2015: Reading Year in Review

Watchman_LeeFor once, I agree with my fellow readers at Goodreads.  Without a doubt, the best book I read in 2015 was Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman.  It really resonated with me emotionally.  I sat there and sobbed through the entirety of Chapter 8.  It’s like I was Jean Louise, in those moments, drowning in a storm of grief and rage.  I still get a little steamed when I think about it.

My other top 10 reads for the year are:

The Rosie Project and The Rosie Effect by Graeme Simsion – I loved these books. Don Tillman, professor of genetics, and all around brainiac finds social interaction and emotional situations difficult to say the least. But he has decided it’s time for him to find a wife. He chooses to go about this using logic. That is a list of criteria, some of which he’s willing to be slightly flexible about, but which don’t take into account the fact the woman may have her own set of criteria. Emotion fits nowhere in this search. That is until he meets Rosie. Then everything changes and he has to find ways to adapt. This is often both hilarious and painful to watch. Even after he wins Rosie, Don continues to struggle, especially when others are added to the equation.

Souls_HarufOur Souls at Night by Kent Haruf – Haruf’s final novel gives us a last, wonderful visit with our  friends in Holt, Colorado. This one is about two older people, widowed, who come together in friendship in order to alleviate their loneliness. But this somewhat unorthodox friendship gradually grows into something more. However, others do not approve and try to tear them apart. Add in a neglected little boy and a dog and you have an emotionally wrenching read. Though I remember being not wholly satisfied with the ending.

The Truth According To Us by Annie Barrows – A thoroughly enjoyable second adult novel from the coauthor of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, The Truth According To Us takes us to a small town in West Virginia during the Great Depression where things are not what they seem. I couldn’t help but like and loathe the villain at the same time. The resolution of the conflict is rather obvious from early on, but the telling of it is vastly entertaining.

Honey_GanesanAs Sweet as Honey by Indira Ganesan – This story is told by Meterling’s young niece, Mina, as Mina and her cousins, all children, try to puzzle out exactly what’s happening to their beloved aunt in the strange world of adults.  An unusually tall South Asian woman, Meterling finds love long after she was considered to be “on the shelf” with a short, slightly rotund Englishman who promptly drops dead during their first dance.  Amidst the scandal of a pregnancy and a courtship, Meterling tries to find her place within two very different societies.

My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry by Fredrik Backman – Elsa, a very intelligent almost-eight-year-old girl has been tasked with a difficult mission.  In a series of letters, her beloved Grandmother, who has recently died of cancer, asks her to apologize on her behalf to a number of people.  Grandma was, shall we say, unorthodox.  Some would say crazy.  My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry is a wonderfully sad, wonderfully hilarious read.

Upstairs_ZakariaThe Upstairs Wife: An Intimate History of Pakistan by Rafia Zakaria – This a story of separation. Of a marriage, and of a country. The Partition of India and Pakistan was a difficult, painful process that, in many ways, is ongoing. Then, when you add in the divorce between Pakistan and Bangladesh, it gets even more complicated. More messy. The joys and pains of these separations is mirrored in the marriage of Amina and Sohail. They don’t divorce, but he takes a second wife. Amina moves upstairs while the second wife takes the downstairs and Sohail splits his time between them in a weird kind of custody agreement with which no one is really happy or satisfied. The Upstairs Wife is a complex, emotional, story of a nation and a family.

2Y8M28N_RushdieTwo Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights by Salman Rushdie – Based loosely on The Thousand and One Nights, Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights, is an epic ride from one of the masters of magical realism. With skill and imagination he tells us of the Strangenesses and the War of the Worlds which followed. How the Lightning Princess and the Grand Ifrits battled over the fate of our world while dead philosophers argued about faith and science, terrorism and logic in their graves. Dust arguing passionately with dust.

The Secret Chord by Geraldine Brooks – The story of David, shepherd, warrior, poet, and king as told by Pulitzer Prize winning author, Geraldine Brooks. And, I must say, she does it with style and skill. I wondered what happened next, even though I know very well what, according to the Bible, happened next. If that isn’t a sign of a good book, then I don’t know what is.Bourbon_Ward

I’d say the award, if you can call it that, for worst book would have to go to J. R. Ward’s The Bourbon Kings.  What does anyone see in that book?  I can’t say I like anyone in that family or that I really care what happens to them next.  I was also hugely disappointed in Jacquelyn Frank’s Nightwalker.  It just kind of fell flat.  The epic battle wasn’t all that epic and, as an ending to a series, or three, it was unsatisfying to say the least.

How about y’all.  Read anything awesome in 2015?  Or just plain horrible?

Can’t Wait for Books of 2015 – Part 2

It is the blessing and bane of the existence of all readers.  The shear number of books there are to be read  My TBR pile is freaking huge.  An all you can read buffet.  Filled with everything from meaty, weighty tomes like The Luminaries and The Goldfinch, to mind bending mysteries such as Pattison’s Mandarin Gate and Soul of the Fire, to brain candy romances like Binding Ties and The Duke and the Lady in Red.  And there are more coming out every week.  Some, like tomorrow’s Shards of Hope, you can’t help but be more eager for than others.  Here are mine for the second part of the year (Part 1 is here):

Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee
Release Date: July 14, 2015

Is there a child in the whole of the United States who has graduated high school without reading Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird at some point?  For me it was in the 9th grade.  I won’t lie.  It didn’t wow me.  Frankly, I’m not at all sure why they make teenagers read this novel.  I’m not sure a fifteen year old has the maturity to fully understand the heart-breaking complexity of this story.  I know I didn’t.  If you haven’t read it since, then you should.  You’ll be amazed at how your perception has changed.  To Kill a Mockingbird is one of those novels that grows with you.  As you grow older, experience more, the book changes, revealing new depths.  This is why I’m so looking forward to this rediscovered sequel, Go Set a Watchman.

