By Caryn Strean
As iconic to women's fashion the little black dress is, this new novel will be the same for summer reading.
Nine Women, One Dress features a unique cast of characters whose lives are all affected by the season's hottest dress. The book starts off with a Southern transplant to NYC who wears the dress in her first runway show where she is photographed for a magazine cover. From there on, that dress makes its appearance in the life of a movie star, widower, private detective, and even finds its way overseas in some mixed-up luggage.
But feelings run deeper than how this dress makes these women feel. It changes their thinking and, thus, the paths their lives will take. It is also a sweet love letter to New York City, as we tour Bloomingdales, Grand Central Station, Sardi's, and Broadway.
If you're looking for something short and sweet, look no further. It's a short book with short chapters, and it can easily be read in a day. It's a perfect escape story or a quick read for a change of pace after a heavy book. And though short, I still felt connected to many characters and found myself rooting them on.
I would love for the author to bring these characters back in a future novel. Maybe moving forward in time where the little black dress becomes a wedding dress, or maybe changed from a dress to an item shared among them all. This would also make such a cute anthology movie in the vein of Love, Actually. Really looking forward to what our author does next.
Thanks to Doubleday for the book in exchange for an honest review.
Check out the book trailer:
Caryn Strean is a mom by day and reader by night. Asking her to name her favorite book is like asking her to choose a favorite child. Her friends call her The Book Whisperer. Caryn can be reached on Facebook, Twitter, and Goodreads.
A place where people can learn about new novels, read reviews, meet authors and win books! Along with rom-coms, we also feature historical fiction, psychological thrillers, and the occasional memoir.
Friday, September 16, 2016
Thursday, September 15, 2016
Brandi Megan Granett can be our sister!
We welcome Brandi Megan Granett to CLC today to talk about our theme of the month...family. Her novel, Triple Love Score, was published earlier this month.
Brandi Megan Granett is an author, online English professor, and private writing mentor. She holds a PhD in Creative Writing from Aberystwyth University, Wales, an MFA in Fiction from Sarah Lawrence College, a Masters in Adult Education with an emphasis on Distance Education from Penn State University, and her BA from the University of Florida.
Granett is the author of My Intended (William Morrow, 2000). Her short fiction has appeared in Pebble Lake Review, Folio, Pleiades and other literary magazines, and is collected in the volume Cars and Other Things That Get Around.
In addition, she writes an author interview series for the Huffington Post, and is a member of the Tall Poppy Writers, a community of writing professionals committed to growing relationships, promoting the work of its members, and connecting authors with each other and with readers.
When Granett is not writing or teaching or mothering, she is honing her archery skills. She lives in New Jersey with her husband, daughter and two dogs. Visit Brandi at her website, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Synopsis:
What happens when you stop playing games?
Miranda Shane lives a quiet life among books and letters as a professor in a small upstate town. When the playing-by-the-rules poet throws out convention and begins to use a Scrabble board instead of paper to write, she sets off a chain of events that rattles her carefully planned world.
Her awakening propels her to take risks and seize chances she previously let slip by, including a game-changing offer from the man she let slip away. But when the revelation of an affair with a graduate student threatens the new life Miranda created, she is forced to decide between love or poetry.
“Brandi Megan Granett’s beautifully written debut novel, full of twists, turns and truths about the ups and downs of life, had me spellbound from the very first page. Triple Love Score proves that, in matters of the heart—as in Scrabble—when you get it right, it’s nothing short of poetry.”
~ Kristy Woodson Harvey, author of Dear Carolina and Lies and
Other Acts of Love
“A charming mash-up of viral poetry, relatable characters, and slow-simmering romance. Granett explores how doing the unexpected might lead to what you had always wanted.”
~ Amy E. Reichert, author of The Coincidence of Coconut Cake and Luck, Love & Lemon Pie
“Clever, heartfelt, and full of surprises until the very last page, Brandi Megan Granett’s Triple Love Score is unlike anything I’ve read.”
~ Camille Pagán, bestselling author of Life and Other Near-Death Experiences
What is your favorite song that involves a family or is about being a family?
"Rocks and Water" by Deb Talan captures a lot of what I feel about being a mom. Talan sings:
“I will be rocks, I will be water.
I will leave this to my daughter:
Lift your head up in the wind
When you feel yourself grow colder
Wrap the night around your shoulders
And I will be with you even then
Even when I cannot see your face anymore.”
