Reading Fanatic Reviews

Books to Add to Your TBR list... or Not!

Hey, ya’ll! I’m VERY behind getting my reviews up on the website! I’ve increased the reading and reviewing, leaving less of my leisure time available to update this website. I’ll do weekly posts with links to my reviews at Amazon; you can also check out my Amazon and Goodreads profiles.

By the way, I’m now a top 50 Amazon.com reviewer (#12 currently) and the top 8 US reviewer of all time on Goodreads (and top 9 in the world)… and the #6 US reviewer and #8 in the world in the past year. Cool stuff!

I hope to make updates to this site soon!

Wedding Day Shenanigans by Tracy Broemmer

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Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBooks, Kobo, Thalia, Mondadori, Angus & Robertson, Indigo (Chapters), and Bol.de

Wedding Day Shenanigans*

What Happens When Fake Becomes Real?

What a fun read this is! If you can buy into the premise of best friends marrying because he wants to use it as a ploy to get his ex-girlfriend back—which seems a little harebrained to me—this is a delightful contemporary romance. The hero and heroine are very well drawn, and the plot has a lot of twists and turns that take deep dives into both characters’ motivations, goals, emotions, thoughts, and backstory. The author has done a good job putting the reader right in the middle of a very complex relationship that has only gotten more complicated after their decision to have a fake marriage. Their new intimacy of acting like a husband and wife affects them in ways that neither expected, right from the beginning of the scheme. Though they had been longtime friends, this new closeness brings a depth to their relationship that neither wants to admit to. What to do when all that was fake starts to become real?

I didn’t like that the author did use some mild profanity, but I did enjoy the interactions between the hero and the heroine as they tried to sort themselves out of the mess they had gotten themselves into. Both characters had to mature and grow—a burgeoning love which makes them better versions of themselves—which I always love to see in a romance like this.

Something Wicked by Lucy Hudson

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Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Mondadori, and Angus & Robertson

Something Wicked*

Ho Hum

This novella is meant to bring to life the delights of the fall season along with a gentle romance. Unfortunately, I found it didn’t have enough tension and conflict to make it interesting. I’m afraid to say that I was simply bored by it. I thought, too, that for such a short book, the author included far too many scenes that seemed like just everyday occurrences. That is definitely an interest killer. They didn’t provide insight into character and/or drive the plot forward. The characters were likable enough but didn’t seem to have depth. The book just felt lackluster to me. 

A Touch of Silver by Lynne Connolly

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Available at Amazon only
Free with Kindle Unlimited

A Touch of Silver*

Well-Written Georgian Romance

As a fan of both Regency and medieval romance, I’ve always thought there was a dearth of earlier Georgian romance. Here is a book that can claim that title, and the author has done a simply fantastic job. She has created a strong woman, a widow with two young sons who inherited her husband’s silver business when he died. She’s not content to let things just roll along until her sons can take over. No, she has big plans to expand her business into reasonably priced silverware that she will sell directly to the public. To do so, she needs to expand her premises. She meets the hero after his man of business sent her a very insulting letter, suggesting trading favors to give her access to the earl. So the meet-cute was quite explosive as she went directly to the earl to complain of the insult. During this extended meeting, though, some of the more subtle sides of both characters were revealed as well. Gerald, the hero, is a newly minted earl who never expected to be one, only stepping into the title after three members of his family died in a tragic carriage accident. Despite their rough beginning, they have an attraction from the start, although that is of course complicated by many factors throughout the course of the story.

The only thing I didn’t like about this book was the time they spent apart in the last part of the middle section and the beginning of the end of the book. I just loved it when they were together because they did have chemistry and were fascinating to watch interact. There is definitely sexual tension between them, and the author did very well showing how that simmered as well as its ultimate culmination. I liked that the sensual scenes seemed to really fit with the characters; oftentimes in romance novels, intimate scenes feel like the author is just ticking off the boxes of positions and practices. That was not done here; instead, their interaction on an intimate level seem to truly spring from their characters, their histories, and where they were at in their relationship.

The author did an excellent job weaving in some history and story of London at the time. It is clear she has done a lot of research as her knowledge of the City of London at that time is breathtaking in its breadth and depth. I felt like I could see it. Yet she doesn’t overpower you with this knowledge. She is able to incorporate it as it flows with the story. Having read so many books, I know that this is not easily done (or easily done well). I loved the fact that the heroine was loosely based on one of the author’s own relatives. That adds a lot of authenticity to the tale. I found this a very enjoyable read, and I look forward to more in this series. I hope they will give glimpses into the lives of the earl and his countess.