The Blurb:

Watchman_Lee

An historic literary event: the publication of a newly discovered novel, the earliest known work from Harper Lee, the beloved, bestselling author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning classic, To Kill a Mockingbird.

Originally written in the mid-1950s, Go Set a Watchman was the novel Harper Lee first submitted to her publishers before To Kill a Mockingbird. Assumed to have been lost, the manuscript was discovered in late 2014.

Go Set a Watchman features many of the characters from To Kill a Mockingbird some twenty years later. Returning home to Maycomb to visit her father, Jean Louise Finch—Scout—struggles with issues both personal and political, involving Atticus, society, and the small Alabama town that shaped her.

Exploring how the characters from To Kill a Mockingbird are adjusting to the turbulent events transforming mid-1950s America, Go Set a Watchman casts a fascinating new light on Harper Lee’s enduring classic. Moving, funny and compelling, it stands as a magnificent novel in its own right.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1aArchangel’s Enigma by Nalini Singh
Release Date: September 1, 2015

It’s Naasir, need I say more?  And didn’t I tell y’all that Archangel Alexander would show up at some point?  He’s been mentioned too much for him not to.

Archangel's EnigmaThe Blurb:

Naasir is the most feral of the powerful group of vampires and angels known as the Seven, his loyalty pledged to the Archangel Raphael. When rumors surface of a plot to murder the former Archangel of Persia, now lost in the Sleep of the Ancients, Naasir is dispatched to find him. For only he possesses the tracking skills required—those more common to predatory animals than to man.

Enlisted to accompany Naasir, Andromeda, a young angelic scholar with dangerous secrets, is fascinated by his nature—at once playful and brilliant, sensual and brutal. As they race to find the Sleeping archangel before it’s too late, Naasir will force her to question all she knows…and tempt her to walk into the magnificent, feral darkness of his world. But first they must survive an enemy vicious enough to shatter the greatest taboo of the angelic race and plunge the world into a screaming nightmare…

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1aThe Gilded Hour by Sara Donati
Release Date: September 1, 2015

I adored Donati’s Wilderness novels, so I was completely psyched to learn she’d written something else under that pseudonym.  While a little bummed that it’s not another Wilderness book, I still can’t wait to read it.

The Blurb:

24611868The international bestselling author of Into the Wilderness makes her highly anticipated return with a magnificent epic about the transcendent power of courage in 19th-century New York…

The year is 1883, and although young surgeon Anna Savard and her cousin, Sophie, have become successful physicians, they never recovered from the losses they suffered as children. So when Anna encounters a child who’s lost nearly everything, she must decide whether she’s willing to let go of the past and let love into her life. Meanwhile, Sophie’s memories of being left alone in the world propel the young obstetrician to help a desperate mother—and catapult her into the orbit of a very dangerous man.

Vividly drawing on historical events, Sara Donati has written a captivating, emotionally gripping novel that proves she is an author at the height of her powers.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1aAbove the Waterfall by Ron Rash
Release Date: September 15, 2015

Ron Rash has become one of my favorite authors.  I just love his smooth, slow southern style.  Each passage just drips with it.  Those honeyed vowels.  Like a cool sip of sweet tea, at times laced with a splash of bourbon.

The Blurb:

Waterfall_RashThe New York Times bestselling author of Serena—the basis of the movie starring Academy Award-winner Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper—illuminates lives shaped by violence, passion, and a powerful connection to the land in this haunting tale set in contemporary Appalachia.

Les, a long-time sheriff nearing retirement, contends with the ravages of poverty and crystal meth on his small Appalachian town. Nestled in a beautiful hollow of the Appalachians, his is a tight-knit community rife with secrets and suspicious of outsiders.

Becky, a park ranger, arrives in this remote patch of North Carolina hoping to ease the anguish of a harrowing past. Searching for tranquility amid the verdant stillness, she finds solace in poetry and the splendor of the land.

A vicious crime will plunge both sheriff and ranger into deep and murky waters, forging an unexpected bond between them. Caught in a vortex of duplicity, lies, and betrayal, they must navigate the dangerous currents of a tragedy that turns neighbor against neighbor—and threatens to sweep them all over the edge.

Echoing the lapsarian beauty of William Faulkner and the spiritual isolation of Carson McCullers, Above the Waterfall demonstrates the prodigious talent of an author hailed as “a gorgeous, brutal writer” (Richard Price); “one of the best American novelists of his day” (Janet Maslin, New York Times). Lyrical and evocative, tragic and indelible, it is a breathtaking achievement from a literary virtuoso.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a
Library of Souls by Ransom Riggs
Release Date: September 22, 2015

Can’t wait to see what Jacob does with his awesome powers.  What thrilling adventures will he and his fellow Peculiars have next?