Recently my daughter found her voice in poetry. I feel like I get to pass on some of what I’ve enjoyed so far through her as well as some of the things that made me a real live person. Her accomplishments as a young writer light me up so much more than anything I’ve ever achieved.
Who is someone you are not related to that you consider part of your family?
My archery coach, Len Cardinale! He gives so much to me and has taught me so much about not only archery, but about how to live a life worth living. The biggest thing he taught me is that thoughts are things. How you think about the world, how you process events…that determines your reality. I so appreciate his care and respect.
Which fictional family would you like to be a part of?
I would like to be a Waverly Sister from Sarah Addison Allen’s books, First Frost and Garden Spells. I’d love to have magic and a sister to count on to help me raise my daughter. I am lucky to have some pretty amazing girlfriends, but as an only child, I can only imagine what it would be like to have a sister.
What is something that has been passed down in your family?
A belief in Santa Claus. When I was little, my mom struggled as a single mother. Yet every year at Christmas something special would happen, a bill would be for less, an extra would come up, a boss would pay a bonus, and she would be able to make Christmas happen. I have seen Christmas magic continue throughout my life. Just this last year, when I was riddled with Lyme disease and our house was torn up for repairs, my Jewish husband insisted we get TWO Christmas trees because he felt we needed double magic that year. My sixteen year-old daughter said to me the other day that she tells people Santa isn’t real just to make them feel better about themselves; people don't like to be contradicted, she said. She didn’t want to hurt their feelings!
Which holiday do you enjoy spending with your family the most?
While Christmas is a great holiday, we have really enjoyed celebrating our dogs’ birthdays. We take them to Dilly’s, our local hamburger and ice cream place, for kiddie sized dishes of vanilla soft serve with rainbow sprinkles. We get so much joy from their excitement; it makes a regular day special.
Finish the sentence: To me, family is ___________
Everything.
Thanks to Brandi for chatting with us! Enter to win TRIPLE LOVE SCORE at the following blogs:
Teddy Rose Book Reviews (US only, Ends 9/23)
Books á la Mode (US only, ends 9/16)
Liz and Lisa, along with 31 other books (US/Canada, ends 9/17)
Brandi Megan Granett is an author, online English professor, and private writing mentor. She holds a PhD in Creative Writing from Aberystwyth University, Wales, an MFA in Fiction from Sarah Lawrence College, a Masters in Adult Education with an emphasis on Distance Education from Penn State University, and her BA from the University of Florida.
Granett is the author of My Intended (William Morrow, 2000). Her short fiction has appeared in Pebble Lake Review, Folio, Pleiades and other literary magazines, and is collected in the volume Cars and Other Things That Get Around.
In addition, she writes an author interview series for the Huffington Post, and is a member of the Tall Poppy Writers, a community of writing professionals committed to growing relationships, promoting the work of its members, and connecting authors with each other and with readers.
When Granett is not writing or teaching or mothering, she is honing her archery skills. She lives in New Jersey with her husband, daughter and two dogs. Visit Brandi at her website, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Synopsis:
What happens when you stop playing games?
Miranda Shane lives a quiet life among books and letters as a professor in a small upstate town. When the playing-by-the-rules poet throws out convention and begins to use a Scrabble board instead of paper to write, she sets off a chain of events that rattles her carefully planned world.
Her awakening propels her to take risks and seize chances she previously let slip by, including a game-changing offer from the man she let slip away. But when the revelation of an affair with a graduate student threatens the new life Miranda created, she is forced to decide between love or poetry.
“Brandi Megan Granett’s beautifully written debut novel, full of twists, turns and truths about the ups and downs of life, had me spellbound from the very first page. Triple Love Score proves that, in matters of the heart—as in Scrabble—when you get it right, it’s nothing short of poetry.”
~ Kristy Woodson Harvey, author of Dear Carolina and Lies and
Other Acts of Love
“A charming mash-up of viral poetry, relatable characters, and slow-simmering romance. Granett explores how doing the unexpected might lead to what you had always wanted.”
~ Amy E. Reichert, author of The Coincidence of Coconut Cake and Luck, Love & Lemon Pie
“Clever, heartfelt, and full of surprises until the very last page, Brandi Megan Granett’s Triple Love Score is unlike anything I’ve read.”
~ Camille Pagán, bestselling author of Life and Other Near-Death Experiences
What is your favorite song that involves a family or is about being a family?
