Reading Fanatic Reviews

Women's Literary Fiction (including Chick Lit)

Unscripted by Claire Handscombe

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Unscripted*

Main Characters Not Really Likable

Libby is a young British writer who has had a crush on an American actor for a very long time. She comes up with the idea of writing a book and sending it to him, hoping he’ll be so enthralled with it he’ll want to collaborate with her to make it a screenplay. She does write the book, and he in fact does invite her to Los Angeles to collaborate.

I had a hard time getting into this book and caring about the characters. Chapters alternate between several characters in the first-person present. As I got toward the end of the book, I wondered whether that unusual tense was part of what made me not be able to immerse myself in the story. Unfortunately, much of the book seems just to be telling about events, with significant blocky sections of paragraphs, not showing them through dialogue and action. The whole tone of the book just came across as strange to me. It didn’t help that I didn’t particularly like either of the main characters, Thom or Libby. Both suffer from a certain degree of narcissism and selfishness. Libby doesn’t realize the effects her actions have on others. I also found their age difference to be a little off-putting. The end of the book seemed off to me as well, and it just seemed to come out of nowhere.

I received a free copy of this book, but that did not affect my review.

In Darkest Days May Blossom by Leila Snow

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In Darkest Days May Blossom*

Can Love Survive in the Face of Harsh Realities?

Jonathan first sees Charlotte as she’s being beaten nearly to death buy constables for a crime that she didn’t commit. As a young gentleman, he is appalled her treatment and steps in to help, ultimately saving her life. These unlikely people fall for each other, and the book details Charlotte’s treatment in the legal system of late 18th century England.

Will Jonathan continue to stand by Charlotte? How was she fare at the hands of this seemingly merciless system?

Oh, my goodness! What a book! The author was able to draw me into this harsh world right away. Both Jonathan and Charlotte have incredible self-awareness as they acted and reacted to forces and circumstances beyond their control. As Jonathan saw that first day, Charlotte does have an incredible depth of character and inherent dignity that seem at odds with her circumstances as a poor orphan child. Jonathan, too, is different from—as Charlotte might say—a lily-handed toff. My goodness, what Charlotte suffers in prison as well as at the mockery of a trial! It’s hard not to feel for her and the injustice of her circumstances, first out in the real world and in prison as well. The author has done a skilled job in writing with such emotional honesty for both characters. I couldn’t help but be sucked in nor did I want to put the book down until I was finished. The end indignity—after all that she had already suffered—nearly broke my heart, but I was so thrilled when she finally triumphed.

This is an engaging and sometimes difficult read. The words themselves are easy enough, but the harshness of Charlotte’s world that they convey make a difficult indeed. Still, this was so masterfully done that I wholeheartedly recommend this book

Back Where I Belong by Virginia Gray

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Back Where I Belong*

Hero Deserves Better than Snarky Heroine

We meet the heroine, Susan, as she is standing in a church as the maid of honor at her best friend’s wedding. Susan herself has recently become engaged to Pete, a big-hearted southern gentleman. Susan is a hard-driving career woman, and she doesn’t quite seem to have adjusted to Pete’s big southern family. How will she and Pete’s relationship evolve during their engagement and marriage?

Susan, the narrator and heroine, is a difficult woman for me to like. She’s got a real hard edge to her, and she seems to not fully appreciate her gift in Pete and his extended family. She comes across as critical of the small southern town and the people in it, to the point of being insulting. She and Pete supposedly love each other, but as we come in just after they’ve gotten engaged, it’s not really clear how these two very different people came to love each other. Pete’s a solid family-man type, kind and loving, while Susan places more importance on her career and is definitely the yang to his yin, so to speak. Probably because I couldn’t identify with the heroine, I couldn’t really appreciate any chemistry between the couple. I just kept reading, hoping that she would change her stripes and become the kind of woman that a man like Pete deserved.