Library-of-Souls_RiggsThe Blurb:

Time is running out for the Peculiar Children. With a dangerous madman on the loose and their beloved Miss Peregrine still in danger, Jacob Portman and Emma Bloom are forced to stage the most daring of rescue missions. They’ll travel through a war-torn landscape, meet new allies, and face greater dangers than ever. . . . Will Jacob come into his own as the hero his fellow Peculiars know him to be? This action-packed adventure features more than 50 all-new Peculiar photographs.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

After You by Jojo Moyes
Release Date: September 29, 2015

I loved Me Before You.  It made me cry, so I’ll definitely have a box of tissues ready.

The Blurb:

after-youA NOTE FROM JOJO MOYES ABOUT HER EXCITING NEW NOVEL, AFTER YOU:

Dear Reader,

I wasn’t going to write a sequel to Me Before You. But for years, readers kept asking and I kept wondering what Lou did with her life. In the end the idea came, as they sometimes do, at 5:30 in the morning, leaving me sitting bolt upright in my bed and scrambling for my pen.

It has been such a pleasure revisiting Lou and her family, and the Traynors, and confronting them with a whole new set of issues. As ever, they have made me laugh, and cry. I hope readers feel the same way at meeting them—especially Lou—again. And I’m hoping that those who love Will will find plenty to enjoy.

—Jojo Moyes

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1aBlood Kiss by J. R. Ward
Release Date: December 1, 2015

Back to basics and, hopefully, the Brotherhood we all fell in love with the first time we read Dark Lover.  Frankly, the original series was getting boring.  I don’t really care about the Band of Bastards, and I care even less for Assail, so I’m looking forward to this new series.  Here’s hoping.

The Blurb:

The legacy of the Black Dagger Brotherhood continues in a spin-off series from the #1 New York Times bestselling author…

blood-kissParadise, blooded daughter of the king’s First Advisor, is ready to break free from the restrictive life of an aristocratic female. Her strategy? Join the Black Dagger Brotherhood’s training center program and learn to fight for herself, think for herself…be herself. It’s a good plan, until everything goes wrong. The schooling is unfathomably difficult, the other recruits feel more like enemies than allies, and it’s very clear that the Brother in charge, Butch O’Neal, a.k.a. the Dhestroyer, is having serious problems in his own life.

And that’s before she falls in love with a fellow classmate. Craeg, a common civilian, is nothing her father would ever want for her, but everything she could ask for in a male. As an act of violence threatens to tear apart the entire program, and the erotic pull between them grows irresistible, Paradise is tested in ways she never anticipated—and left wondering whether she’s strong enough to claim her own power…on the field, and off.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

Can’t Wait for Books of 2015 – Part 1

Happy New Year, everyone.  I hope y’all had a good, but safe, time last night.  And that this morning’s hangover isn’t too bad. 🙂

Being an unashamed, unrepentant, and incurable bookworm, I’m already eagerly anticipating several books that are coming out in this new year.

Here are just a few:

The Mime Order by Samantha Shannon
Release Date: January 27, 2015

The eagerly awaited sequel to The Bone Season.  It was supposed to be released October 2014, but, for some reason, is now slated to come out January 2015.

The Blurb:

Mime_ShannonPaige Mahoney has escaped the brutal penal colony of Sheol I, but her problems have only just begun: many of the fugitives are still missing and she is the most wanted person in London.

As Scion turns its all-seeing eye on Paige, the mime-lords and mime-queens of the city’s gangs are invited to a rare meeting of the Unnatural Assembly. Jaxon Hall and his Seven Seals prepare to take center stage, but there are bitter fault lines running through the clairvoyant community and dark secrets around every corner.

Then the Rephaim begin crawling out from the shadows. But where is Warden? Paige must keep moving, from Seven Dials to Grub Street to the secret catacombs of Camden, until the fate of the underworld can be decided. Will Paige know who to trust? The hunt for the dreamwalker is on.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

The Country of Ice Cream Star by Sandra Newman
Release Date: February 10, 2015

Sandra Newman is a new author for me, but this book sounds really good.  Just read the part of the blurb that’s in Ice Cream Star’s own words.  You just want to read more, don’t you?

The Blurb:

Ice-Cream-Star_NewmanMy name be Ice Cream Fifteen Star. This be the tale of how I bring the cure to all the Nighted States, save every poory children, brief for life. Is how a city die for selfish love, and rise from this same smallness. Be how the new America begin, in wars against all hope – a country with no power in a world that hate its life. So been the faith I sworn, and it ain’t evils in no world nor cruelties in no red hell can change the vally heart of Ice Cream Star.

In the ruins of a future America, fifteen-year-old Ice Cream Star and her people survive by scavenging in the detritus of an abandoned civilization. Theirs is a world of children – by the time they reach the age of twenty, each of them will die of the disease they call posies.

When her brother sickens, Ice Cream sets out on the trail of a cure, led by a stranger whose intentions remain unclear. It’s a quest that will lead her to love and heartbreak, to captivity and to a nation’s throne, and ultimately into a war that threatens to doom everyone she loves.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

Dead Heat by Patricia Briggs
Release Date: March 3, 2015

Charles and Anna, not to mention Brother Wolf and Blue-Eyes (that’s how I think of her), are finally back.  And, bonus, it sounds like the Fae are about to kick some ass.  I hope they do it in a very dramatic, shock-and-awe fashion.