"Rocks and Water" by Deb Talan captures a lot of what I feel about being a mom. Talan sings:
“I will be rocks, I will be water.
I will leave this to my daughter:
Lift your head up in the wind
When you feel yourself grow colder
Wrap the night around your shoulders
And I will be with you even then
Even when I cannot see your face anymore.”
Recently my daughter found her voice in poetry. I feel like I get to pass on some of what I’ve enjoyed so far through her as well as some of the things that made me a real live person. Her accomplishments as a young writer light me up so much more than anything I’ve ever achieved.
![]() |
| Brandi and her daughter |
Who is someone you are not related to that you consider part of your family?
My archery coach, Len Cardinale! He gives so much to me and has taught me so much about not only archery, but about how to live a life worth living. The biggest thing he taught me is that thoughts are things. How you think about the world, how you process events…that determines your reality. I so appreciate his care and respect.
Which fictional family would you like to be a part of?
I would like to be a Waverly Sister from Sarah Addison Allen’s books, First Frost and Garden Spells. I’d love to have magic and a sister to count on to help me raise my daughter. I am lucky to have some pretty amazing girlfriends, but as an only child, I can only imagine what it would be like to have a sister.
What is something that has been passed down in your family?
A belief in Santa Claus. When I was little, my mom struggled as a single mother. Yet every year at Christmas something special would happen, a bill would be for less, an extra would come up, a boss would pay a bonus, and she would be able to make Christmas happen. I have seen Christmas magic continue throughout my life. Just this last year, when I was riddled with Lyme disease and our house was torn up for repairs, my Jewish husband insisted we get TWO Christmas trees because he felt we needed double magic that year. My sixteen year-old daughter said to me the other day that she tells people Santa isn’t real just to make them feel better about themselves; people don't like to be contradicted, she said. She didn’t want to hurt their feelings!
Which holiday do you enjoy spending with your family the most?
While Christmas is a great holiday, we have really enjoyed celebrating our dogs’ birthdays. We take them to Dilly’s, our local hamburger and ice cream place, for kiddie sized dishes of vanilla soft serve with rainbow sprinkles. We get so much joy from their excitement; it makes a regular day special.
Finish the sentence: To me, family is ___________
Everything.
Thanks to Brandi for chatting with us! Enter to win TRIPLE LOVE SCORE at the following blogs:
Teddy Rose Book Reviews (US only, Ends 9/23)
Books á la Mode (US only, ends 9/16)
Liz and Lisa, along with 31 other books (US/Canada, ends 9/17)
Wednesday, September 14, 2016
Virginia Franken's bonafide family...plus a book giveaway
We're pleased to feature Virginia Franken during the publication week of her debut novel, Life After Coffee. She's talking about her family today, in honor of our theme month. Thanks to TLC Book Tours, we have one copy of her novel for a lucky reader!
Virginia Franken was born and raised in Medway, Kent. Most of her childhood was spent wearing a dance leotard and tights, and at age 11 she attended the (sort of) prestigious dance school The Arts Education School, Tring, where she spent her teen years trying to do pique turns in a straight line and getting drunk in the village. (The inability to do the former possibly informed by too much opportunity to do the latter).
After graduating from The University of Roehampton, she worked on cruise liners as a professional dancer before deciding she’d had enough of wearing diamanté g-strings for a living and somehow managed to bag a job in book publishing. Getting fed up of having to choose between paying the rent or buying groceries, she eventually moved from London to Los Angeles where life was affordable and every time she opened her mouth she got to act all surprised and flattered when someone said they liked her accent.
These days she lives in Monrovia, near Pasadena, with two kids, a dog, one ever-lasting goldfish and her bearded lover, in a house that’s just a little bit too small to fit everyone in quite comfortably. She gets most of her writing done when she should be sleeping. If enough people buy a copy of her novel, there’s a good chance she’ll write another…
Visit Virginia at her website, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Synopsis:
When globe-trotting coffee buyer, Amy O’Hara, assures her husband—who stays at home to watch the kids—that it is He Who Has it Harder… she doesn’t really believe it. That is, until the day she gets laid off, her husband decides to devote all his waking hours to writing a screenplay, and she discovers she’s actually the world’s most incompetent mother.
