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Book Reviews - Romance, Fantasy, Science Fiction - By an Adult for Adults

Daring Deception – Harlequin Presents Romance by Amanda Browning

July 25, 2022 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I do not like Daring Deception. The hero, Nathan, has known heroine Rachel for two years because she helps her grandfather and Nathan runs Grandpa’s bank. Nonetheless Nathan knows Rachel is a man eater with no morals who sleeps around because he witnessed Rachel steal another girl’s fiancé a year before he came to work for Grandpa. In truth the other girl is Rachel’s cousin, roommate and business partner and the fiancé is a fortune hunter. The cousin had agreed to let Rachel try to steal her guy because she did not believe he had been after her money. Nonetheless, Nathan is never wrong.

Rachel is in love with Nathan, supposedly, although it’s hard to believe when they spend almost no time together. It turns out Nathan is in love with Rachel too, although he despises her and fights the attraction. Again, hard to believe.

Plot Synopsis – Click to Avoid Spoilers

Grandpa needs someone go retrieve love letters his good friend had written to a dead aristocrat. The letters would hurt aristo’s wife and embarrass his family and Grandpa was good friends with both the lady and her lover. Lady’s nephew swiped the letters and is blackmailing her. (Yes, the plot is this dumb.) Will Nathan please whistle up a blonde bombshell and go get the letters while bombshell distracts the villain?

Nathan doesn’t have a spare blonde in his pocket but, oh yes, Rachel! Rachel is blonde and gorgeous and of course, being a man eating slut can surely vamp the villain. Rachel protests but goes along with it. She nearly loses her temper when Nathan takes her aside to explain just why he knows she can do this little job and gets so mad she decides not to tell Nathan about her cousin. Nathan threatens to tell Grandpa about Rachel’s dark side and Rachel manages to not tell him that it was Gramps who sent her to extricate cousin.

Nathan is lucky at cards and Villain loves to gamble for high stakes, so off to Tahoe we go, where Nathan engages Villain in card game while Rachel leans over him and pretends to be his lucky talisman. Villain invites Nathan to his house – oh, be sure to bring the blonde too – and off we trot. While Nathan gambles with Villain Rachel goes exploring and finds the letters in Villain’s bedside table. The next morning Rachel flirts while Nathan grabs the letters and we leave quickly, but not before Rachel and Nathan end up in bed together.

The next day Nathan comes by Rachel’s apartment, meets cousin, realizes Rachel is not the vamp he thought. Explanations, I Love You, and Happy Ever After. Supposedly.

Characters, Really?

If this were real life if I were Rachel I’d avoid Nathan like poison. He only believes her not to be a slut/vamp/man eater after he talks to cousin. Despite knowing each other for two years, seeing her up close for a few days, sleeping together, Nathan still does not trust Rachel without third party proof. This is not a good way to start a life together.

I don’t think Rachel loves Nathan either. She likes his body, she likes what she knows about his personality although she knows he doesn’t like her even before she learned what he thought about her. She is hurt by his nasty comments and accusations and angry and gleefully anticipates showing him the truth. She knows almost nothing about the man himself before their Tahoe weekend.

And shall we look at Grandpa? A man who cheerfully sends his beloved granddaughter and well-liked and respected friend to tangle with a villain and all to prevent embarrassment to someone else?

Nope, I do not buy that any of these people know what love is. Nathan and Rachel may be happy together, but it will blow up the first time Nathan has a breath of suspicion against Rachel, and she will never know where she truly stands with him. Nathan was able to sleep with a woman he claimed to despise, tell her the next morning it was a one night stand, not a relationship, who then claims later his is in love.

Not only is the plot incredibly stupid the people and their motivations are inane, juvenile, and yes, stupid.

Overall

I finished this stupid story because I bought it and wanted to get to the end. It isn’t worth wasting your time and certainly do not waste your money.

2 Stars

I purchased my E copy on Harlequin.com and you can get Kindle E versions on Amazon. Look at Amazon and used book sites for paperback copies.

