had to get my hands on it. Plus, just look at that cover! These days, an illustrated cover like that almost always contains a story I absolutely adore. And, luckily for me, the recommendations and cover did not let me down. I really, really enjoyed this book.

Here's the synopsis:
A romance writer who no longer believes in love and a literary writer stuck in a rut engage in a summer-long challenge that may just upend everything they believe about happily ever afters.
Augustus Everett is an acclaimed author of literary fiction. January Andrews writes bestselling romance. When she pens a happily ever after, he kills off his entire cast.
They're polar opposites.
In fact, the only thing they have in common is that for the next three months, they're living in neighboring beach houses, broke, and bogged down with writer's block.
Until, one hazy evening, one thing leads to another and they strike a deal designed to force them out of their creative ruts: Augustus will spend the summer writing something happy, and January will pen the next Great American Novel. She'll take him on field trips worthy of any rom-com montage, and he'll take her to interview surviving members of a backwoods death cult (obviously). Everyone will finish a book and no one will fall in love. Really.
One of the things I liked best about this book was how deep it went. I'm sure most people expected a typical "beach read" with it's title (more on that later) but Gus and January's lives were not all sunshine, rainbows, and beach days. There's bantering and flirting - two of my favourite things to read about - but there's also really serious family issues and professional problems too. Waiting for January and Gus to figure out that they're in love and totally belong together is only a small part of the story (a really fun part, don't get me wrong) and that's part of what made this book stick with me.

Let's get into the whole beach read thing here for a second. Because I like to take every opportunity I have to remind people that All. Books. Are. Beach. Books. Everyone has different tastes. That's why there are countless books published every year. So to call a story like Henry's a "beach book" because it isn't literary or written by a man is insulting to Henry and all other authors like her. I totally get that people want stories that are maybe slightly less taxing/emotionally difficult and contain more humour when they're on vacation but I think the nuances in books like Beach Read get lost in the label of vacay/pool/beach book. Long rant short: read whatever you want, whenever you want, wherever you want. 

Back to the story! I really liked the writer's block/author aspect of Henry's novel. Well, reading about writers in novels in general is one of my favourites so it's really no surprise this one thrilled me. I also really liked the writing "journey" (if we want to be cliched and call it such) January goes on. She loves her romances - loves writing them, loves reading them, loves talking about them - and has no shame in it (see above rant for why I especially loved that). But she feels stuck. And I think that's totally fair. I imagine when you're a writer, or in any creative profession, you don't want to be doing the same thing that's expected all the time. (I mean, it's fine if you do. To each their own, etc.) And to feel like you're not allowed to write something a little different? Frustrating. So I liked that January pushed herself and realized how she could take her love of romance and add a little something extra to it. 

I wasn't completely sold on Gus. Or maybe it's more that I didn't feel like I got to know quite enough about him. The reader does get some of his backstory and I really did like him as a person (and as a partner for January) but he didn't pop off the page as much as January did. 

I had fun the entire time I was reading Beach Read. (Except, perhaps, when January was dealing with the issues with her dad and when they were researching the cult.) I loved reading as January and Gus wrote notes and held them up to each other (talk about swoon). I loved their writing "dates" (they wouldn't call them dates to start but we all know that's what they were). I loved that it was a little bit of a second chance romance (I'm a sucker for that trope even when they didn't technically date in the past). It was just all so great and exactly what I needed to be reading at the time. 

Emily Henry has written a novel that's so thoroughly enjoyable. Beach Read is clever, with wicked smart and funny main characters, and it doesn't shy away from the tough issues either. It'll make you laugh and think and probably desperately wish you were at a beach house of your own instead of dealing with a pandemic. Just me? But seriously, friends, read this one. I think you'll love it too!

*An egalley of this novel was provided by the publisher, Penguin Random House Canada, via Edelweiss in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Monday, July 20, 2020

Review: The Book of Lost Names



I hadn't read any of Kristin Harmel's novels before diving into The Book of Lost Names, her latest and just being published this week. Which is silly since I have a copy of her last book, The Winemaker's Wife, sitting on my shelf just wondering when I'm going to get around to reading it. (I wish I knew.) But, after reading this historical novel, I think I'm going to have to make time soon to read her others. She takes a part of history and makes it come alive in a really entertaining and interesting way.