Amy’s only possible salvation is to find another high-flying job as quickly as possible, but with the coffee industry imploding around her—and the competing buyers in her field being much hipper prospects—things look pretty dire. Even if Amy does manage to find full-time employment ever again, as her life slowly becomes more and more entwined with her children’s, how will she be able to bear leaving them to travel for weeks on end?
When salvation appears in the form of a movie-mogul ex-boyfriend who wants to employ her husband and rekindle their relationship, Amy starts to find she’s sorely tempted…
Family
Loud dinner conversations, dramatic room entrances and exits, enough food for a family of six heaved up onto a scrubbed pine table every few hours, kids, noise, distraction, plentiful love. Family.
Or that was the family I grew up in anyhow, and I presumed that having that same family unit would just be a part of the natural blueprint of my life the moment I hit my thirties. Erm… Didn’t quite work out that way.
But let’s back up for a moment. So when exactly was it that my quest to have a family of my own started going horrendously wrong? Well, in general, it is never considered a good idea to marry someone six weeks after you have met them. Yet, that is what I did: A sane, college-educated girl from a family no more dysfunctional than what can considered to be universally average. I married a man, moved to another country to be with him, and I hadn’t even met his mother. So given that start, maybe it should have been entirely predictable that the marriage unraveled just a few years in? Some of my favorite rom-coms would say, “Not so,” but sadly, real life often tells another story. However, perhaps not so predictable was that it would all go south just six weeks after I’d had a baby… I became a single mommy practically in the same month that I became a mommy and I never saw it coming! This was not in the blueprints!
Overnight “family” was now my son and I. Now, all you need to make a bonafide family is a party of two and a good dose of love - however, somehow life with just us, simply didn’t feel complete. Giving birth at thirty-one in Los Angeles is practically teen mom territory. I was the first one of my friends to have kids, so mommy friends were not in the picture. My own family of the “scrubbed pine table” all lived back in the UK. I was kinda isolated.
Even though marriage hadn’t exactly brought happiness to my world the first time around, I still knew exactly what it was that I wanted: One good man to start my life with again. A man to make a family with. I wanted a father for my baby who would love his mother. And did I find him? Well that’s a whole other novel, but eventually, yes – I found him. We found each other; two lost corks, bobbing around in a lonely ocean. And overtime, the three of us became that family unit I’d been searching for most of my life. We started having those vague “might we” conversations about marriage and even adding another baby to the mix. If three was fun, then surely four would be awesome! Of course nothing is that straightforward, but after a slight diversion (think surgeries, endless injections, stitches inserted in unlikely places) our beautiful daughter was born. And now we are four.
Of course, being a mother is also tough, tough, tough and not every moment is blissful. But Sunday night is movie night and every time we’re all piled up on the couch, eight hands in the same bowl of popcorn, spilling it everywhere, I never fail to stop and reflect that somehow, against the odds, I pulled it off.
I made a family.
Thanks to Virginia Franken for her lovely guest post and TLC Book Tours for sharing her book with our readers. Visit all the other stops on Virginia's blog tour for more chances to win.
How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Giveaway ends September 19th at midnight EST.
Virginia Franken was born and raised in Medway, Kent. Most of her childhood was spent wearing a dance leotard and tights, and at age 11 she attended the (sort of) prestigious dance school The Arts Education School, Tring, where she spent her teen years trying to do pique turns in a straight line and getting drunk in the village. (The inability to do the former possibly informed by too much opportunity to do the latter).
After graduating from The University of Roehampton, she worked on cruise liners as a professional dancer before deciding she’d had enough of wearing diamanté g-strings for a living and somehow managed to bag a job in book publishing. Getting fed up of having to choose between paying the rent or buying groceries, she eventually moved from London to Los Angeles where life was affordable and every time she opened her mouth she got to act all surprised and flattered when someone said they liked her accent.
These days she lives in Monrovia, near Pasadena, with two kids, a dog, one ever-lasting goldfish and her bearded lover, in a house that’s just a little bit too small to fit everyone in quite comfortably. She gets most of her writing done when she should be sleeping. If enough people buy a copy of her novel, there’s a good chance she’ll write another…
Visit Virginia at her website, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Synopsis:
When globe-trotting coffee buyer, Amy O’Hara, assures her husband—who stays at home to watch the kids—that it is He Who Has it Harder… she doesn’t really believe it. That is, until the day she gets laid off, her husband decides to devote all his waking hours to writing a screenplay, and she discovers she’s actually the world’s most incompetent mother.
