Review: Don’t Bite the Bridesmaid by Tiffany Allee

Dont Bite the BridesmaidDon’t Bite the Bridesmaid
By Tiffany Allee
Publisher: Entangled: Covet
Publication Date: May 27, 2013
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Source: Publisher
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Alice Shepard needs one thing: a date for her sister’s wedding. And not just any date. A hunk who will make her fiancé rue the day he left her for her best friend. Her drop-dead gorgeous neighbor fits the bill—even if he is a bit quirky and never comes out during the day—and Alice has downed just enough appletinis to ask him. But she makes it quite clear that there will be no funny business.

Spending a week on a cruise ship full of humans while sleeping close to his sexy next-door neighbor sounds like a helluva bad idea to vampire Noah Thorpe. But his friends need time to get him out of a shotgun wedding—a vampire bonding that will tie his fate to a female vampire he’s never met. And Alice’s offer comes at just the right time.

What could possibly go wrong?

Goodreads Summary

Are you in the mood for something fun and sexy? I’ve been waiting for a nice little paranormal romance, something that doesn’t make me have to write down the genealogy, power structure, all about the world and how it got there, who’s going to kill them – you get the picture. I just wanted something uncomplicated, like a nice frisky werewolf story or a nibbly vampire tale. I was so happy to get my hands on Don’t Bite the Bridesmaid. It was fun, so, so smexy and a tiny bit angsty to round out the experience.

Alice Shepard is desperate for a hunky man to help her prove to her ex-fiancé that she’s moved on and she needs him really soon. Her sister’s getting married and she’ll be stuck with the cheating dirtbag on a cruise ship for a week – hence the need to find someone to prove she’s not a total loser at love. She’s noticed – okay, ogled – her yummy neighbor more than a few times and she screws up her courage and pops the question. He says no until he has a little problem of his own and has to skip town for a week and a cruise with Alice becomes a very good idea.

It’s not that Noah doesn’t like Alice or want to spend time with her, he just afraid it’s not a good idea. Vampires aren’t great with sun and the fun he wants to get up to with Alice is horizontal and includes his teeth in her neck at some point. He’s hoping he can stave off his cravings long enough to get back home, but when her ex starts bothering Alice again, he’s not about to let her get hurt. Noah decides it’s time he and Alice play girlfriend and boyfriend, which leads to a lot of steamy glances and smexy alpha behavior.

I loved both Alice and Noah, but the best part of the book for me was the romance of it. Alice had a lot of trust issues left over from her relationship with her smarmy ex but it was fun to see her brain go all foggy whenever Noah was around. She was so smitten with him, it was kind of funny how much she wanted to jump his bones and because of his own issues with the pointy-teeth thingie, he had to run away. Noah was ridiculously hot, protective of Alice and even a sweetie all in touch with his feelings – say it with me – awwwww. They were so good and smoking together that I loved the dance between them and since it felt like they had gotten to know each other as neighbors, it wasn’t rushed at all.

There are some terrific side characters, especially Alice’s vivacious sister Cindy and her outrageous mom Edna. Edna is a widow and now she likes younger men – she really really likes younger men and she’s hilarious about it. I hope if there are more books in the series that we see more of her. She and Cindy were a riot.

I had so much fun reading this that I’m going to go back and check out Allee’s backlist. This was just the right combination of paranormal and fun, sexy romance to make me happy and gave me a new author to check out. I didn’t see that there were any sequels already listed but by the cover and some hints in the book, I’m hoping that there’ll be more. I’ll definitely be there to read it.

My Rating: A
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Review: The Caged Graves by Dianne Salerni

The Caged GravesThe Caged Graves
By Dianne Salerni
Publisher: Clarion Books
Publication Date: May 14, 2013
Genre: Historical Fiction/Mystery
Source: Publisher
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17-year-old Verity Boone expects a warm homecoming when she returns to Catawissa, Pennsylvania, in 1867, pledged to marry a man she has never met. Instead, she finds a father she barely knows and a future husband with whom she apparently has nothing in common. One truly horrifying surprise awaits her: the graves of her mother and aunt are enclosed in iron cages outside the local cemetery. Nobody in town will explain why, but Verity hears rumors of buried treasure and witchcraft. Perhaps the cages were built to keep grave robbers out . . . or to keep the women in. Determined to understand, Verity finds herself in a life-and-death struggle with people she trusted.