The Blurb:

Heat_BriggsTHE NEW CHARLES AND ANNA NOVEL

Praised as “the perfect blend of action, romance, suspense and paranormal,” the Alpha and Omega novels transport readers into the realm of the werewolf, where Charles Cornick and Anna Latham embody opposite sides of the shifter personality. Now, a pleasure trip drops the couple into the middle of some bad supernatural business…

For once, mated werewolves Charles and Anna are not traveling because of Charles’s role as his father’s enforcer. This time, their trip to Arizona is purely personal, as Charles plans to buy Anna a horse for her birthday. Or at least it starts out that way…

Charles and Anna soon discover that a dangerous Fae being is on the loose, replacing human children with simulacrums. The Fae’s cold war with humanity is about to heat up—and Charles and Anna are in the cross fire.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

Lady of the Eternal City by Kate Quinn
Release Date: March 3, 2015

Vix returns, not only to the page, but to Britain.  Unfortunately for him, Hadrian and Sabina come too.  And Hadrian has a new obsession which also happens to be an excellent way to torment Vix.

The Blurb:

20486495National bestselling author Kate Quinn returns with the long-awaited fourth volume in the Empress of Rome series, an unforgettable new tale of the politics, power, and passion that defined ancient Rome.

Elegant, secretive Sabina may be Empress of Rome, but she still stands poised on a knife’s edge. She must keep the peace between two deadly enemies: her husband Hadrian, Rome’s brilliant and sinister Emperor; and battered warrior Vix, who is her first love. But Sabina is guardian of a deadly secret: Vix’s beautiful son Antinous has become the Emperor’s latest obsession.

Empress and Emperor, father and son will spin in a deadly dance of passion, betrayal, conspiracy, and war. As tragedy sends Hadrian spiraling into madness, Vix and Sabina form a last desperate pact to save the Empire. But ultimately, the fate of Rome lies with an untried girl, a spirited redhead who may just be the next Lady of the Eternal City . . .

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

Binding Ties by Shannon K. Butcher
Release Date: March 3, 2014

I know, I know.  I hated Willing Sacrifice.  So, why are you anticipating this one, you ask?  Truth is, I actually hesitated to add Binding Ties to this list, but, in the end, I just couldn’t resist.  I mean, it’s Joseph, finally, and a certain Slayer.  How could any reader of this series NOT eagerly anticipate this story?  Maybe, if we’re lucky, we’ll actually learn more about the Slayers, as well as watch Joseph get his head out of his ass and make a move already.  Or maybe it’s Lyka who makes the first move.  I really don’t care as long as someone does!

The Blurb:

Binding_ButcherThey are the Sentinels. Three races descended from ancient guardians of mankind, each possessing unique abilities in their battle to protect humanity against their eternal foes: the Synestryn. Now a warrior must protect his onetime enemy—without succumbing to his darkest desires.

Lyka Phelan is a Slayer, sent to live among her enemy to guarantee lasting peace with the Theronai. Yet she has a secret—and it could make her a slave to their power. But when a pack of Synestryn destroys her home and captures her packmates, Lyka realizes her freedom is a small price to pay for the safety of her people. So she strikes a bargain with the leader of the Theronai—one that reveals her true identity and binds her to him forever.

Joseph thought he knew better than to tangle with the beautiful, hot-blooded Lyka. One misstep could send their races straight back to war. But now he has no choice other than to help her. Forced to protect her with his life, Joseph finds himself increasingly drawn to Lyka. As they risk everything in their fight against the demons, he realizes he must convince her to surrender to him completely—otherwise she will never truly be his.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

The Shadows by J.R. Ward
Release Date: April 7, 2015

Just as I was ready to throw in the towel and give up on this series, the Warden announces The Shadows.  I honestly don’t care about Trez, but I can’t wait for Iam’s story.  And finding out what’s wrong with Selena.  It’s obviously some genetic disorder of the Chosen, but we don’t know anything specific.  I also want to know more about the Shadows, in general.  And, hopefully, she’ll bring in the symphaths.  They’ve been really quiet, lately.  Even with Rehvenge as their king, they should still have pulled something by now.

The Blurb:

Shadows-WardTwo brothers bound by more than blood fight to change a brutal destiny in the heart-wrenching new novel of the Black Dagger Brotherhood by #1 New York Times bestselling author J. R. Ward.

Trez “Latimer” doesn’t really exist. And not just because the identity was created so that a Shadow could function in the underbelly of the human world. Sold by his parents to the Queen of the S’Hsibe as a child, Trez escaped the Territory and has been a pimp and an enforcer in Caldwell, NY for years- all the while on the run from a destiny of sexual servitude. He’s never had anyone he could totally rely on… except for his brother, iAm.

iAm’s sole goal has always been to keep his brother from self-destructing- and he knows he’s failed. It’s not until the Chosen Serena enters Trez’s life that the male begins to turn things around… but by then it’s too late. The pledge to mate the Queen’s daughter comes due and there is nowhere to run, nowhere to hide, and no negotiating.