Song of Sacrifice by Janell Rhiannon

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Song of Sacrifice*

Stunning Look at Ancient Troy from Women’s Perspectives

The book opens with a scene of Queen Hecuba of Troy having a hard time sleeping as she ponders the child she carries and the disturbing visions she’s been having of coming conflict. She also reflects on her life as one of the wives of King Priam.

What a simply stunning book! It brought to life the myths and legends of ancient Greece in a most complexly detailed way. But, unlike the way we usually hear about them, the story is not told through the eyes of the heroes. Instead, it unfolds as seen by the heroines. I would venture to say that behind every hero stands a heroine or two. This is their story. It starts just before the Fall of Troy.

The author is able to convey the thoughts, fears, and emotions of these women as they see history unfold around them a compelling way. Though we are separated from these ancient heroines by millennia, the issues they confront are universal and timeless. The author’s ability to get inside these women’s heads was amazing in its depth; it made their emotions real and their plights understandable on a deep level. This book is immersive; I felt like I was there with them, seeing what they were seeing and feeling what they were feeling. It’s rare to find an author who writes in this fashion, and it was amazing to be a part of this world. For me, this was even more powerful as this era is not one I’ve gone to often in my historical fiction reading.

There were a few issues with grammar, punctuation, and usage, but that did not detract from the story.

A Song Out of Time by Dixie Carlton

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A Song Out of Time*

Naive Girl Comes of Age in 1930s New Zealand

We meet Margaret, the protagonist of the story, in 1935 when she is on a ship heading from England to New Zealand just after her brother died on the journey. Margaret’s relationship with her parents is difficult at times. She starts working in New Zealand and soon moves out on her own. What will happen to an inexperienced young woman living on her own at that time?

I think it is interesting that the author chose to fictionalize the story of one of her distant relatives. She only knew a little bit about her but developed a story that touches on the struggles that women faced in that era, especially women with an independent spirit. Margaret was definitely a green girl when she came to New Zealand, and the author explores that in vivid detail. Margaret eventually gets involved with men and discovers sex, which goes on to shape her life in a variety of ways. She also becomes a singer in a jazz club.

The story is written in the first-person past. There were a couple of problems with this. First, that point of view lends itself to an excess of narrative prose versus dialog; that did happen here. Second, the author chose to write it in a style as if the narrator was telling it looking back on her life rather than as she lived it. Using this technique, the author lends the narrator a degree of omniscience about herself; the narrator comments at critical junctures, stating that they are important turning points for her. I’m not accustomed to this use of the first person, so I found the effect to be distancing for me.

This book is very steamy. When the book starts, Margaret is truly naive and innocent, but that quickly changes, and we are there every step of the way as she learns about her body and how to interact sexually with men.

The author is Australian, and I will admit that I do not know the differences between American and Australian grammar and punctuation rules. That being said, the book seemed filled with those errors, mostly revolving around commas. They were missing at the end of long introductory phrases, at the separation point between independent clauses in a compound sentence, and before the direct address of a person (along with other issues). There are also a few places where punctuation around dialogue does not look correct.

That said, I think this is a fascinating piece of women’s literature that gives us a window on a time and place that is different to our own.

Finding Claire by Barbra Dawson

Universal Book Link

Available at Amazon (KU), though the book is offered at Kobo, Mondadori, and Angus & Fergus for free.
The author may be planning to have Amazon price-match to these other sources.

Finding Claire*

Potentially Good Story Ruined by Bad Grammar and Punctuation

The book opens at Claire’s funeral. Soon, her son is given a box of diaries and other things of his mother’s that will help explain some questions the son has about her, his father states. The bulk of the book, except for a little at the beginning and the end, relates Claire’s later teenage life.

I had a problem with this book on a variety of levels. First, I didn’t really see the need to bracket Claire’s story with the modern context of having it seen through her son’s eyes after her death; this added nothing to the story as not much was done in either of the small modern-day portions. The end, especially, could have been so much more (and have been the reason for the modern parts) if he had some interaction with the young man mentioned in the diaries who was so pivotal in his mother’s early life. That would have made this modern-day bracketing make sense. But as that did not happen, it seems rather pointless.