Amy’s only possible salvation is to find another high-flying job as quickly as possible, but with the coffee industry imploding around her—and the competing buyers in her field being much hipper prospects—things look pretty dire. Even if Amy does manage to find full-time employment ever again, as her life slowly becomes more and more entwined with her children’s, how will she be able to bear leaving them to travel for weeks on end?
When salvation appears in the form of a movie-mogul ex-boyfriend who wants to employ her husband and rekindle their relationship, Amy starts to find she’s sorely tempted…
Family
Loud dinner conversations, dramatic room entrances and exits, enough food for a family of six heaved up onto a scrubbed pine table every few hours, kids, noise, distraction, plentiful love. Family.
Or that was the family I grew up in anyhow, and I presumed that having that same family unit would just be a part of the natural blueprint of my life the moment I hit my thirties. Erm… Didn’t quite work out that way.
But let’s back up for a moment. So when exactly was it that my quest to have a family of my own started going horrendously wrong? Well, in general, it is never considered a good idea to marry someone six weeks after you have met them. Yet, that is what I did: A sane, college-educated girl from a family no more dysfunctional than what can considered to be universally average. I married a man, moved to another country to be with him, and I hadn’t even met his mother. So given that start, maybe it should have been entirely predictable that the marriage unraveled just a few years in? Some of my favorite rom-coms would say, “Not so,” but sadly, real life often tells another story. However, perhaps not so predictable was that it would all go south just six weeks after I’d had a baby… I became a single mommy practically in the same month that I became a mommy and I never saw it coming! This was not in the blueprints!
Overnight “family” was now my son and I. Now, all you need to make a bonafide family is a party of two and a good dose of love - however, somehow life with just us, simply didn’t feel complete. Giving birth at thirty-one in Los Angeles is practically teen mom territory. I was the first one of my friends to have kids, so mommy friends were not in the picture. My own family of the “scrubbed pine table” all lived back in the UK. I was kinda isolated.
Even though marriage hadn’t exactly brought happiness to my world the first time around, I still knew exactly what it was that I wanted: One good man to start my life with again. A man to make a family with. I wanted a father for my baby who would love his mother. And did I find him? Well that’s a whole other novel, but eventually, yes – I found him. We found each other; two lost corks, bobbing around in a lonely ocean. And overtime, the three of us became that family unit I’d been searching for most of my life. We started having those vague “might we” conversations about marriage and even adding another baby to the mix. If three was fun, then surely four would be awesome! Of course nothing is that straightforward, but after a slight diversion (think surgeries, endless injections, stitches inserted in unlikely places) our beautiful daughter was born. And now we are four.
Of course, being a mother is also tough, tough, tough and not every moment is blissful. But Sunday night is movie night and every time we’re all piled up on the couch, eight hands in the same bowl of popcorn, spilling it everywhere, I never fail to stop and reflect that somehow, against the odds, I pulled it off.
I made a family.
Thanks to Virginia Franken for her lovely guest post and TLC Book Tours for sharing her book with our readers. Visit all the other stops on Virginia's blog tour for more chances to win.
How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Giveaway ends September 19th at midnight EST.
Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Giveaway: September and October Books We're Looking Forward to Reading
Every two months, we're featuring EIGHT books we're interested in checking out. (We know there are many, many more, but we're just highlighting a few that haven't received their time in the spotlight yet.) Here are the books we've chosen for September and October. There is one copy of each book available to give away and we will choose FOUR winners to each receive TWO books at random.
See our May/June and July/August posts for some other great reads you might have missed.
September:
All the Good Parts by Loretta Nyhan (September 20th)
The cover is pretty, but what's inside counts even more. Loretta Nyhan tackles an issue that affects many women in this day and age.
*Thanks to Loretta Nyhan for the giveaway copy.
See Book Mama's review and enter to win through 9/26
Take a Chance on Me by Carol Wyer (September 23rd)
Besides the fact that it makes us think of an ABBA song...the premise sounds like a lot of fun (as most bucket list books tend to be) and it's perfect for fans of Carole Matthews.
*Thanks to Bookouture for the giveaway copy.
Home with My Sisters by Mary Carter (September 27th)
A great way to get into a winter holiday mood before the fall has even ended (or started for that matter, given this heat). And a perfect fit for our September theme of "Family."
*Thanks to Kensington for the giveaway copy.