Here's the synopsis:
Eva Traube Abrams, a semi-retired librarian in Florida, is shelving books one morning when her eyes lock on a photograph in a magazine lying open nearby. She freezes; it’s an image of a book she hasn’t seen in sixty-five years—a book she recognizes as The Book of Lost Names.
The accompanying article discusses the looting of libraries by the Nazis across Europe during World War II—an experience Eva remembers well—and the search to reunite people with the texts taken from them so long ago. The book in the photograph, an eighteenth-century religious text thought to have been taken from France in the waning days of the war, is one of the most fascinating cases. Now housed in Berlin’s Zentral- und Landesbibliothek library, it appears to contain some sort of code, but researchers don’t know where it came from—or what the code means. Only Eva holds the answer—but will she have the strength to revisit old memories and help reunite those lost during the war?
As a graduate student in 1942, Eva was forced to flee Paris after the arrest of her father, a Polish Jew. Finding refuge in a small mountain town in the Free Zone, she begins forging identity documents for Jewish children fleeing to neutral Switzerland. But erasing people comes with a price, and along with a mysterious, handsome forger named Rémy, Eva decides she must find a way to preserve the real names of the children who are too young to remember who they really are. The records they keep in The Book of Lost Names will become even more vital when the resistance cell they work for is betrayed and Rémy disappears.
I read a lot of historical fiction and a lot of it tends to take place during or between the World Wars. In part that's because there are a lot of those kinds of books out there but it's also because it's a time period that really intrigues me. I know the broad strokes of history but there's so much I don't know and novels like Harmel's teach me a few things I hadn't heard of before. I've realized over the years that I like to use historical fiction, whether that's books or movies, as a base before I start watching documentaries or, less often, reading non-fiction titles on the same events. I guess it helps me to have a story in place instead of a bunch of facts. (Also likely why I don't remember much from history class.) That's why I appreciate the authors who dive into a time period, do the research, and create a story that is based in fact but allows me to see a bit better what things would have been like during that time. I'll never know exactly what it was like but books like The Book of Lost Names helps me understand a little bit more.

One thing I struggle with in some historical fiction is how much these heroines would have really known. I love reading about young women as they learn more about the world around them and fight for what is right, sometimes at the risk of their own lives, but I always have to wonder...how much did they know and how much is the author putting into their heads? It's never enough to fully take away from whatever story I'm reading but it's always a thought in the back of my head. It just always kind of seems like they go from naive girls to strong, capable women in an instant. Which, I guess, is possible given the circumstances. I can't know what it's like to have to deal with a war in my backyard or worrying that any beliefs I may have will get me arrested or executed. Eva is an educated young woman, she's going to school at the Sorbonne when we first meet her, but even she has a hard time putting two and two together when she's asked to help the underground resistance. Perhaps I expect too much of these heroines or, on the flip side, don't think enough of the women who lived during that time though, as I said, it's never really affected my enjoyment of the overall story. It just makes me wonder and think. (And shouldn't all books make you think at least a little bit?)

Does anyone else ever notice it's weird when you know characters are speaking another language, though you're reading it in English, and the author throws in phrases in the language they're supposed to be speaking? It happened a lot with this book as Harmel wrote the characters, who would have been speaking French to each other, saying things en français. Eva would be talking along to someone and then say, "Oui, monsieur." like she wasn't already speaking French. Again, not something that takes away from my enjoyment of the story (it's actually fun right now as I'm taking French lessons online and I test myself with the phrases before the characters/author translates them for the reader), but it can be a bit jarring and I wonder what the purpose is. Just to remind us where the story is set and what language the characters are speaking?

I read this book in two sittings. It's one of those stories that really captivated me. I cared about the characters. All of them, not just Eva and Rémy, but the people they were helping, especially the children, and all the unnamed individuals who were fighting in the resistance. I wanted them all to be safe even though I knew that would be impossible. My heart swelled with the love blossoming between Eva and Rémy and it broke when things went about as you'd expect and people were betrayed, killed, or left behind. There are a lot of emotions to be had in this novel and Harmel writes them all with skill and care. 