All Amazon links are paid ads.

Filed Under: Other Authors Tagged With: Book Review, Harlequin Romance, Not So Good, Romance Novels, YA Fantasy

Titan by Daniel Mignault and Jackson Dean Chase – Greek Mythology Turned Real

September 30, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Titan by Daniel Mignault and Jackson Dean Chase is subtitled “An Epic Novel of Urban Fantasy and Greek Mythology” and is the first book in new series The Gods War. Mignault and Chase have created an unusual blend of ancient Greek mythology with vicious high school and societal control.

Titan’s hero is young Andrus Eaves, adopted son of a rich couple, in his final year of school training to go into the warrior service of the New Greek Theocracy.  Titan’s world developed because the primeval Greek god Kronus defeated his children including Zeus and Thanatos (Hades or Death), and rules supreme over the tiny remnant of earth left after the devastating war.  Kronus “mercifully” let humans live, providing him with worshipers and service.  No one can die, not matter how injured, because Thanatos is imprisoned.

Andrus pretty much takes his life for granted, is satisfied with his future service until he begins to have segues that disorient and distract him.  He loses face when he loses a climbing test to his arch rival, and his teacher then assigns both young men to a final test, with a catch:  both must pair with one of the weakest people in their class and both must make it to the top before the other pair.  The evil arch priest takes note of the contest and this spawns the action.

Back Story and Setting

Mignault and Chase have built a horrific world, one where everyone is at the mercy of Kronus and his sadistic priests.  Everyone must attend temple weekly and kneel on stone floors for hours.  Any who fall over or settle back – even old and infirm – are turned into “worms”, without legs or arms, and thrown to Kronus to eat.  Anyone out after sunset curfew is fair game for centaurs who enjoy eating people, although rich folks may purchase tokens from the priesthood that allow them later hours.

The world has some odd side notes.  For instance, it is set on the US West Coast and Andrus’ parents are rich because he discovered oil on their former property.  Andrus’ father drives a new red Ferrari, although Europe and the Farrari factory are demolished.

Rich folks own slaves and the priests or the security force can condemn anyone to be a slave.  Poor people live in a ghetto area with few services and very little opportunity to escape unless they are able to pass an exam.  Andrus’ climbing partner is one of these poor folks and if he and Andrus lose then he will suffer greatly.

Characters

The characters were the weakest link in the story.  Andrus is fairly well developed but his new friend and climbing partner is less so.  Andrus meets and supposedly falls in love with his friend’s sister, but the romance feels more a literary convention than anything real.

The villains are stock characters:  the bloodthirsty and vicious priest, the nasty and vindictive centaur.  Andrus’ parents and their slave butler are reasonably well done, obviously with mysteries that are not revealed in this first novel.

Overall

Titan has some YA fantasy conventions, most obvious with the romance and the easy-read writing style.  The authors don’t challenge anyone’s brain with this book.

I enjoyed Titan for the most part, despite the tedious and unnecessary romance, and may possibly try the next book in the series.  You can get Titan and the rest of the series on Kindle Unlimited.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Urban / Modern Fantasy Tagged With: 3 Stars, Fantasy, YA Fantasy

Temping Fate by Esther Friesner, Cute Fantasy, Bridezilla and Summer Jobs

August 5, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Ilana needs a summer job.  Now.  If she doesn’t find one her parents will find her all sorts of things to do, starting with music camp.  Of course Ilana must take care that her job will not interfere with endless fittings for her bridesmaid dress so she can be her sister Dyllin’s maid of honor.  Dyllin has transmogrified into Bridezilla, scourge of caterers, florists and sisters everywhere.

Ilana gets a summer job as a temp at the Divine Relief Temp agency, assigned to the three Fates, one of whom is having a severe attack of Mommy-itis.  Ilana isn’t too sure about the work but she sure loves the paycheck!  Plus she meets some cute guys who also temp, albeit with heroes and other assorted demigods.