Trapped between his heart and a fate he never volunteered for, Trez must decide whether to endanger himself and others- or forever leave behind the female he’s in love with. But then an unimaginable tragedy strikes and changes everything. Staring out over an emotional abyss, Trez must find a reason to go on or risk losing himself and his soul forever. And iAm, in the name of brotherly love, is faced with making the ultimate sacrifice…

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

Shards of Hope by Nalini Singh
Release Date: June 2, 2015

It’s Aden, enough said.  🙂

The Blurb:

Shards_SinghThe “smoldering heat, epic romance, and awesome action”* of Nalini Singh’s New York Times bestselling series continues as two Arrows find themselves caught in a chilling conspiracy that spans all three races…

Awakening wounded in a darkened cell, their psychic abilities blocked, Aden and Zaira know they must escape. But when the lethal soldiers break free from their mysterious prison, they find themselves in a harsh, inhospitable landscape far from civilization. Their only hope for survival is to make it to the hidden home of a predatory changeling pack that doesn’t welcome outsiders.

And they must survive. A shadowy enemy has put a target on the back of the Arrow squad, an enemy that cannot be permitted to succeed in its deadly campaign. Aden will cross any line to keep his people safe for this new future, where even an assassin might have hope of a life beyond blood and death and pain. Zaira has no such hope. She knows she’s too damaged to return from the abyss. Her driving goal is to protect Aden, protect the only person who has ever come back for her no matter what.

This time, even Aden’s passionate determination may not be enough—because the emotionless chill of Silence existed for a reason. For the violent, and the insane, and the irreparably broken…like Zaira.

goodreads-badge-add-plus-7d89c09d2df9777b38fbd808bb3ffb1a

Brain Candy Weekend

Candy isn’t good for you. It will rot your teeth, make you gain weight, and has little to no nutritional value to offset that tremendous amount of calories. But we eat it anyway. Just for the love, or the hell, of it. Cole_JDTylerFor the sense of nostalgia it gives us, or the forbidden pleasure of doing something we shouldn’t.  I consider certain books to be candy for the brain.  Nalini Singh’s Psy-Changeling and Guild Hunter novels, for example, or J. R. Ward’s Black Dagger Brotherhood are like the most luxurious, darkest, richest, most decadent dark chocolate truffle. Wolfs-Fall_JDTylerThe Godiva ones dusted with cocoa.  Mmmmmm.

Well, this weekend, I decided to relax my brain and let it veg, stuffing it with lots of word candy.  Thus, I pretty much gorged on J. D. Tyler’s Alpha Pack series, devouring each and every one of them.  Including the lone novella.  Although dark, they don’t have the weight, the richness, of Singh’s books or the BDB.  Lindor truffles instead of Godiva.  And I love Lindor truffles.  My niece got me a huge 70+ piece bag of them last Christmas.  Yummy.  I’m eagerly awaiting Nick’s book and, even more, I really hope Tyler bites the bullet and writes one for Nix and Noah.  On her Facebook page, she says she’s plotting it, so, fingers crossed.

What’s your favorite candy, brain or otherwise?

The King by J. R. Ward

Back to where, and with whom, it all began, the king and queen of the race, Wrath and Beth. I really enjoyed the look we got into Beth’s relationship with John Matthew. And the flashbacks of Wrath’s parents. Makes we wonder if we could, possibly, get a prequel? Maybe a novella type think? Please?

King_Ward

The Shadows interest me.  Those little snippets of their customs and culture.  I really want Iam to get an HEA.  He so deserves it for putting up with Trez for so long.  Not to mention his relationship with Boo was both sweet and hilarious.

Speaking of hilarious, how about Lassiter as Elvis.  That whole scene had me laughing out loud.  Fortunately, not in public.  I am not typing this from a padded cell.  🙂

I found The King to be a very satisfying addition to Ward’s Black Dagger Brotherhood series.  I’ve been prepared to give up on the series, but I find want to read about Saxton, Iam, and find out what’s up with Selena.  And, of course, the Mary and Rhage novella.

And, about Selena, I thought she was a scribe not an ehros?  In Lover Enshrined, she was the last sequestered scribe before Cormia went into sehclusion.  I’m confused.

I still don’t really care about Assail.  Or the Band of Bastards.  I feel sorry for, Leila, sure, but why hasn’t she told anyone about X’cor coming so close to the mansion?  I whited out that last part, because it’s a bit of a spoiler.  Just a small one, but read it at your own risk if you haven’t finished the book.

Another thing about X’cor and his merry band that has me confused.  Someone, please, explain to me why they have not been reported to the Scribe Virgin for attempting to assassinate the king?

Rating:  4 out of 5 stars

What new books are you most looking forward to reading this year?

Most-Anticipated-Reads-2014

As always, there are dozens of books coming in the new that I’m going to want to read, but some more I anticipate more than others.

Hollow City by Ransom Riggs.  Who hasn’t been slavering for the new Miss Peregrine novel? From the moment I learned there was going to be a sequel, it went onto my “Gotta Read That” list.  Here’s the blurb:

Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children was the surprise best seller of 2011—an unprecedented mix of YA fantasy and vintage photography that enthralled readers and critics alike. Publishers Weekly called it “an enjoyable, eccentric read, distinguished by well-developed characters, a believable Welsh setting, and some very creepy monsters.”