Read The Book of Lost Names for the story Kristin Harmel weaves. She teaches and reminds readers what atrocities occurred during World War II and shines a light on the kind of people who fought back, even while risking their own lives. 

*An egalley of this novel was provided by the publisher, Simon & Schuster Canada, via NetGalley in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Review: Faker



Confession: I read my ARC of Faker way back in October of last year, which was when Sarah Smith's debut novel was published. Life happened, one thing led to another, and here we are way too many months later and I'm finally getting around to reviewing it!

Here's the synopsis:
Debut author Sarah Smith nails this fun and sexy multicultural romance where two office foes hammer out their differences to build a love that will last...

Emmie Echavarre is a professional faker. She has to be to survive as one of the few female employees at Nuts & Bolts, a power tool company staffed predominantly by gruff, burly men. From nine to five, Monday through Friday, she's tough as nails--the complete opposite of her easy-going real self.

One thing she doesn't have to fake? Her disdain for coworker Tate Rasmussen. Tate has been hostile to her since the day they met. Emmie's friendly greetings and repeated attempts to get to know him failed to garner anything more than scowls and terse one-word answers. Too bad she can't stop staring at his Thor-like biceps...

When Emmie and Tate are forced to work together on a charity construction project, things get...heated. Emmie's beginning to see that beneath Tate's chiseled exterior lies a soft heart, but it will take more than a few kind words to erase the past and convince her that what they have is real.
I think I've mentioned it before but enemies to lovers is not my favourite trope. I just find it hard to wrap my head around it. I know hate and love are both very strong emotions but if you are spending so much time disliking someone I'm just not sure what can happen to realize that, actually, just kidding, you'd like to make out with them now. Sometimes though, as was the case with Faker, it's really been a miscommunication that's led to the dislike between characters. If Emmie and Tate had just talked to each other, maybe things would have been different at the start. Actually, that's not strictly true. Tate was acting like a knob and needed to get his shit sorted out and then should have talked more openly with Emmie. 

I liked Emmie from the get go. She was funny and clever and smart and a joy to read. I could really understand why she had to put on a tough exterior at work since she was surrounded by a bunch of men who didn't always think she could handle the job sites. (Any other women have this problem? It's not just in male dominated workplaces either, is it? Harrumph.) 

Tate, on the other hand, was harder to get a read on. I was sure there was some sort of miscommunication happening and he wasn't the asshole that he seemed to be. It was super frustrating as he acted so rudely to Emmie for absolutely no reason - she never gave him a single reason to dislike her - and he had to work hard to convince Emmie and me that he wasn't the jerk that we thought he was and actually did have genuine feelings for Emmie. He almost lost me (and Emmie) near the end-ish though with the disaster that was the high school reunion. Honesty, people. It can help, a lot.

While I was reading Faker I was having a great time. It made me laugh and swoon and I adored Emmie. But when I think back on Sarah Smith's debut novel, I'm a bit less excited about it. (And no, that's not just because I read it a million years ago.) It's fine but not groundbreaking. That said, I've just learned she has a new book coming out later this year and I'm interested to see what that one will be like. Faker was fun but I'd file this one under borrow rather than buy.

*An ARC of this novel was provided by the publisher, Penguin Random House Canada, in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Monday, July 13, 2020

Review: Dear Emmie Blue



Oh, Emmie. You randomly came across my reading pile and quickly found your way into my heart. The cover of Lia Louis's second novel was what originally caught my eye but then one of my favourite authors mentioned she had read, and loved, Dear Emmie Blue. I figured, what the heck. I'd request it from NetGalley and see what it was like. And oh my word, I fell head over heels for this story. It was a surprise, not that it was great, exactly, but that I was so completely, totally in love.

Here's the synopsis:
At sixteen, Emmie Blue stood in the fields of her school and released a red balloon into the sky. Attached was her name, her email address…and a secret she desperately wanted to be free of. Weeks later, on a beach in France, Lucas Moreau discovered the balloon and immediately emailed the attached addressed, sparking an intense friendship between the two teens.