Inspired by a pair of real caged graves in present-day Catawissa, this historical YA novel weaves mystery, romance, and action into a suspenseful drama with human greed and passion at its core.

Goodreads Summary

I love historical fiction but with all of the other genres I review, don’t have time to read much of it anymore. When I saw the synopsis for The Caged Graves in the Houghton Mifflin Harcourt catalogue I was completely captivated by it and immediately requested it, hoping it would not only be great but the YA genre would make it of interest to everyone who reads the blog. After reading it, I can only say that YA or not, perfect fit or not, I would have had to review this for you – this was an absolutely gorgeous, captivating story.

It’s 1867, and Verity has returned to the small rural town she was born in to fulfill a childhood promise to marry Nathaniel McLure. She was sent away from home by her father when she was two, so Nate is a stranger for all intents and purposes, except for the letters they’ve been exchanging. They’ve been sweet, romantic letters and Verity has developed a regard for Nate so she’s disappointed when they meet and he’s nothing like that. During one of their stilted conversations and walks, Verity comes across two graves near a church. They’re outside the church’s hallowed ground and have bizarre iron cages built around them. A closer look reveals them to be Verity’s mother and her aunt, who died within days of each other right before Verity was sent away.

No one wants to talk about the caged graves, including her own father. The more Verity searches for answers, the more ugly rumors she hears, from curses to grave-robbers, hidden treasure to witchcraft. When even her father won’t tell her the truth, Verity takes drastic steps to uncover why her mother and aunt were ostracized from the community after their deaths, why their names are whispered with venom and why even those who knew and loved them want to continue the cover-up.

This is one of those stories with a large cast of characters, nearly any of whom could have something to do with what happened fifteen years ago to Verity’s mother and aunt. It was a deliciously rural small town of that era, with all of its class snobbery and racism in place. The area had been a hotspot during the war and after being originally settled with British, Sioux and American, became the local melting pot. One family that had a generous line of Sioux blood was extremely prolific, very poor and discriminated against in the community. It was made known to Verity that most people in town thought Nate was marrying her to gain a large portion of her father’s extensive land through her dowry, even though his family was well-off. I loved having so many characters weaving in and out of the story both helping and hurting Verity’s search – there were suspects and motives everywhere.

Verity was a wonderful character, with flaws that I thought were consistent for a girl of her age in her time. She’d come from a sheltered, fairly affluent situation, expecting a happy reunion with her father and a romantic marriage and found a dusty, spare home, a father who doesn’t know what to do with her and a young man who isn’t what she’d hoped for. Her upbringing meant she was headstrong, outspoken, unapologetic and secure enough to think she could choose her own destiny, which wasn’t always the case with women in the 1800s. I loved her devotion to the mother she’d never known and the lengths she was willing to go to for her, to have her name restored and her grave placed on hallowed ground. I think it was realistic that a young girl like Verity would have doubts about her feelings for Nate, but I didn’t like the sort-of love interest triangle that developed between Nate, Verity and a young doctor’s assistant. I think it was taken a little bit too far, even if it was romantically dramatic.

I don’t want to say a lot about Nate or Hadley, the doctor’s assistant, because they’re both vying for Verity’s hand and she does choose one – the right one, in my opinion. They both brought different things to Verity in a relationship and in different places I went back and forth between them before settling on the one that I knew would have her heart.

The Caged Graves was more than just a good book I picked up. I was completely captivated by the occasionally dark story, by Salerni’s gorgeous writing and the search for the truth behind the burials of Verity’s mother and aunt. I loved that even though there was one true answer in the book there were a few other plausible answers too. The resolution of the mystery was well done and the romantic ending was satisfyingly sweet and believable. I can’t wait to see what Salerni does next.