Temping Fate is light summer reading and most teens would enjoy it as would many adults.  Dylin’s panic attacks (NO!  The wrong color of ribbons!!!  The Horror!) add comedy offset by some real sisterly moments.  Ilana grows up somewhat, but don’t expect a serious coming-of-age novel as this is lighthearted fun.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Young Adult Fantasy Tagged With: 3 Stars, Fantasy, YA Fantasy, YA Fantasy Fiction

Tempests and Slaughter (The Numair Chronicles, Book One) – Vivid Fantasy by Tamora Pierce

June 17, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Tamora Pierce is best known for colorful fantasies for older teens with smart, strong female characters.  Tempests and Slaughter is the first novel of hers that I have read, and apparently the main characters as adults star in her novels in the same world.  It is a testament to Pierce’s ability to tell a story with likable characters who feel real, to develop a full fantasy world with magic, gods, empires and strange customs, that I did not realize Tempests and Slaughter is part of a larger story arc until I was writing this review.

I thoroughly enjoyed Tempests and Slaughter and the three main characters,  Arram,  Ozorne and Varice, all three teens in the Empire’s school for mages.  Arram is the son of traders from another country, with great talents.  Ozorne is the Emperor’s nephew and moving up in the succession, Varice is the only girl and not as prominent a character as Arram.  The book reads well on its own but clearly sets up a conflict between Arram and Ozorne.

Arram cannot abide the slavery endemic in the Empire nor can he stomach the gladiator games while Ozorne takes both these for granted.  Ozorne is about 7th in line to succeed the emperor as the story opens and talks about setting up a small estate to study magic and asks Arram and Varice to promise to join him.  As the book proceeds and Ozorne’s cousins die, he gradually abandons those peaceful dreams.  Arram is shocked when Ozorne says he dreams, not of a peaceful life of study, but to conquer the rest of the world – including Arram’s country.  Arram knows but does not want to believe that he will eventually have to leave Ozorne and make his own way.  The next novel may feature Arram and Ozorne.

Tempests and Slaughter particularly impressed me with the vivid world building.  We can almost see the dust and smell the rocks that Arram helps to move, we can hear the shouts and screams in the gladiator pits.  Pierce creates an intense setting that feels real.

The mage school is superficially peaceful, with students and teachers all pursuing scholarly work, except underlain with the assumption the mages will assist the empire.  They will heal the gladiators and the typhoid-suffering poor, brace the fallen rocks, clear the river of corpses.  The godlets visit certain scholars, notably the crocodile godlet requires Arram foster a sunbird he absconded with, something else guaranteed to cause trouble later on.

Overall Tempests and Slaughter is an excellent novel, with well-developed people, good dialogue that advances the plot and develops the characters, vivid setting and world building that constrasts with the surface placidity of the mage school.

5 Stars

Filed Under: Magic Tagged With: 5 Stars, Book Review, Fantasy, YA Fantasy

Review: Witches Gone Wicked: A Cozy Witch Mystery (Womby’s School for Wayward Witches Book 3)

June 10, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Witches Gone Wicked is bad.  Lead character Clarissa is a witch wanna-be, newly hired to teach arts and crafts to young witch kin at Womby’s charity school.  The book could have been quite good, following Clarissa as she tries to teach art with $25 per year supplies budget to students who would just as soon stick her on the ceiling as pay attention.  Unfortunately the author chose to model Clarissa and the plot and the setting on the Harry Potter series.

Clarissa herself grew up ignorant of her witch heritage and now needs to learn fast; however no one wants to teach her because her biological mother was a powerful witch of the dark arts.  We don’t get a chance to get to know Clarissa as a person because she is too busy jumping to conclusions and flirting with the attractive wizard Julian (who is of course a Bad Man).