Now, fourteen years later, Emmie is hiding the fact that she’s desperately in love with Lucas. She has pinned all her hopes on him and waits patiently for him to finally admit that she’s the one for him. So dedicated to her love for Lucas, Emmie has all but neglected her life outside of this relationship—she’s given up the search for her absentee father, no longer tries to build bridges with her distant mother, and lives as a lodger to an old lady she barely knows after being laid off from her job. And when Lucas tells Emmie he has a big question to ask her, she’s convinced this is the moment he’ll reveal his feelings for her. But nothing in life ever quite goes as planned, does it?

Emmie Blue is about to learn everything she thinks she knows about life (and love) is just that: what she thinks she knows. Is there such thing as meant to be? Or is it true when they say that life is what happens when you are busy making other plans?
Emmie is a huge reason why I loved this book. She's just turning 30 when we meet her (as is Lucas - they share a birthday) and feels like she should have her life more "together" than it is. That is something I most definitely can relate to. Sometimes I'm still surprised that I'm supposed to be a real adult. She also has a lot of pain in her past, especially from when she was a teen, that she's never really dealt with. Until she realizes she has to work through what happened to her, she can't quite move on and isn't aware of some of the really wonderful things, and people, in her life.

You may think that it would be frustrating for the reader when it's so clear that Emmie needs to face her past head on so she can move forward. That she's putting walls up and not fully allowing people in who the reader can see would be so good for her. I wasn't frustrated. I actually felt some of the pain right along with Emmie and was surprised at how emotional I was getting while reading the book. Louis makes the reader feel all the feels with this novel so be prepared. It's hard sometimes but it's part of what makes this book so magical.

When I first started the book, it reminded me a lot of the movie Love, Rosie which is based on Cecelia Ahern's novel Where Rainbows End. This was a rare case of not having read the book before the movie so I don't know how much was changed in the adaptation, but the similarities between this book and the movie were strong. The storylines eventually diverged and become more dissimilar as time went on but the feeling I was left with after finishing both Dear Emmie Blue and Love, Rosie was really similar and I was glad to have found another story that made my heart warm (after making it hurt). 

While the majority of the novel's plot is about family, friends, and professional issues, a good chunk of it is also about a romance. Emmie's realized she's completely hung up on Lucas, who she's known for 14 years. Like, full blown, hopelessly devoted in love with him. The reader has a clearer view than Emmie of how the romance should play out and I was thrilled when she finally caught up to what I was seeing. 

Dear Emmie Blue is full of every emotion you can imagine. Some good, some bad, but that's life and Lia Louis has written a novel that is so lovely and realistic and heartwarming that you can forgive the bad because the good is so, so wonderful. This novel gave me a major book hangover and it will stick with me for a long, long time. I highly recommend it!

*An egalley of this novel was provided by the publisher, Simon & Schuster Canada, via NetGalley in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Friday, July 10, 2020

Review: The Austen Playbook and Headliners



Back near the start of the pandemic (remember how naive we were?), Harlequin sent out an email with a few titles for reviewers to check out because they thought readers might be looking for some sweet Happily Ever After stories to sink into. They thought correctly and I requested two that ended up being part of the same series - Lucy Parker's London Celebrities series


The Austen Playbook follows Freddy, a theatre actress in London, and Griff, a theatre critic, as their lives collide. They've always been aware of each other, given their professions, but they're thrown together in the most unlikely of circumstances as Griff's family estate is playing host to a unique play that Freddy is taking part in. They're staging a play inspired by some of Jane Austen's most famous characters that will be aired on live TV. Not only that, the audience gets to vote on how the play proceeds. Sort of like a choose your own adventure but...televised live. Just a bit stressful, eh? 


The next book is Headliners and, as you may expect if you've read the preceding novel, it features Sabrina, Freddy's older sister, and Nick. The two are evening TV news presenters and they've both taken major hits to their careers. The owner of the news station decides to make them work for their careers and they're thrust together to co-host the network's struggling morning show. They hate each other...at least, that's what they think at the start. As you may imagine, those feelings start to change.