My Rating: A
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Review: Desire by Design by Paula Altenburg

Desire by DesignDesire by Design
By Paula Altenburg
Publisher: Entangled: Bliss
Publication Date: May 13, 2013
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Source: Publisher
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He stole her job, and now she’s stealing his heart.

Eve Doucette finally almost has it all. She’s free from her mistake of an ex-husband and just landed her dream job: project manager for a new City Hall and drafter of the final design. That is, until a handsome architect sweeps into town to commandeer her blueprints.

Famous architect Matt Brison is unsatisfied with his mundane life in Toronto. So when the mayor of Halifax asks him to spearhead his City Hall project, Matt jumps at the opportunity. There’s just one problem: the feisty and beautiful project lead, Eve, who isn’t exactly thrilled about her new “coworker” hijacking her design.

But when the sparks begin to fly, they both find themselves falling for the colleague they shouldn’t want. And before they know it, their already shaky foundation might come crumbling down…

Goodreads Summary

Whether I want it to or not, my reading seems to go in one direction or another that I often don’t notice until I look back on a week or so of reviews and books read on my Kindle. I’ve been on an adult contemporary romance kick lately – my personal buying choices have ranged from meh to ugh and it’s been a little disheartening. Being offered a title from Entangled’s Bliss imprint was like getting to pick the first chocolate in the box of adult contemporaries – I know what I’m going to get and I know I’m going to like it, it just depends on how much. Desire by Design was chocolate-covered toffee crunch – yummy.

Eve Doucette is the project manager for Sullivan Construction, the company handling the new city hall project and while she doesn’t have a formal degree, her draftsman skills have been highly regarded on past jobs. She’s worked up a design for this one and expects to be able to present it to the mayor sometime before she kills him for trying to mess with her budget, but that dream goes out the window with the arrival of his nephew, hotshot architect Matt Brison. Mayor Bob already gave the design job to Matt, whose sleek modern style isn’t what Eve had in mind for her lovely Nova Scotia town.

Following a cute meet-cute that’s a great indication of Altenburg’s sense of humor, the sparks flew between this unconventional couple. There’s no insta-love, and although the book isn’t long enough to let things percolate forever, Eve and Matt still take their sweet time working around each other’s prickly spots. Eve in particular has a lot of issues – as a woman in what’s typically a man’s job, she’s developed an aggressive exterior over what was already a tough hide from her weird family and a rotten first marriage. I sympathized with her, I really did – she kept getting knocked down as person after person hinted that she failed to meet their expectations, but she just got up again. It was frustrating that she kept Matt in the dark so long about her issues with her ex-husband Claude, but I might have done the same thing. I loved that she threw a punch just as well as any guy, not that I’m going to start enjoying heroines beating people up or anything. For this particular heroine though, it worked – Eve was a firecracker and I wanted her to be as physically able to take anyone on as she was intellectually.

I’m not normally a fan of beta heroes and I’m not sure if Matt was all beta, but he was close. He was a nice guy, a good complement to Eve’s storminess. I liked that he wasn’t a pushover for her but that he gave her space, made her come to him then pounced on her – then they repeated the process. It was a nice changeup, having the guy in the book being more in touch with his feelings than the woman, and I can’t believe I just wrote that, by the way. Feely Book Guys aren’t for me usually, but Altenburg made Matt really sexy in a cute, wish-he-was-my-boyfriend, way.

At some point, when I reach a certain number of books I’ve read from the Bliss line that I’ve loved, my reviews will consist entirely of, “Bliss – loved it, go for it.” Or maybe I’ll rate them just based on a box of chocolates and which ones are my top five or something, since none have been less than good. When I’m just in a blah mood, need something sweet and uncomplicated, I pick one of these up and am guaranteed a good story. Altenburg’s Desire by Design was fun, sexy and had some serious moments that made me sad for one of the characters, but ended with such a sweet note, I pulled out a Kleenex. This is a keeper for me and I recommend it if you’re in the mood for an adult contemporary romance.