This second novel begins in 1940, immediately after the first book ended. Having escaped Miss Peregrine’s island by the skin of their teeth, Jacob and his new friends must journey to London, the peculiar capital of the world. Along the way, they encounter new allies, a menagerie of peculiar animals, and other unexpected surprises.

Complete with dozens of newly discovered (and thoroughly mesmerizing) vintage photographs, this new adventure will delight readers of all ages.

Under the Wide and Starry Sky by Nancy Horan.  I absolutely loved Horan’s first novel, Loving Frank, so I was overjoyed when I found out she’d written a second book.  This one tells us of the tempestuous love between beloved writer Robert Louis Stevenson and his wife, Fanny. Here’s the blurb:

From Nancy Horan, New York Times bestselling author of Loving Frank, comes her much-anticipated second novel, which tells the improbable love story of Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson and his tempestuous American wife, Fanny.At the age of thirty-five, Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne has left her philandering husband in San Francisco to set sail for Belgium—with her three children and nanny in tow—to study art. It is a chance for this adventurous woman to start over, to make a better life for all of them, and to pursue her own desires. Not long after her arrival, however, tragedy strikes, and Fanny and her children repair to a quiet artists’ colony in France where she can recuperate. Emerging from a deep sorrow, she meets a lively Scot, Robert Louis Stevenson, ten years her junior, who falls instantly in love with the earthy, independent, and opinionated “belle Americaine.”

Fanny does not immediately take to the slender young lawyer who longs to devote his life to writing—and who would eventually pen such classics as Treasure Island and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. In time, though, she succumbs to Stevenson’s charms, and the two begin a fierce love affair—marked by intense joy and harrowing darkness—that spans the decades and the globe. The shared life of these two strong-willed individuals unfolds into an adventure as impassioned and unpredictable as any of Stevenson’s own unforgettable tales.

A King’s Ransom by Sharon Kay Penman.  Penman’s long awaited sequel to Lionheart.  Slightly off topic strange fact:  Did y’all know that although Richard was King of England for ten years, he only spent about six months of that in England?  Anyway, the Blurb:

This long-anticipated sequel to the national bestseller Lionheart is a vivid and heart-wrenching story of the last event-filled years in the life of Richard, Coeur de Lion. Taken captive by the Holy Roman Emperor while en route home—in violation of the papal decree protecting all crusaders—he was to spend fifteen months imprisoned, much of it in the notorious fortress at Trefils, from which few men ever left alive, while Eleanor of Aquitaine moved heaven and earth to raise the exorbitant ransom.

For the five years remaining to him, betrayals, intrigues, wars, and illness were ever present. So were his infidelities, perhaps a pattern set by his father’s faithlessness to Eleanor. But the courage, compassion, and intelligence of this warrior king became the stuff of legend, and A King’s Ransom brings the man and his world fully and powerfully alive.

Wulfe Untamed by Pamela Palmer.  The next installment of Palmer’s Feral Warriors series.  I’ve been looking forward to Wulfe’s story for a long time.

The most enigmatic and tortured of the Feral Warriors, Wulfe is haunted by the quiet beauty of a human woman who no longer remembers him. Once a captive of both the Mage and the Ferals, Natalie stole a piece of his heart before he took her memories and sent her safely back to her fiancé. But now the Mage are threatening her again, and Wulfe will risk anything to protect her.

Natalie Cash is stunned when she’s saved by a wolf who shifts suddenly into a splendidly built, if badly scarred, man, a man with the kindest eyes. Swept into a world of intrigue and danger beyond her comprehension, she turns to the powerful Wulfe, finding a passion she’d only dreamed of. But when time runs out, they must trust one another and surrender to a wild, untamed love.

The King by J. R. Ward. Wrath, the King, is my favorite brother after Zsadist, so I’ll read this, but it’ll probably be the last book in this series that I’ll read because, in my opinion, it’s gone on too long. Love the Black Dagger Brotherhood, but it’s starting to get repetitive. Here’s the blurb:

J.R. Ward’s # 1 New York Times bestselling Black Dagger Brotherhood continues as a royal bloodline is compromised by a grave threat to the throne.

Long live the King…

After turning his back on the throne for centuries, Wrath, son of Wrath, finally assumed his father’s mantle–with the help of his beloved mate. But the crown sets heavily on his head. As the war with the Lessening Society rages on, and the threat from the Band of Bastards truly hits home, he is forced to make choices that put everything–and everyone–at risk.

Beth Randall thought she knew what she was getting into when she mated the last pure blooded vampire on the planet: An easy ride was not it. But when she decides she wants a child, she’s unprepared for Wrath’s response–or the distance it creates between them.

The question is, will true love win out… or tortured legacy take over?

Shield of Winter by Nalini Singh.  Vasic!  Enough said.  Here’s the blurb:

Assassin. Soldier. Arrow. That is who Vasic is, who he will always be. His soul drenched in blood, his conscience heavy with the weight of all he’s done, he exists in the shadows, far from the hope his people can almost touch—if only they do not first drown in the murderous insanity of a lethal contagion. To stop the wave of death, Vasic must complete the simplest and most difficult mission of his life.