Each novel could be described as an enemies-to-lovers story (though Freddy and Griff's is more of an opposites attract but they did know each other and I wouldn't call them friends or even acquaintances...I think there was a healthy dislike there). And, I admit, this is not one of my favourite tropes. Intellectually, I just don't love the idea of people despising each other and then, wham, they want to hop into bed together. But...I'll admit that many authors know how to tell a good story and I almost always end up enjoying the ride as the characters realize their strong feelings for the other have shifted in a surprising way.

I hadn't read the first books in the London Celebrities series but I don't think you really need to. I would, however, recommend you don't jump into Headliners without first reading The Austen Playbook. A lot happens in Freddy's story that directly impacts what happens in Sabrina's and you'll get a much better sense of the sisters and their lives if you read the books together. 

I really adored Freddy and Sabrina. Their mom died when they were very young and Sabrina had to step up and become more mom than older sister to Freddy (which, of course, has it's own set of issues the pair had to deal with over the course of the novels). Their father was an actor but was injured on set and now managed Freddy's careers (again...much frustration, much drama). The women were close, which was so great, and they had their sibling squabbles like any others (made me miss my sister, that's for sure). They're both smart, funny, and had such warm and welcoming personalities that it was a delight to read their stories - and as the men in their lives realized that they had been idiots and could not live without them. 

The setting of these novels was absolutely delightful. I had a whirlwind trip to Edinburgh before the world shut down and I also spent an evening hitting the top sights in London before flying home the next day. The books are set in London and I was feeling a bit nostalgic for the sightseeing tour my sister brought me on. I also liked that part of Freddy's story took place at a countryside estate because it was just so quintessential England to me. (Maybe that's just the Canadian in me.)

I think I liked Headliners more than The Austen Playbook but both of Lucy Parker's novels were a balm to this romance lover's soul while dealing with all the pandemic has brought upon us. They were sweet and sexy, fun and dramatic, and both had the most delightful Happily Ever Afters. Check them out if you're also in need of an escape!

*Copies of these novels were provided by the publisher, Harlquin, via NetGalley, in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Review: Still Here



Usually I'm a purist when it comes to a series. Sometimes, though, needs must and I jump into a series in the middle. That's what happened with Amy Stuart's novels. I hadn't read Still Mine but I had the chance to review Still Water for Niagara Life and jumped at it (I love featuring female Canadian authors, especially with those magazine reviews). While Stuart's novels do follow the same character, you could go into the latest, Still Here, without reading the rest, but I think you should do yourself a favour and read all three together so you make the most out of this really great thriller series.

Here's the synopsis:
From the bestselling author of Still Mine and Still Water—PI Clare O’Dey is on the hunt for two missing persons. Little does she know she’s the one being hunted.

Malcolm is gone. Disappeared. And no one knows where or why.

His colleague and fellow private investigator, Clare, is certain she can find him, as she holds the key to his past. She arrives in the oceanside city where he last lived and starts digging around. Not only is Malcolm gone without a trace, so is his wife, Zoe. Everyone who knew the perfect couple sees Malcolm as the prime suspect in his wife’s disappearance. Everyone except Clare. She’s certain there’s more at play that has nothing to do with Malcolm, a dark connection to Zoe’s family business and the murder of her father years ago.

As Clare pulls back the layers, she discovers secrets the entire community is trying desperately to leave in the past. As for Malcolm, his past is far more complex—and far more sinister—than Clare could ever have imagined. He may not be innocent at all. As she searches for the man who helped her build her career as a private eye, Clare discovers that many women are in grave danger. And she is among them.
As I said, each book could be read alone but I think you get more out of the linked novels if you read all three. By not reading the first book, I missed out on some of Clare's early motivations as well as learning more about the husband and life she escaped from. I knew enough, though, to be surprised by the twist Stuart threw into the third story. Surprised in a good way. I didn't see it coming but it made total sense and worked well. 

Stuart keeps you guessing with her characters. Each one has had some pretty serious shit mess them up and they've all struggled in various ways with what happened to them. Those pieces of their past also make you wonder how much you can really trust each character. Is everyone who they say they are? Almost certainly everyone is hiding something. But how much? And who is going to get hurt, or even killed, in the end?

Still Here wraps up Clare's story in a way that will satisfy readers without being too tied-up-in-a-bow perfect (though it's close). Amy Stuart gave readers a character who evolved before our eyes - with a few slip ups along the way - as well as three separate thrillers that come together in a pretty epic conclusion. This is definitely a series worth reading.