Enter to win a copy from Book Mama Blog, as well! (Ends 10/2)
The Promise Kitchen by
Peggy Lampman (September 27th)
Food, friendship, and a delightful cover...who could ask for anything more?!?
*Thanks to Peggy Lampman for the giveaway copy.
October:
Today Will Be Different by
Maria Semple (October 4th)
For those of us who know what it's like to make plans, but then life gets in the way.
*Thanks to Little, Brown for the giveaway copy.
Just Fine with Caroline by
Annie England Noblin (October 11th)
Annie had us at "irresistible dog." Perfect for fans of Mary Kay Andrews!
*Thanks to William Morrow for the giveaway copy.
Small Great Things by Jodi Picoult (October 11th)
Two words: Jodi Picoult. What further persuasion could we possibly need?!?
*Thanks to Ballantine for the giveaway copy.
Paris for One and Other Stories by Jojo Moyes (October 18th)
We're glad to see Jojo Moyes back with another book, and this time it's short stories!
*Thanks to Pamela Dorman Books for the giveaway copy.
How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Worldwide. Giveaway ends October 6th at midnight EST.
See our May/June and July/August posts for some other great reads you might have missed.
September:
All the Good Parts by Loretta Nyhan (September 20th)
The cover is pretty, but what's inside counts even more. Loretta Nyhan tackles an issue that affects many women in this day and age.
*Thanks to Loretta Nyhan for the giveaway copy.
See Book Mama's review and enter to win through 9/26
Besides the fact that it makes us think of an ABBA song...the premise sounds like a lot of fun (as most bucket list books tend to be) and it's perfect for fans of Carole Matthews.
*Thanks to Bookouture for the giveaway copy.
Home with My Sisters by Mary Carter (September 27th)
A great way to get into a winter holiday mood before the fall has even ended (or started for that matter, given this heat). And a perfect fit for our September theme of "Family."
*Thanks to Kensington for the giveaway copy.
Enter to win a copy from Book Mama Blog, as well! (Ends 10/2)
The Promise Kitchen by
Peggy Lampman (September 27th)
Food, friendship, and a delightful cover...who could ask for anything more?!?
*Thanks to Peggy Lampman for the giveaway copy.
October:
Today Will Be Different by
Maria Semple (October 4th)
For those of us who know what it's like to make plans, but then life gets in the way.
*Thanks to Little, Brown for the giveaway copy.
Just Fine with Caroline by
Annie England Noblin (October 11th)
Annie had us at "irresistible dog." Perfect for fans of Mary Kay Andrews!
*Thanks to William Morrow for the giveaway copy.
Small Great Things by Jodi Picoult (October 11th)
Two words: Jodi Picoult. What further persuasion could we possibly need?!?
*Thanks to Ballantine for the giveaway copy.
Paris for One and Other Stories by Jojo Moyes (October 18th)
We're glad to see Jojo Moyes back with another book, and this time it's short stories!
*Thanks to Pamela Dorman Books for the giveaway copy.
How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Worldwide. Giveaway ends October 6th at midnight EST.
Monday, September 12, 2016
Book Review: Sunset in Central Park...plus a special giveaway
By Sara Steven
**WARNING: May contain spoilers for Sleepless in Manhattan.**
I’m a big fan of the "From Manhattan With Love" book series. After reading Sleepless in Manhattan (reviewed here), I couldn't wait for Sunset in Central Park. I was eager to learn more about Frankie and her personal story.
For Frankie, love has never been a priority. In fact, it has no place in her life. It’s best to focus on her gardening, the plants that never give her any trouble, that never argue back. The mystery/horror novels she spends hours reading, that she can escape into. Lost within a reality that isn’t hers. Keeping a wall built up by wearing the baggiest clothing, lacking femininity. Anything to keep men away.
Well, most men. Her best friend’s brother, Matt, is someone she’s known for most of her life, a dear friend. If only she could squash the more than friendly feelings she’s developed for him over the years. Anytime she looks at him, her heart races. The yearning she’s kept buried seems to find the surface, complicating everything she’s worked so hard to build. It’s safer to hide away, to steer clear of burning desires. Most people, men, can’t connect with her, because they don’t understand the things she finds enjoyable, but Matt does. Or more importantly, he understands her.