For if the Psy race is to survive, the empaths must wake…

Having rebuilt her life after medical “treatment” that violated her mind and sought to suffocate her abilities, Ivy should have run from the black-clad Arrow with eyes of winter frost. But Ivy Jane has never done what she should. Now, she’ll fight for her people, and for this Arrow who stands as her living shield, yet believes he is beyond redemption. But as the world turns to screaming crimson, even Ivy’s fierce will may not be enough to save Vasic from the cold darkness….

Written in My Heart’s Own Blood by Diana Gabaldon.  To be honest, the Outlander series as been going downhill since Dragonfly in Amber, the second book.  None of the others have been as good as the first two.  But I still love Jamie Fraser and can’t to find out what happens when he finds out about Claire and John.  The blurb:

In her now classic novel Outlander, Diana Gabaldon told the story of Claire Randall, an English ex-combat nurse who walks through a stone circle in the Scottish Highlands in 1946, and disappears . . . into 1743. The story unfolded from there in seven bestselling novels, and CNN has called it “a grand adventure written on a canvas that probes the heart, weighs the soul and measures the human spirit across [centuries].” Now the story continues in Written in My Own Heart’s Blood.

1778: France declares war on Great Britain, the British army leaves Philadelphia, and George Washington’s troops leave Valley Forge in pursuit. At this moment, Jamie Fraser returns from a presumed watery grave to discover that his best friend has married his wife, his illegitimate son has discovered (to his horror) who his father really is, and his beloved nephew, Ian, wants to marry a Quaker. Meanwhile, Jamie’s wife, Claire, and his sister, Jenny, are busy picking up the pieces.

The Frasers can only be thankful that their daughter Brianna and her family are safe in twentieth-century Scotland. Or not. In fact, Brianna is  searching for her own son, who was kidnapped by a man determined to learn her family’s secrets. Her husband, Roger, has ventured into the past in search of the missing boy . . . never suspecting that the object of his quest has not left the present. Now, with Roger out of the way, the kidnapper can focus on his true target: Brianna herself.

Written in My Own Heart’s Blood is the brilliant next chapter in a masterpiece of the imagination unlike any other.

The Summer Queen by Elizabeth Chadwick. Finally, after coming out across the pond in the UK last summer, this first novel in Chadwick’s Eleanor of Aquitaine trilogy will be released here in the U.S.  I hate when that happens. Why can’t they release books on the same day, not to mention in the same year, everywhere? The blurb:

Eleanor of Aquitaine is a 12th century icon who has fascinated readers for 800 years. But the real Eleanor remains elusive.

This stunning novel introduces an Eleanor that all other writers have missed. Based on the most up-to-date research, it is the first novel to show Eleanor beginning her married life at 13. Barely out of childhood, this gives an entirely new slant to how Eleanor is treated bv those around her. She was often the victim and her first marriage was horribly abusive.

Overflowing with scandal, passion, triumph and tragedy, Eleanor’s legendary story begins when her beloved father dies in the summer of 1137, and she is made to marry the young prince Louis of France. A week after the marriage she becomes a queen and her life will change beyond recognition . . .

And these are just in the first part of the year!  What books are you guys looking forward to reading in 2014?

How long should a series last?

You fall in love with a series.  Either with the story or the characters.  Or even the world.  Avidly, you follow through upheaval, mayhem, and long fought for HEAs.  The whodunits and the who-the-hell-are-theys.

The Ghost for example.

Psy-ChangeI simply adore Nalini Singh’s Psy/Changeling novels.  June 4th can’t get here soon enough to give me my next fix.  And, in Heart of Obsidian, we’re supposed to learn who the Ghost is.  FINALLY!!!!  But, even after the big reveal, I still want to know more about the characters and their world.

  • How many kids are Mercy and Riley having?  And what will be they be?
  • Who will Kit end up with and when will he start his own pack?
  • Will Nikita ever break Silence and acknowledge Naya?
  • Vasic and Aden.  Are they or aren’t they?  Probably not, but I can hope.
  • What about Windhaven and RainFire?
  • Are Ben and Marley mates?
  • Who will Toby end up with?  Will he get a story some day?
  • What about the Forgotten?  How will it effect them and the ShadowNet when/if the PsyNet fails?

This series could go on for a long time without running out of material.  And possible spin-offs.

But when is enough simply enough?

Take Laura Adrian’s Midnight Breed series, for example.  I know many of you will disagree with me, but was it really necessary for her to continue the series?  I can’t say I really care about these characters, this world, after the rather abrupt, and unsatisfying, end to the previous story arc.

BDB_1-3Then, there’s the BDB.  The Black Dagger Brotherhood.  I fell in love with series, and Wrath, the first time I read Dark Lover.  The world was interesting, the characters, and the plot, edgy.  Finally, a vampire series that wasn’t filled with angsty, emo, wannabe-human-again, vampires.  I was hooked.  Loved Rhage and Zsadist.  Then we got to Butch, who I really didn’t care about one way or the other, but the whole Dehstroyer thing was interesting.  I’ve never liked V, but the reveal about his mother kept me reading.  Phury, though.  I got to the point that I actually wished Z had let him die after that bit of stupidity.  Rehv, however, won me back.  The symphaths are wonderfully creepy.  Spine chilling, with this skin-crawling sensation creepy.  I wish they still featured prominently in the series, because, let’s face it, the lessers are becoming cartoonishly ridiculous.