*An egalley of this novel was provided by the publisher, Simon & Schuster Canada, via NetGalley in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Monday, July 6, 2020

Review: The Heir Affair



It's been over five years since I read Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan's novel The Royal We. I've read hundreds of books since so it's no surprise that I had forgotten many of the plot points from the first book. I did, however, remember absolutely adoring it and know it was one of my favourite books from 2015. The Heir Affair is the long-awaited sequel and one of my most anticipated reads of 2020. I'm not sure it lived up to the hype I had given it but I still really enjoyed the time I spent reading it.

Here's the synopsis:
Making it up the aisle was the easy part: After marrying the heir to the throne, Rebecca “Bex” Porter must survive her own scandals as she adjusts to life in the glamorous British royal family, in this “highly anticipated” follow-up to The Royal We, the “fun and dishy” bestseller and NYT Summer Reading List pick inspired by Will and Kate’s romance (People).
After a scandalous secret turns their fairy-tale wedding into a nightmare, Rebecca “Bex” Porter and her husband Prince Nicholas are in self-imposed exile. The public is angry. The Queen is even angrier. And the press is salivating. Cutting themselves off from friends and family, and escaping the world’s judgmental eyes, feels like the best way to protect their fragile, all-consuming romance.
But when a crisis forces the new Duke and Duchess back to London, the Band-Aid they’d placed over their problems starts to peel at the edges. Now, as old family secrets and new ones threaten to derail her new royal life, Bex has to face the emotional wreckage she and Nick left behind: with the Queen, with the world, and with Nick’s brother Freddie, whose sins may not be so easily forgotten — nor forgiven.
I admit I was under the impression that this novel was Freddie's story. He's the "spare" (the Harry in the authors' royal family) and played a large role in Nick and Bex's lives in the first book. However. The sequel is not told from Freddie's point of view. We're still firmly in the life of Nick and Bex and she tells the story to the reader in first person POV. This wasn't a problem, of course, I like Bex. I just had to quickly adjust my thinking of how this novel was going to go.

And go it does. It clocks in at over 460 pages, just about 10 pages longer than the first book, which I recall being ginormous. It meant I spent a good chunk of a summer Friday afternoon reading the book and still wasn't close to being finished (it's a good time when you get sprung from work early, especially right now). Normally I'm all for a book being long because it means I have more time to spend with the story and the characters. But...I would like it if there weren't tangents that took away from the main story or if the extra pages had been spent tying up some loose ends I think should have been tied. (There's a potential for a third book but given the second one took five years to get to us, I don't know if we'll get a third any time soon.) While I like the large cast of supporting characters and quite enjoyed the spoof on the Great British Bake Off  (or Great British Baking Show as it's known to those in North America), I kind of think that whole part of the book took away from the rest of the story. I think it was to give a fan favourite secondary character their own time to shine but it didn't fully work for me.

The other thing that didn't quite work for me was the big revelation at the end of the novel. Obviously I am not going to tell you what that is because spoilers but it felt extremely far-fetched. Granted, it played with the idea that we really don't know what goes on in the private lives of the British Royal Family. Things are hushed up and we, the peasants general public, will never, ever hear about them. But the way the story line unfolded? I was just kind of like...wtf is even happening and how can they be agreeing to this and be ok with that? If you've read it, you know what I've talking about and I am here for a deep dive conversation if anyone else needs/wants to talk it out.

Other than those things I wasn't super fussy about, the rest of the book was as entertaining, dramatic (in both the best and most bonkers ways - the latter being a positive because I enjoy bonkers when it's done well), heart-wrenching, funny, and clever. 

There were times I was (literally) laughing out loud and times I felt as tied up in knots and anxious as the characters felt. Cocks and Morgan know how to write to get the emotions their characters are feeling off the page and directly into the readers' hearts. 

I absolutely loved that Bex turns Queen Eleanor into a Cubs fan the year they won the World Series. First, it's a hilarious coincidence, and one they reference, that of course the team breaks the curse the year a monarch decides to cheer for them. Second, I just love when baseball is featured in novels especially when it's a female character who's the fan. Third, it's just a whole lovely and hilarious section of the plot that works to elevate and strengthen a few relationships and I adored it.