The witch kin in this series are half fae and half human (or their descendants) and have significant magic tendencies.  If they fail to master their magic then they are fair game for the fae to snatch for servants or the Tithe.  Wouldn’t this be an interesting idea to explore, to understand what’s involved, and possibly, how the witch kin can fend off the fae?    Author Sarina Dorie may cover this in other books in the series; in Witches Gone Wicked she chose to focus on Clarissa.  Clarissa’s magic affinity which is touch, which she experiences as extraordinarily sensual and powerful and any pain is unbearable.  She has power over others’ bodies too, should she learn to use it.

Most Amazon reviews are positive, with no ratings below 3 stars at this time.  This novel is not listed as YA although it may appeal more to younger teens than it did to me.

I received this for free in expectation of an honest review.

1 Star

Filed Under: Magic Tagged With: 1 Star Pretty Bad, Book Review, Fantasy, YA Fantasy

The Glass Magician by Charlie N. Holmberg, Sequel to Paper Magician Set in Retro England

June 6, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Charlie Holmberg’s The Paper Magician (reviewed here) surprised me with its fresh take on elemental magic and the two main characters, Ceomy and her mentor Thane.  Holmberg follow up novel, The Glass Magician, is set immediately after the first book and introduces new heroic side kicks and new villains.  While The Glass Magician is good, it is not in the same league as The Paper Magician, primarily because it has more YA elements than the first.

In Paper Ceomy is brave and prudent and takes independent action only to save Thane’s life, and only when there is nothing else to do.  In The Glass Magician, Ceomy makes one dumb move after another, tries to go after Grath – unsuccessfully – despite being told not to, and gets her good friend into the mess.  The Ceomy vs. Villains situations comprise the bulk of the plot, something more typical of YA fantasy than stories aimed at adults.

Also typical of YA novels, Ceomy spends too much of the book worrying whether Thane loves her.  The romance was a nice plus in Paper, but it’s overdone in Glass, reducing mature, likable Ceomy to a silly girl.

I still enjoyed The Glass Magician, still liked Ceomy, Thane and the magic system.  I just didn’t enjoy it quite as much as The Paper Magician.

3-4 Stars

Filed Under: Magic Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Fantasy, YA Fantasy, YA Fantasy Fiction

The Paper Magician by Charlie N. Holmberg – New Twist on Fantasy Magic

May 22, 2018 by Kathy 1 Comment

I borrowed the first book in Charlie Holmberg’s Paper Magician YA fantasy series, The Paper Magician, from the library and found it surprisingly good.  About the only concession to YA is the book is short and a very fast read that could have been more developed.

After main character Ceomy used her scholarship to magic school to cram two years into one and graduate top of her class.  She expected to choose the element she would bond with – paper, metal, plastic, glass, rubber – but instead was assigned to paper, the least favored, unpopular substance.  Once she bonds with paper she can never reach her dream be a Smelter, bonded to metal.

The magic system is intriguing and I hope author Holmberg explores it more in future novels.  Basically paper magicians can do anything that paper can do.  For example, if one folds a basic fan then one can use that fan to create a massive windstorm. Or one can read anything written on paper and produce illusions that illustrate the story.

I got all sorts of ideas from this second notion, especially once Ceomy found that not everything she produced was an illusion; at least one was real and lasting.  Could one print a story about housework, read it and get the dishes done by magic?   Or build a house by reading about it?  Or win a war by writing about collapsing the enemy’s walls?

Ceomy herself was a far better character than I expected.  She makes the most of her opportunities, even when thrust into the least glamorous magic world.  She is resourceful, determined, smart, loyal.  When a dark magician attacks her mentor Thane, Ceomy risks everything to save him.  She learns as much paper magic as she can and, more important, learns how to think of new paper spells, new uses for paper.

The Paper Magician is set in a London around the early 1900s, with automobiles and carriages, trains but no planes.  Holmberg doesn’t elaborate the setting more than needed, creating a small problem that those unfamiliar with London may not be familiar with the locations she uses.

Ceomy’s magic school oversees her apprentice years; while she is assigned to a single magician she is still bound by the rules and Thane grades her on performance.  I found this part interesting and the school structure adds some ease to the plot; it gives Thane legitimate reasons to test Ceomy and stretch her skills.