A Duke in Autumn by Arietta Richmond

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Available at Amazon only
Free with Kindle Unlimited

A Duke in Autumn*

Chemistry When Opposites Attract

I found this book to be a surprising delight. I have read some Regencies lately that just didn’t do it for me. What I particularly enjoyed was the well-crafted dialogue. I believe that language in historical fiction should be slightly elevated but still accessible; compared to us, they were much more formal back then, and it is nice to see that expressed in written dialogue. As I read, I hear the story in my head, and this felt authentic to me. The characters themselves were also fun as well. The hero has a roguish charm, taking delight in vexing the much more straitlaced heroin. They truly are opposites. She is all about propriety and being a good girl. I liked, too, that this book took place in Bath. In quite a few Regencies, we hear a peripheral reference to Bath being a place where characters have been, are going to, or are at, but we never really see the location in action as an actual setting. The hero and heroine are next-door neighbors. By chance, one of the heroine’s new friends is trying to encourage her to loosen up a little bit, while she promises to help on the other young lady understand what the proper behavior and actions should be. This character change sets up an interesting arc both for the heroine as well as for the hero. If you enjoy well-written Regency, you will most likely enjoy this book.

The Autumn Duke by Jillian Eaton

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Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBooks, Scribd, 24 Symbols, Thalia, and Bol.de

The Autumn Duke*

Deficiencies Make Book Not Wholly Enjoyable

I think I have read most of the A Duke for All Seasons series. Unfortunately, I have found them to be of variable quality. I know that I enjoyed at least one of them, but some of these others have been a surprise with the number of deficiencies. I’ll mention these in no particular order. There are definitely some issues with grammar, punctuation, and usage. Commas are more problematic than usual. There was also a strange misuse of “whom” that caught my eye. Some word choices also didn’t seem quite right. Beyond language, I also had issues with the level of sensuality expressed by the duke so early in his acquaintance with the heroine. There was actually a level of what I would call the “ick factor” regarding his wayward thoughts. There seemed to be inconsistencies with the Duke’s age. At one point, the Duke said he was nearly 20 years past his father’s death. His father died when he was 14. Then later on in the story, it is mentioned that the Duke is 28. So those numbers don’t quite add up. I also thought that the characters themselves were very ill suited. They were too different in ways that matter to make a love story between them seem plausible. The duke has a rather wretched past with his father, who was physically and mentally abusive towards him. This has made the Duke a somewhat a solitary man who does not wish to wed because he fears he might harbor some of his father’s treachery within him. So he’s got a bit of a dark story. In contrast, the heroine seemed to be a bit of a bubblehead. She is at least definitely silly and shallow. To me, silly/shallow and deeply wounded don’t quite go together, or at least this author did not pull it off.

Rebecca by Nancy George

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Available at Amazon only
Free with Kindle Unlimited

Rebecca*

Wildly Inappropriate Heroine

Merciful heavens! I did not like this book. It turned me off on so many levels. First, the profanity. The blurb didn’t warn about profanity at all, and I think any book that uses a lot of it it should warn readers who have no desire to read that kind of language. While I can appreciate that the character was mad at her husband because of his treatment of her, I didn’t think the heroine should have thought and acted the way she did in his hospital room, both when she was alone with him and when she was with his mother. In a real-world situation, to have one family member talk like that to another member of the family when a patient is in the ICU is just hurtful and inappropriate. The heroine might not like her husband or her mother-in-law, but there is still such a thing as common decency when one is around someone appears to be dying. I am an RN, so I may be a bit sensitive to this issue. Oh, and some of her description of the hospital was so inaccurate. The book is already short, but surprisingly it takes until approximately the 12% mark for the story to actually start. The first 12% is taken up by things like the blurb, table of contents, acknowledgments, and descriptions of the other heroines in this series. I just did not like this book.

The Health Recovery Zone by Cary Kelly

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Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBooks, Thalia, and Bol.de

The Health Recovery Zone by Cary Kelly*

Too Personal and Often Tangential

This book is an intensely personal view of one woman’s own health recovery and her suggestions about what you can do if you feel you need help in this area. Unfortunately, I think the book is too personal and a bit scattered in its organization. She needed to focus more on her core message and make it applicable to others. Buried deep in the middle of the book, she has what is, for the most part, a good plan for more healthful living, including eating more whole foods, getting enough rest and exercise, and avoiding as many food chemicals as possible. But the book does not follow a logical flow. It feels like a personal rant against a variety of people and institutions. A message on its own is important, of course, but the delivery needs to be right as well.

Along with the major quibbles that I have with this book, as I have somewhat outlined above, I do have one small issue. I am an RN, and she mentioned us, stating that nurses she knows have admitted to not having much training about nutrition. At least in the state where I received my license, we were required to take one full semester of nutrition. I don’t know what it is like in other states, but I actually think that is more education than doctors get on nutrition.

If you enjoy reading books about one person’s personal journey to health as well as that person’s take on a variety of sometimes tangential topics, you may enjoy this book.

The Cowboy’s Hunt by Jamie K. Schmidt

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Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBooks, Kobo, Google Play, Mondadori, Angus & Robertson, and Indigo (Chapters)

The Cowboy's Hunt*

Conflict on Several Levels But Some Steamy Moments

This is a tale of opposites attracting. The heroine, Emily, is newly returned from a Peace Corps mission because her father said that the situation was dire back at the family ranch; she was needed at home. Donovan has taken a lease on part of their property, part of the effort to get the ranch back in the black, and he has set up a lodge for hunters who pay a lot to shoot some of the game on the property. Emily’s a vegetarian with very strong feelings about animals. In fact, she attempts to sabotage some of his hunts. An attraction does simmer between them despite them being in very different camps when it comes to meat. Several complications arise in the story, some having to do with the ranch and some having to do with Donovan’s sordid past as the son of an imprisoned con man.