Matt has feelings for Frankie, too. He knows she tries to hide from everyone, including herself, but he sees through it. He sees right down to the center of her, and it’s scary and enlightening, for the both of them. He wants so badly to be let in, to help her break those barriers that she tries so desperately to hold onto, but he’s not sure how to do it. Frankie has been through so much in her life, more than he knows. If he discovers her secrets, will he run away?
Many of us can identify with Frankie, with the reasons why she’s chosen to protect herself from relationships, from falling in love. I felt like I was right there with her, terrified at the thought of being with someone, yet terrified at possibly ending up alone. There's an endless struggle, with the highs and lows that lends a complimentary take on what a relationship is really like. It's those qualities and so much more that makes Sunset impossible to put down, and I'm looking forward to reading Miracle on 5th Avenue, #3 in the series.
Thanks to TLC Book Tours for the book in exchange for an honest review. Visit all the stops on Sarah Morgan's blog tour. Then enter to win a $25 gift card. (Giveaway is part of the tour. If the Rafflecopter below doesn't work, enter here.)
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Giveaway ends October 2nd.
**WARNING: May contain spoilers for Sleepless in Manhattan.**
I’m a big fan of the "From Manhattan With Love" book series. After reading Sleepless in Manhattan (reviewed here), I couldn't wait for Sunset in Central Park. I was eager to learn more about Frankie and her personal story.
For Frankie, love has never been a priority. In fact, it has no place in her life. It’s best to focus on her gardening, the plants that never give her any trouble, that never argue back. The mystery/horror novels she spends hours reading, that she can escape into. Lost within a reality that isn’t hers. Keeping a wall built up by wearing the baggiest clothing, lacking femininity. Anything to keep men away.
Well, most men. Her best friend’s brother, Matt, is someone she’s known for most of her life, a dear friend. If only she could squash the more than friendly feelings she’s developed for him over the years. Anytime she looks at him, her heart races. The yearning she’s kept buried seems to find the surface, complicating everything she’s worked so hard to build. It’s safer to hide away, to steer clear of burning desires. Most people, men, can’t connect with her, because they don’t understand the things she finds enjoyable, but Matt does. Or more importantly, he understands her.
Matt has feelings for Frankie, too. He knows she tries to hide from everyone, including herself, but he sees through it. He sees right down to the center of her, and it’s scary and enlightening, for the both of them. He wants so badly to be let in, to help her break those barriers that she tries so desperately to hold onto, but he’s not sure how to do it. Frankie has been through so much in her life, more than he knows. If he discovers her secrets, will he run away?
Many of us can identify with Frankie, with the reasons why she’s chosen to protect herself from relationships, from falling in love. I felt like I was right there with her, terrified at the thought of being with someone, yet terrified at possibly ending up alone. There's an endless struggle, with the highs and lows that lends a complimentary take on what a relationship is really like. It's those qualities and so much more that makes Sunset impossible to put down, and I'm looking forward to reading Miracle on 5th Avenue, #3 in the series.
Thanks to TLC Book Tours for the book in exchange for an honest review. Visit all the stops on Sarah Morgan's blog tour. Then enter to win a $25 gift card. (Giveaway is part of the tour. If the Rafflecopter below doesn't work, enter here.)
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Giveaway ends October 2nd.
Friday, September 9, 2016
What's in the mail
Melissa A:
Totlandia: Book 6: The Twosies - Winter by/from Josie Brown (e-book)
The Real Liddy James by Ann-Marie Casey from Putnam
The Choices We Make by/from Karma Brown (signed)
The Road to Enchantment by Kaya McLaren from St. Martin's Press
The Confectioner's Tale by Laura Madeleine from Thomas Dunne
Leopard at the Door by Jennifer McVeigh from Putnam
Does This Beach Make Me Look Fat?
by Lisa Scottoline and Francesca Serritella from St. Martin's Press
Melissa A and Melissa S:
The Boy is Back by Meg Cabot from
William Morrow
Sara:
Close Encounters of the Furred Kind by
Tom Cox from St. Martin's Press
Jami:
Undertow by Elizabeth Heathcote from Quercus (e-book via NetGalley)
Love Her Madly by/from M. Elizabeth Lee
(e-book)
Totlandia: Book 6: The Twosies - Winter by/from Josie Brown (e-book)
The Real Liddy James by Ann-Marie Casey from Putnam
The Choices We Make by/from Karma Brown (signed)
The Road to Enchantment by Kaya McLaren from St. Martin's Press
The Confectioner's Tale by Laura Madeleine from Thomas Dunne
Leopard at the Door by Jennifer McVeigh from Putnam
Does This Beach Make Me Look Fat?