Overall The Paper Magician is a most enjoyable book.  I would prefer a more complex novel that develops the magic system more intensely and a plot that has more layers.  The characters are well done and the dialogue and interactions feel real.

4 Stars

Filed Under: Magic Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Fantasy, YA Fantasy

Royal Tournament by Richard H. Stephen – Beautiful Cover on a Morality Tale

March 14, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I picked Royal Tournament by Richard H. Stephen based on the cover and his website artwork linked in from Instafreebie.  I am a sucker for medieval stories and this one looked promising.

Royal Tournament is a novella featuring Javan, son of a local farmer who is the reigning jousting champion in his baron’s territory.  Now the king is visiting the baron and holding the royal tournament at the castle right near Javan.  Of course he must compete.

Compliments

The story itself is unusual for a fantasy set in a medieval world.  Javan makes friends with a dark-skinned man from one of the kingdom’s allies.  The stranger defeats one of the kingdom’s knights who is badly injured in the joust.  His men take revenge on the stranger and then turn their violence on Javan when he tries to intervene.  I’ve noticed more fantasies taking on themes of racism and basic fairness, and it was good to see a novella that handles this without moralizing or sermons.  Javan simply does the right thing for the right reasons; he acts honorably.

The other plot-related pleasant surprise is the ending.  Normally the young hero wins the competition, somehow defeating everyone.  That doesn’t happen, resulting in a more believable outcome.

Not So Good

I’m no expert in feudal economics but the whole Javan set up didn’t make a lot of sense.  If he and his father worked their land alone – without hired hands or even seasonal help – then they could only farm a small plot.  In that case they couldn’t afford the trained warhorse or even dented armor for Javan or be on such good terms with the baron.

There were a few other points that felt off, but the economic set up was the most obvious.

Overall

I enjoyed this short novella, but probably not enough to pursue more books by this author.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Fantasy, YA Fantasy

The Girl In The Tower Katherine Arden Sequel to The Bear and The Nightingale Russian Fantasy

October 14, 2017 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The Girl in the Tower by Katherine Arden already has garnered high praise and (to date) solid 5 star reviews on Amazon, just as did its predecessor The Bear and the Nightingale.  The books are set in early medieval Muscovy ruled by princes under Tatar overlords.  The people are deeply religious, superstitious, uneducated, yet as Arden shows us, admirable.

I enjoyed reading about early  medieval Rus/Muscovy in both novels as it is an era and locale we seldom see in fiction.  The people must be fierce and hardy to survive the long cold winters, muddy springs and falls.  As the author noted, Vasya knows nothing of luxury.  To her being warm, having enough to eat, having dry socks are luxurious.  Ideas of beautiful furniture, wall hangings that are as much decoration as aids to warmth, of good food all winter, these are as fantastical as snowdrops in January.

We are meant to admire and identify with main character Vasya, the girl who found the snowdrops in winter, but I didn’t find her likable.

Vasya has dilemmas:

  • She can see the small household spirits, the ones in the bathhouse, the oven, the stable that almost no one else can, which in a superstitious age marked her as horribly different, a witch.
  • Vasya is a girl in an era when a high-born girl either married or entered the convent.  Vasya wants neither of these; she wants adventure, she wants to travel.
  • She refuses to compromise or to decide what to do.

Reading the first half of the novel was like wading through icy cold water.  We know nothing good can come of Vasya’s determination, there is no good ending possible.  Once Vasya meets Prince Dmitrii and she and her brother Sasha lie to him that she is a young man, she has even fewer options and none are palatable.

Prince Dmitrii grows in this sequel.  He had a small role in The Bear and the Nighingale, portrayed as young, somewhat self-indulgent.  In this sequel Dmitrii acts as a prince.  He routs bandits, tries to protect his people from avaricious Tatars, abhors lies.