I found the philosophical interplay between the couple to be fascinating to watch. They were each willing to compromise, Donovan taking her to a new vegetarian restaurant and she grudgingly agreeing that shooting the feral Hogs that overran parts of the ranch was perhaps a good idea. The sensual aspect of this felt rushed given the build of the relationship and the back-and-forth issues they had, and oh my goodness, I didn’t suspect that the heroine would be quite as much of a wild child as she was. All in all, I have mixed feelings about this book because of my feelings about the intimate moments, which I didn’t like, and the other aspects of their relationship, which I did like. By the way, this is a part of a series. You don’t really need to read them in order as they can stand alone, though you definitely will enjoy the series better if it is read in order because doing so will give later stories context..

Every Little Kiss by Susan Hatler

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Available at Amazon only
Free with Kindle Unlimited

Every Little Kiss*

The Call of the Ocean and Romance in Northern California

I read one other book by this author, and I enjoyed it, so I was looking forward to this book. The book called to me for another reason. I am not sure precisely where on the northern California coast the fictional town of Blue Moon Bay is, but I traveled that route often when I lived in California when visiting family.

This is a sweet little contemporary romance. The heroine is a bit excitable, though she claims not to be. She does have a complicated and sad past, being abandoned by her parents when she was a young girl. They put her and her brother under the care of one of their grandmothers. The hero is an absolute sweetheart, thought that always makes you question if there’s something deeper that might be going on! The book felt a bit repetitious the way that the heroine would go on and on about why she couldn’t have even a little fling with a hero, even though there was definitely attraction and chemistry and he did actually changed his trip so he can spend more time with her. How can you turn down a nice guy even if the relationship might be brief? I thought it was odd, too, that both the hero and heroine had ties to reality shows. Not everyone in California is on reality shows! The heroine had her own briefly, and the hero’s father had one. It just was quite bizarre.

As someone who lived on the Northern California coast for more than a decade and did much traveling up and down it, I did have a few quibbles with the way the author described the area of course, I don’t actually know where this fictional town is supposed to be other than probably someplace where it would be comfortable to drive to Napa for the meet-in-the-middle visits of the heroine and her grandmother. In the fictional town, she described many two- and three-story houses. Where I lived on the coast, such dwellings were rare. I don’t think I ever saw a 3-story one. Also, compared to the Oregon coast, the Northern California coast does not have a ton of seafood restaurants. I know that one would think that it would have, but on the northern California coast, they’re actually surprisingly rare. You can find good seafood in regular restaurants, but there aren’t many strictly seafood joints. The Oregon coast is entirely different; I live in Oregon now, and I know that every little burg on our coast has some sort of seafood shack, joint, or restaurant. She also described sandy beaches. Much of the northern California coast is bluffs and cliffs with no sand in sight. Of course, there is sand in places, but if you drive from San Francisco to Eureka, it is surprising how little is sand there is in places. One last Coastal rant. She described the sunlight as glinting off the ocean surface as golden discs. As a coastal resident for many years, I never once saw anything like that. When the sun is out and fully shining down on that glorious Pacific Ocean, what it actually looks like is a scattering of glittering diamonds, little brilliant white shards reflecting back at you from the blueness. It is actually quite spectacular to have full sun on a choppy ocean.

I just had to share all that because, for me, having these kinds of details wrong kind of detracted from my enjoyment of the story. Perhaps if you’re not a foggybottom, you wouldn’t notice or care. Again, this is essentially a sweet little romance that is a pleasure to read.

Neurology Rounds with the Maverick by Bernard M. Patten, MD

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Available at Amazon only
Free with Kindle Unlimited

Neurology Rounds*

A Window into the “Golden Age” of Medicine

I am an RN–a generalist, not a neuro nurse–so I found this collection of this doctor’s patient stories from what he calls the golden age of medicine (back before the heavy influence of administrators and insurance companies) to be quite a fascinating one. Given what I know of HIPAA, I’m actually surprised that he could publish a book like this, but it is a fascinating read. There’s not much of a distinct organization to it. The bulk of the book is a set of patient stories, and at the end, he talks about malpractice, being an expert witness, and gives one detailed case study. If you have an interest in medicine, or neurology, you might find this book to be an intriguing one like I did.

Jamie Brydone-Jack

Jamie Brydone-Jack

Reader, Editor, Writer

I’m an avid reader, for both fun and work/business. I enjoy a wide variety of books, including literary fiction, romance, thrillers, cozy mysteries, and fantasy for fiction and history, contemporary issues, philosophy, music, medicine, and cookbooks for nonfiction. I’m a freelance copyeditor who also does beta and alpha reading. I have two websites that are all about romance and mystery. You can also follow my reviews at Amazon, Goodreads, and Bookbub.

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

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

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