Another odd thing I found about the book was that even though the son is supposedly reading these papers and diaries, the story itself is related as any regular story would be, with a fair amount of dialogue. I don’t know about you, but when I write in a diary or a journal, I don’t write dialogue! So, unless the son has an excellent and spot-on imagination, this isn’t actually a good representation of what supposedly happened with his mother.

The most significant issue I had, though, was that the book was poorly written from a grammar, punctuation, and usage standpoint. So much so that I was utterly distracted from reading the story. I don’t think I’ve ever seen such terribly inconsistent and non-edited work in publication. I did receive an ARC of this book, so I double checked the Amazon preview to see if the final book had been edited before I wrote this portion of the review. The preview seems to be no different from the version that I read. The author appears to be British, but most of the rules of grammar and punctuation are the same between these two variants of English. She seemed to have no understanding whatsoever of how to punctuate dialogue, and there was a lot of conversation in this book. Capitalization is wrong, commas are wrong, and other random punctuation is thrown in around dialogue. Both in dialogue and narrative sections, sometimes ending punctuation is left out. Word choice was occasionally wrong, like bare vs. bear. It seemed hardly a paragraph went by without an error, making it so I could barely concentrate on the story.

The story itself about the coming of age of a young girl had its merits, but these were overshadowed by the structural problems of the book as well as the grammar, punctuation, and usage issues.

The Going Back Portal by Connie Lacy

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Available at Amazon only
Free with Kindle Unlimited

The Going Back Portal*

Time Portal to Dark Time in American History

Kathryn, an investigative TV journalist, loves her grandmother, but thinks she is not quite in her right mind when she starts talking about seeing a Cherokee woman at a farm nearby. The problem is, there is no farm close to them. After investigating with Grandma, Kathryn changes her mind when she is transported back to the 1840s. Forest Water is a woman from that time who was left behind on the trail of tears and trapped on what used to be her family’s farmstead by a brutal white man. Kathryn keeps going back in time, wanting to help the young woman. Soon, she finds that more is at stake than the woman’s freedom and her life.

Will Kathryn be able to help the Cherokee woman? Can she keep the dangers at bay? Will Forest Water be free of the man harming her?

This book was well written. There’s a good mix of dialogue and narrative prose; she doesn’t hit you over the head with a lot of backstory all at once. The story unfolds naturally, as we learn along with Kathryn. It’s clear that Kathryn and her grandmother have a good relationship, even when Kathryn doesn’t believe her. It’s always lovely to see warm, intergenerational relationships. Oh, my goodness, poor Forest Water! What she had to go through! Even though this is fiction, it brings home the atrocities that happened at that time.

This book is a real page-turner. The author made the time travel aspect seem plausible. You can’t help but feel for these two women as they struggle against forces that are so strong. Yet, the fight is important. I loved how the author interwove romance relationships for both of the women into the plot. Something for them both to have hope for.

If you enjoy time travel and romance steeped in one of the dark times in America’s past, you might enjoy this very different take on time travel romance.

The Middle-Aged Virgin by Olivia Spring

The Middle-Aged Virgin*

Death of a Friend Triggers Heroine to Change Her Life Plan

Sophia appears to have it all. She has a thriving public relations business and has been in a long-term relationship with a decent guy. She’s busy all the time, jetting around the world for her clients. After the death of her good friend and mentor, Sophia realizes that she is not living as full of a life as she could. She is a workaholic, and there has been no spark (and no sex) between her and her boyfriend for a very long time. She decides to change this and writes herself a new life plan.

How will Sophia’s business fare when she decides to change things? Will she find passion (one of the items on her list)? Will she be able to fulfill her new plan?

This book follows the well-trodden path of certain chick lit novels. A woman, whether by choice or circumstance, decides to strike out on a new and potentially frightening course to see what more life has to offer her. The book had interesting secondary characters, and Sophia’s new life had all sorts of twists and turns that I enjoyed reading about. Her thoughts and reactions were a little off-kilter at times, which seemed to point up that, while she may be approaching 40, she isn’t as sophisticated or knowledgeable as she’d like to believe.