My Rating: A
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Review: Love Me (Take a Chance #2) by Diane Alberts

Love MeLove Me (Take a Chance #2)
By Diane Alberts
Publisher: Entangled Publishing
Publication Date: May 13, 2013
Genre: Adult Contemporary
Source: Publisher
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Thomas Jones has come to Vegas to win yet another account for his marketing company. But when he sits across from beautiful and sensual Brianna Faulk to deliver his pitch, his desire to leave Vegas as quickly as possible is replaced by the need to get close to her. Yet she resists his
charm.

Brianna knows a date with Thomas could jeopardize her job, but he’s so maddening and insistent, she has a hard time denying him just one date. But that’s all it can be: one date. Because she has to protect her job and her secrets, even if it means giving up a chance at a life she never thought she’d have again.

Goodreads Summary

After I put Love Me on my Kindle, I really couldn’t get it out of my head that I’d read Diane Alberts before or something – it turned out to be the “or something.” I had fallen in love/lust with two of her other books, Faking It and the first book in this series, Try Me, and purchased them but they’re still sitting there waiting to be read, which isn’t too abnormal with me. They’ve been pushed closer to the top of my TBR pile after reading Love Me, which was a sexy and surprisingly warm and fuzzy story that I enjoyed.

Ad exec Thomas Jones hasn’t just been unlucky in love, he’s been stomped on, dragged around and left for dead by it. Eight years later, he’s still bitter and has no intention of ever getting involved again. He’s currently throwing himself a little pity party while he’s in Vegas, waiting for the elusive Brianna Faulk to show up so he can wow her with his company’s plans for her casino then hightail it back to California. A brief encounter with a klutzy, irritable and luscious blonde has him rethinking his plans to join the priesthood – and wouldn’t you know, the curvy beauty is none other than Brianna.

Brianna has her own reasons for not wanting to jump into a relationship. She hasn’t been burned by love, but her heart is in a precarious place. It’s hard enough for her to get past the idea that she’s attracted to someone she’ll be working with, but then she has to sort out the parts about having sex with someone again. For her, sex and a stable relationship had always been intertwined, so to embark on that with Thomas was a giant step and there was a lot of stepping forward and stepping back. When they were together though? It’s scorchingly hot.

This is really a character-driven story and the main conflict comes because of character issues. Both Thomas and Brianna are holding things back and there are things in Brianna’s life that he’ll have to adjust to if he truly wants to be with her. Thomas was a character I really had to warm up to. In the beginning of the story, he was plain and simple, mostly a jackass. He had the fake salesman smile and persona down and the entire time he was pushing Brianna for her secrets, he put up big “no trespassing,” signs on his own issues. He was such an infuriating blockhead! Mid-book though, it was like a switch flipped and it wasn’t so much that he opened up, but he gave Brianna some slack for a change and quit being such a faker. The entire tone of the story changed and I started really wanting this guy to win her heart.

Brianna was such a wonderful character. Part of her secret explained why she had issues with Thomas but the rest I wasn’t expecting and it completely changed the way I saw her. She was so funny and spirited, I loved the way she was always ready to zap Thomas back into place if he got too pushy with her, yet she was so vulnerable that every time she ran from him, I understood why and would have been right beside her.

I really do need to get to those other two books of Alberts’ because I completely enjoyed her style and sense of humor in Love Me. Thomas and Brianna were a complicated couple whose story had much more depth than I thought it would. Their chemistry was smoking hot, they had a nice HEA and there was a great epilogue, like a little present.

My Rating: A-
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Review: If You Find Me by Emily Murdoch

If You Find MeBy Emily Murdoch
Publisher: St. Martin’s Griffin
Publication Date: March 26, 2013
Genre: Young Adult Contemporary Fiction
Source: Netgalley

There are some things you can’t leave behind…

A broken-down camper hidden deep in a national forest is the only home fifteen year-old Carey can remember. The trees keep guard over her threadbare existence, with the one bright spot being Carey’s younger sister, Jenessa, who depends on Carey for her very survival. All they have is each other, as their mentally ill mother comes and goes with greater frequency. Until that one fateful day their mother disappears for good, and two strangers arrive. Suddenly, the girls are taken from the woods and thrust into a bright and perplexing new world of high school, clothes and boys.