by Lisa Scottoline and Francesca Serritella from St. Martin's Press
Melissa A and Melissa S:
The Boy is Back by Meg Cabot from
William Morrow
Sara:
Close Encounters of the Furred Kind by
Tom Cox from St. Martin's Press
Jami:
Undertow by Elizabeth Heathcote from Quercus (e-book via NetGalley)
Love Her Madly by/from M. Elizabeth Lee
(e-book)
Book Review: My Kind of Perfect
By Sara Steven
**Contains spoilers for Friends Like These (the first book in the series).**
The gang is back!
The same lovable, misfit characters I discovered while reading Friends Like These (reviewed here), are once again front and center, lending us a glimpse into their somewhat unconventional, slightly chaotic lives. Marie and Brian are engaged, ready to take the plunge into happily ever after. Marie’s best friend, Grace, is also gearing up for her own nuptials, but nothing has been smooth sailing for her. She’s trying desperately to have the perfect wedding, which is no surprise, since Grace is the epitome of perfection. This can definitely cause friction with Marie, considering Marie is more of a go with the flow kind of gal.
It doesn’t help that Brian isn’t around. He’s had a lot going on behind the scenes, trying to stay afloat with his career. It seems the more Marie tries to spend quality time with him, the more distant he becomes. Sure, she has her Fat Club crew, friends she can rely on and depend on to keep her in check, yet with Brian missing, it never feels as though the picture is complete. It doesn’t bode well when the one who’s usually sane (Brian) isn’t. And, the one who isn’t organized (Marie) is the one taking the reigns and keeping everyone in line. Will Marie and Brian find their way to the alter? Will Grace? And, will Marie and Grace get over the bumps in their friendship, or is it best to part ways?
Like it’s predecessor, My Kind of Perfect feels like a sit-down with a group of friends, much like Fat Club, I’d imagine. Hannah Ellis tells the story of Marie and her friends in a way that feels comfortable. I had a great time reacquainting myself with every single character. While I would have appreciated more backstory, so the two novels tied together a little more flawlessly, I still enjoyed my seat on the Fat Club couch, listening in on everyone’s lives and experiences. I know there's another installment in this series, Christmas With Friends (which is actually the second book) and I'm definitely going to check it out. Keep a seat open for me, Marie!
Thanks to Hannah Ellis for the book in exchange for an honest review.
**Contains spoilers for Friends Like These (the first book in the series).**
The gang is back!
The same lovable, misfit characters I discovered while reading Friends Like These (reviewed here), are once again front and center, lending us a glimpse into their somewhat unconventional, slightly chaotic lives. Marie and Brian are engaged, ready to take the plunge into happily ever after. Marie’s best friend, Grace, is also gearing up for her own nuptials, but nothing has been smooth sailing for her. She’s trying desperately to have the perfect wedding, which is no surprise, since Grace is the epitome of perfection. This can definitely cause friction with Marie, considering Marie is more of a go with the flow kind of gal.
It doesn’t help that Brian isn’t around. He’s had a lot going on behind the scenes, trying to stay afloat with his career. It seems the more Marie tries to spend quality time with him, the more distant he becomes. Sure, she has her Fat Club crew, friends she can rely on and depend on to keep her in check, yet with Brian missing, it never feels as though the picture is complete. It doesn’t bode well when the one who’s usually sane (Brian) isn’t. And, the one who isn’t organized (Marie) is the one taking the reigns and keeping everyone in line. Will Marie and Brian find their way to the alter? Will Grace? And, will Marie and Grace get over the bumps in their friendship, or is it best to part ways?
Like it’s predecessor, My Kind of Perfect feels like a sit-down with a group of friends, much like Fat Club, I’d imagine. Hannah Ellis tells the story of Marie and her friends in a way that feels comfortable. I had a great time reacquainting myself with every single character. While I would have appreciated more backstory, so the two novels tied together a little more flawlessly, I still enjoyed my seat on the Fat Club couch, listening in on everyone’s lives and experiences. I know there's another installment in this series, Christmas With Friends (which is actually the second book) and I'm definitely going to check it out. Keep a seat open for me, Marie!
Thanks to Hannah Ellis for the book in exchange for an honest review.
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