There were some odd tense and voice shifts in the section where she is writing her plan for her new life. The book is written in the past tense, and this part shifted into the present. In this section, too, it felt like the wall between reader and character was knocked down unintentionally by using *you* or making it seem as if Sophia was speaking directly to us, the readers. I found these two things a bit jarring in an otherwise enjoyable book.

The Road Leads Back by Marci Bolden

The Road Leads Back*

Breathtakingly Beautifully Written Tale of Coming Home To Love

Forty-something hippie chick artist, Kara, is blown away when she is touched on the shoulder by a man she hasn’t seen since their one-night stand nearly thirty years ago. They had each had a secret crush on each other during high school, and after a graduation party, acted on it. This resulted in a pregnancy that, through no fault of either of them, Harry never knew about. Their son, Phil, is a father of a young daughter with Down syndrome.

How will this play out for this long-fractured family unit? Can Kara give up her resentment and anger and allow Harry to get to know his son and granddaughter? How will Harry react to finding out that he is not only the father of a grown son but also a grandfather to a special needs girl? Will Phil accept Harry and allow him to know his daughter?

What an emotional ride! This author hit all the right buttons showing the varied and varying emotional responses of the primary characters. The pain expressed by them is raw and real. She deftly reveals the past slowly so the various parties can understand the impact of decisions made by others that affected this family unit. The author writes with an emotional honesty that is breathtaking to read. I tend to move quickly through books, as I am an avid and fast reader, but this book had me slowing down and immersing myself in the thoughts and feelings of these good people who had been kept apart. It is a real pageturner, though not in the action-filled sense we usually think of one.

On the book review site where I downloaded this book from, it was listed as both Contemporary Romance and Women’s Literature. I agree with these labels; categories at both review sites and online retailers are often inaccurate. If you read romance, you’ve read the second chance at romance and the secret child tropes before a gazillion times. But in this book, these themes are explored with emotional and psychological depth, which is more common in women’s literature. Kudos to the author for creating such three-dimensional characters and an in-depth backstory. For instance, it was beautiful to read Harry’s reaction as he was thumbing through Phil’s baby pictures.

Goddess of Love by Fallyn Briggs

Goddess of Love*

What If You Shared Body and Consciousness with Aphrodite?

When Andra was a young girl, she loved the stories her mother told her about the ancient Greek gods and goddesses. Little did she know that those stories were real and would become her nightmare. According to the legends her mother shared, the Olympian gods were cursed to continue existing but only through human hosts, generation after generation. Andra’s family had often been host to these gods and goddesses. On her 18th birthday, Andra becomes host to the goddess Aphrodite. Being a goddess, Aphrodite wants to completely take over Andra’s life, which she very nearly does. Andra lives where Aphrodite wants, has the job the goddess wants her to have, and interacts with others as Aphrodite wants her to do (even, at times, making Andra black out so she won’t remember). She’s married to the host of Hephaestus; the god is kind, but his host is not. Her being the host of Aphrodite has strained other relationships in her life, particularly with her sister.

Will Andra ever be able to take control of her life from Aphrodite? Can she improve her relationship with her human husband, Kal? Is there any hope for her love life . . . and the rest of the problems created by her unique situation?

I liked the way the author introduced the mythical part of the book, having Andra’s mother relate the myths to the 8-year-old girl. The author does an excellent job of showing the mental battles between Andra and Aphrodite. She was able to show how Andra felt continually put upon by Aphrodite’s thoughts and actions. The author presented other gods and goddesses in ways that rang true to Greek mythology.

This is a very unusual book, but one that I found interesting to read. I like it when authors play around with fairytales and mythology, especially when they bring it into contemporary times. The author pulled that off very well.

I received a free copy of this book, but this did not affect my review.

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One star = I received it as a free advance/review copy or directly from the author.

Two stars = I borrowed it through my Kindle Unlimited subscription.

Three stars = I purchased the book outright (sometimes for free).

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