Now, Carey must face the truth of why her mother abducted her ten years ago, while haunted by a past that won’t let her go… a dark past that hides many a secret, including the reason Jenessa hasn’t spoken a word in over a year. Carey knows she must keep her sister close, and her secrets even closer, or risk watching her new life come crashing down.

Goodreads Summary
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I read more books about kidnappings and Stockholm Syndrome from the end of 2012 and into the very beginning of 2013 than I think I have in the previous ten years combined, so I was particularly interested in this when I saw it. Most of what I read has featured older teens with some kind of ongoing contact with their kidnappers, none who were family. If You Find Me was about younger kids and began with parental abduction and I have to say, it blew every other story right out of the water. This was such a gripping journey for these girls that it’s one I won’t forget for a long time.

For all intents and purposes, all teenage Carey has known is barely scratching out a life in a disgusting box of a trailer in the middle of the woods with her mother and little sister Jenessa. There’s no school, barely ever any contact with other people and barely any food that she doesn’t forage for but she’s so inured to the situation, Carey doesn’t expect she’ll ever have anything else. Then after her mother disappears for months, a strange man and woman appear, claiming the girls have been abandoned, he’s their father and he’s taking them home.

I read this a bit ago but it’s been a hard review for me to write. As a mom, Carey and Nessa’s story had me twisted in knots – it was painful for me to let the characters tell their story and not feel like there was something I should or could have done. My parental instinct to do something was sitting up and yelling at me and that almost never happens when I read. I can hardly believe this is Murdoch’s first book.

For the obvious reasons, Carey and Nessa initially have a lot of trouble fitting in at their new home. They have a big house and hundreds of things to learn to fit in with people. Fortunately, their dad married a wonderful woman who pre-loved them before they even came home and was willing to help, especially initially with sweet Nessa.

I can’t say enough about how much I loved Carey. She was so incredibly strong, mostly for all of the saddest reasons. No fifteen year-old girl should have to do the things she did or be a mother to her little sister. She had the most beautiful bond with Nessa, it brought tears to my eyes more than once. Many times it looked like Nessa had run to Carey for comfort, but the sisters were obviously getting it from each other as they always had. When Nessa developed a bond with Melissa, Carey could have been jealous, but she was happy that her sister was finally becoming “normal.”

Murdoch added a step sister for the girls that I thought about dinging my grade for, but ultimately she didn’t weigh that much against the rest of the book. I expected any step sister suddenly dealing with the sudden return of two beloved girls who had been missing would feel some jealousy and anger, but Delaney was a classic over the top mean girl. Sure, she provided conflict, but in such a unique and well-crafted story, she felt completely out of place. I didn’t like her sudden change later in the story either. I had no idea why it happened, so I didn’t believe it. She was just a character that I could have done without.

The ending is shocking and I love Murdoch for going there with it. It suited the tone of the rest of the book – the desolation, pain, hope and fear – and while I saw it coming, my heart still lurched when Carey told her story. If You Find Me was such a revelation, Murdoch has gone on my must-buy list.

My Rating: A
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Review and Giveaway: Faster We Burn (Fall and Rise #2) by Chelsea Cameron

Faster We BurnBy Chelsea Cameron
Published: April 20, 2013
Genre: New Adult Contemporary
Source: Xpresso Book Tours
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Katie Hallman is done with douchebags. Done with guys who treat her like crap and leave her broken. But then Stryker Grant is there anyway. With his numerous piercings and bleached hair, he’s the polar opposite of all of her past relationships, which makes him the perfect candidate.

At first, Katie just sees him as a physical escape from her previous rocky relationship, and Stryker doesn’t seem to mind just being a distraction from Katie’s problems. But soon he’s getting under her skin, peeling back layers she’d rather keep covered. She tries to make it clear that she doesn’t want a relationship, but keeps breaking her own rules.