I also have to point out how amusing it was to have Bex and Nick visit Canada as well as having Eleanor reading a copy of The Globe and Mail, one of our national newspapers. Oh, and the reference to our Prime Minister's hair. It's especially full of life right now given the pandemic! We don't often get to have Canada in such mainstream books so it's always nice to see a slice of my country in my reading material.

If you want a book with all of the feelings in a giant package, The Heir Affair is for you. Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan give readers a new royal story that has every emotion imaginable and a cast of characters who are full of flaws but have, for the most part, good hearts. I'm glad the authors were finally able to give us this sequel and I hope we get another novel sooner rather than later.

*An egalley was provided by the Canadian distributor, Hachette Canada, via NetGalley in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Review: Every Step She Takes



I've been making up for lost time after years and years of never reading a Kelley Armstrong book - since the beginning of 2019 I've read four, including two by her alter-ego, K.L. Armstrong. The latest, just published on Tuesday, is Every Step She Takes, a thriller that kept me turning the pages until I discovered the answers I needed. I ended up finishing the book in one sitting.

Here's the synopsis:
Sometimes there's no use running from your past. . . .

Genevieve has secrets that no one knows. In Rome she can be whoever she wants to be. Her neighbours aren't nosy; her Italian is passable; the shopkeepers and restaurant owners now see her as a local, and they let her be. It's exactly what she wants.

One morning, after getting groceries, she returns to her 500-year-old Trastevere apartment. She climbs to the very top of the staircase, the stairs narrowing the higher she goes. When she gets to her door, she puts down her bags and pushes the key into the lock . . .

. . . and the door swings open.

It's unlocked. Sometimes she doesn't lock it because break-ins aren't common in Rome. But Genevieve knows she locked the door behind her this morning. She has no doubt.

She should leave, call the police. What if someone is in her apartment, waiting for her? But she doesn't.

The apartment is empty, and exactly as she left it, perfectly tidy and not a thing out of place . . . except for the small box on her kitchen table. A box that definitely wasn't there this morning. A box postmarked from the US. A box that is addressed to "Lucy Callahan."

A name that she hasn't used in ten years.
The book's description doesn't give the reader a whole lot to go on. I think that's intentional but I also think it would have been best for the reader to know going in that the main suspense isn't, actually, who sent her the package. It's what happens to that person. I think that would help the set up of the novel because I found myself just waiting for the big moment and for the suspense to truly start. Speaking of the set up...it and beginning of the novel was a tad...clunky? I guess? and didn't seem to flow as well as the rest of the story did. Maybe it's just because I was invested in the thrill and suspense by that point that I stopped worrying about word choices and how certain things were described.

Without giving anything away, I'll say that I didn't figure out the whodunnit. I had a suspicion about part of it and I was correct there but who committed the final, actual, permanent crime? Didn't even cross my mind. I did, however, guess the identity of a certain mysterious character. (And that was even with my e-galley not being formatted properly and missing a number of important instant messaging conversations.) Are you confused yet? What I'm getting at is, there were some predictable, to me, moments and others that completely surprised me. I consider that a win for a thriller.

The story itself really interested me. I was totally invested in Genevieve/Lucy, her past, and how she was going to get out of the situation she found herself in. I think it helped that we were the same age so I could kind of get into her head (both then and now) a little bit easier. I also really appreciated that Armstrong didn't use the unreliable narrator trope. That can be done well, of course, but I like when a story, especially a mystery or thriller, doesn't rely on a trope that I've been reading a lot of. 

Sure, there are some issues with Every Step She Takes. It's not what I'd call a great book but I got a lot of enjoyment out of it and didn't want to put it down, so that should tell you something about the entertainment value of it (and let's be real here, we mostly read for entertainment). I'm going to continue to check out K.L. Armstrong's books (and those she writes as Kelley, too) because she's clearly getting stronger with her thrillers and I'm curious to see what she writes next.

*An e-galley of this novel was provided by the publisher, Doubleday Canada, via NetGalley in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*