The relationship between frost demon Morosko and Vasya is frustrating to read.  It’s obvious something is going on with Vasya’s sapphire and that Morosko feels more for Vasya than he admits or that he believes he should.  Vasya too has strong feelings but is confused as to what those are exactly.  She is intrigued by Morosko, is grateful to him, enjoys his company but finds him difficult and opaque and she does not love him.

I don’t care for teen fantasy novels where the 16 year old idiot girl captivates the 2000 year old vampire/godlet/demon/what-have-you because it’s just stupid.  To Arden’s credit the Vasya/Morosko semi relationship is believable – it has a quid pro quo at its heart although Vasya doesn’t know it – but the relationship still suffers from the underlying problems that Vasya is young and naive and doesn’t know her own heart.

My overall problem with The Girl in the Tower is that it is not enjoyable reading.  Every page brings the characters closer to doom.  We know there is no happy ending, that nothing will be resolved – because the underlying problem cannot be solved – and that makes it difficult to read.  Every page brought Vasya into more tanglements, more lies, more risk.

Vasya can not control herself while in Moscow, cannot follow her sister’s and brother’s commands to be quiet, to stay in the background.  She takes a bad situation and made it far worse for herself and those she claims to love, just because she cannot control her curiosity, her bravado.  I liked her less and less as the novel progressed.

This novel will get many accolades and probably awards, but I do not like it.  The writing is excellent; the setting is unusual and intriguing, but the unlikable heroine Vasya and miserable options she makes for herself make it heavy going.  In fact, had this not been a NetGalley where I’m obliged to write a review, I would have put the book aside and not finished.

If you are familiar with The Two Towers, the second book in the Lord of the Rings trilogy by J. R. R. Tolkein, you know that it too has a sense of doom, of bad choices and no good options, of happy endings seemingly out of reach.  Yet Tolkein manages to create a sense of hope, with excellent characters and a plot that moves along enough to keep us happy, reading despite the overarching feeling of menace.  Arden’s novel lacks those elements, leaving only the feeling of menace, of doom, of a foreboding future.  Had I liked Vasya no doubt I’d like the novel, but as it stands, I do not.

How do I rate this?  Do I give it high marks for the excellent writing, originality, strong sense of mood, great setting?  Or rate lower because I do not enjoy it, do not like the character?

3 Stars.  2 Stars because I had to force myself to finish, 4 stars because of high quality writing

Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Fairy Tale, Fantasy, YA Fantasy

The Argent Star by Emerson Fray, YA Science Fiction/Fantasy

December 31, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Somehow I missed that The Argent Star is YA fiction until I recieved a copy from NetGalley (meaning I’m obliged to read it) and started in.  The book has several events that require leaps of faith, something I see in YA more than in adult fiction, meaning that things just happen, gadgets just happen to be available and people just happen to be around when you need them.

The basic outline could be fleshed out into a fairly good novel:  The Monarchy rules many star systems and has recently rediscovered the planet Novae and selected Ren’s father to be its new ruler.  Ren is no dummy and figures this is not as simple and clean as everyone tells her it is, and soon discovers Novae rebels are not so happy with the Monarchy and Ren’s family taking over.  There are hints of forerunner people and possible interesting back story elements but The Argent Star doesn’t explore them.

Ren is smart and a likable heroine who has a lot of common sense and the good taste to reject the suitor the Monarchy picked out for her. Unfortunately the plot doesn’t keep up with the characters as we have all sorts of events just happen that eventually set up Ren to negotiate with the Monarchy’s military leader for Novae’s independence.

Overall I think younger teens, say 12-15, would enjoy this, especially girls.  Ren is far shrewder than her brother Elian and outwits the Monarchy a few times, making her someone that younger girls will like.  The novel isn’t for adults.

I would rate The Argent Star 2 stars if rating for adults, but 3 stars for teens for whom Emerson Fray wrote the novel.

Filed Under: Young Adult Science Fiction Tagged With: Book Review, YA Fantasy, YA Science Fiction

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