Then a tragedy sends Katie into the only arms who are there to catch her, and she’ll realize that she needs him more than she ever thought possible. But is she ready to let herself trust another guy with her already-battered heart? Or will she push him away to protect herself from getting hurt again?

Goodreads Summary


Deeper We Fall (Fall and Rise #1)
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Faster We Burn (Fall and Rise #2)
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Breathe in and out with me, peeps. Okay, I cried during this book, but I didn’t end up in a depressed puddle! I’m officially out of my book purgatory, knock on hardcover. I know the rap contemporary New Adult is getting right now (deservedly), but this is better. It was upsetting to feel like such a cougar afterwards though. Rawr.

For anyone who’s read Deeper We Fall, Katie is Lottie’s friend and dorm mate and Stryker is Zan’s friend (this can be read as a standalone though). Katie and Stryker get along about as well as hot oil and ice water which means the sexual tension is off the charts too. Katie is kind of damaged goods right now though – she’s in a disaster of a relationship with Zan’s brother Zack. He finally goes too far and a post-breakup Katie impulsively decides to use Stryker for sex as a distraction from her problems. After that it’s pure selfishness on her part as she keeps on using him as her booty call, showing up and then dropping him when she’s done. Wham bam, thank you ma’am. Or sir. Whatever.

Stryker is a really nice guy who’s convinced Katie just needs to work her demons out, so he gives her what she wants, tries to work in a little more friendship and hopes for the best. Hot and cold Katie wants none of it though – as soon as he gets close, she shoves him back into the sex-only zone, or at least tries.

Katie. Drove. Me. Nuts. With her treatment of Stryker and bitchy attitude with him in the beginning. I had no idea what her problem was, so all I see is this nice guy who’s up (heh) for anything with her and she’s constantly treating him like nothing more than a plaything. I never got a full picture of what made her so insecure and damaged beyond her horrible relationships, although one of those would have been enough to send me screaming for the hills. There are several distinct nice moments that change their relationship; some of them Stryker’s but some of them are hers and she really redeemed herself for me.

I swear, I don’t know where this sudden infatuation for guys with piercings and tattoos came from, but it’s restricted to the literary world so far. Stryker has both and plays all sorts of musical instruments, is devoted to his sister and is willing to put up with Katie. Sign me up for one of him! He’s not really too perfect though. His past is really awful and he’s done terrible things in the past. With Katie, he makes several boneheaded mistakes and one giant one, but he’s generally pretty wise and romantic for his age. As much as he calls Katie on her crap, he learns to call himself on his own.

The supporting characters are all great, including Katie’s sister Kayla and her dad. Her mother is a horrible person and that’s all I can say. I love the close relationships with Katie and all of her friends, the way they text each other and have post-breakup ice cream sessions. There’s a lot of Zan and Lottie woven into this story too and it’s fun to see their relationship continue to grow. I’m hoping (fingers crossed) that Will’s story will be next.

So okay, there’s some angst, I did cry my eyes out at one point and once in a while, I wanted to club a character over the head with my Kleenex box. I still couldn’t put this down at all. Cameron has this great ability to tell a story I have to keep reading no matter how annoyed with a character I am and to make me root for a couple to make it from the moment they first kiss, even when that first kiss is so wrong I know she’ll have to figure out how to make it right. This felt like something different to me than most of the New Adult I’ve been reading – beneath the sex, there were genuine friendships and it made both Deeper We Fall and Faster We Burn stand out.

My Rating: A-

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2013 the giveaway
Chelsea is giving away ebook copies of both the first and second book in her Fall and Rise series – this is a giveaway I’m holding here and only here, so imagine the odds – mind=boggled, right? It’s open internationally, which we love, love. If you’re feeling like taking a chance on the big daddy of prizes, you can check out the tour-wide giveaway along with my guest post with Chelsea Cameron. She’s giving away a Kindle Paperwhite or a Nook Simple Touch Glowlight and that giveaway’s also open internationally. Good luck everywhere!

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