BDB_Lover-at-LastFast forward the present, the much anticipated Lover at Last.  First, kudos to J. R. Ward and her publisher for finally having the guts to release an M/M romance in a mainstream series to a mainstream audience.  It certainly took long enough for someone to do it.  And, on the M/M front, let me just take a moment to question the absence of lube in this novel.  I know they’re vampires, and, therefore, heal quickly, but, still.

Lover at Last was both satisfying and not.  Qhuinn finally grows up and realizes he wants to, and can, be with Blay.  Being a series long member of Team Qhuay, I am ecstatic about this, and I want to know what happens to Saxton now.  The next book in the series is going to be The King.  Wrath and Beth will finally have an heir.  I’m so looking forward to that.  Mary and Rhage are supposed to get a novella, which I’m also eager to read.  But what about after that?  Trez and the Shadow Princess?  I’m intrigued by the Shadows, but Trez is an overgrown child having a tantrum because he can’t have his way.  Don’t want an arranged marriage.  Instead of just saying that, he protests by becoming a man-whore.  I can’t say I care about Trez, but I just might keep reading for the Iam and the Shadows.  Lassiter?  Okay, now you’ve got me.  I am curious about his female.  And his sister.  What happened to them?  The Band of Bastards?  Don’t care.  Assail and his cousins?  Care even less.

What series do you love and wish would go on forever?  And which ones do you wish would just end, already?

Lover Mine by J. R. Ward

WARNING!  WARNING!  SPOILER ALERT!  SPOILER ALERT!:  There are a lot of spoilers in this review

I’ve been looking forward to this book for a year, and I’m looking forward to the next one even more.  The Black Dagger Brotherhood is awesome.  And wonderfully addictive.  I have so many thoughts and feelings about what went down in Lover Mine.  Here are just a few of them: 

  1. I don’t like Saxton.  Something about him rubs me the wrong way.  Whether or not his attitude was a front, it was irritating.  I mean, the way he called Blay to tell him what to wear on their date.  Did he do it just to make sure that Blay was actually coming?  Probably, but still, he ordered for him at the restaurant. The fact that he got beat up by a human was so unbelievable that I wondered if it was a ploy.  But, given his injuries, and the sub-plot about the effects of inbreeding on the race, I wonder if there’s something physically wrong with Saxton’s heart.  He was wheezing when he talked with Blay on the phone, and there’s been a lot of mention about the vampires’ six chamber heart.  It could have been caused by his injuries, I know, but I can’t help but wonder.  That there’s something emotionally wrong  is certain. My take on Saxton is that he’s Qhuinn with polish.  Qhuinn has been shunned by the glymera because of his mismatched eyes, Saxton for being gay.  Both of them, if I’m right, have defects due to inbreeding.  While Qhuinn’s defect is on the outside, Saxton’s  is on the inside.  If, as I said before, I’m right in my speculation about Saxton.  Emotionally, they both use sexual promiscuity as a front.  Qhuinn calling Saxton a slut was a huge case of the pot calling the kettle black. 
  2. That all being said about Saxton, I’m jazzed that Blay finally has someone who is attracted to him and shows it.  He needs this.  Qhuinn is the king of all hypocrites.  Not only because of the slut thing, but he’s all angry and hurt because Blay is finally getting some and, yet, he does it every opportunity he gets.   I mean, even considering getting it on with Layla in Blay’s bed was beyond cruel, yet, he doesn’t seem to realize this.  Qhuinn really needs to grow up and buy a one way ticket out of Me-ville to be worthy of Blay.
  3. And, speaking of Layla.  I know the Chosen are cloistered and innocent, but shouldn’t an ehros know the difference between lust and love?  And that one doesn’t necessarily lead to the other. 
  4. Murhder is a creepy rat bastard.  What he did to Holly is unforgivable.  To me, it was like using the date rape drug.  In previous books, I was intrigued by this Brother, but I’m not anymore. 
  5. The whole Payne storyline is excellent.  Wonderfully well written.  Her love for Vishous just jumps off the page.  That last scene with two of them was just gorgeous.  Simple, yet it said so much.

There are many things revealed in this book, such as the identity of No’one, but it also brings up more questions.  How will Murhder return, and, more importantly, why.  How will Vishous react to Manny’s relationship with Payne?  For that matter, how will his own relationship with her evolve?  What will Phury’s reaction be when he finds out what Layla’s been up to?  How will his friendship with Payne effect Wrath’s friendship with Vishous?  I want to know more about the Shadows, and we all know that Lash ain’t really dead.  That was too easy.  It’s going to be a loooooong wait until April!

Rating:  4 out of 5 stars

Covet by J. R. Ward

Covet is an interesting read, but it didn’t suck me into the world of the Fallen Angels the way that Dark Lover sucked me into that of the Black Dagger Brotherhood.  No pun intended!  🙂 

It did, however, interest enough to read Crave when it comes out in the fall.  The Warden has said that the hero will be Isaac.  Given what Matthias told Jim in Covet, it should be an interesting story.  A complicated and conflicted one, certainly.

Another thing it did was to make me even more curious about the Shadows than I was after reading Lover Avenged.  I love me some Trez and I’m very eager for his book, which I realize will be a long time in coming.  I have my own theory about who he ends up with, but I’ll keep it to myself lest I creep into the forbidden realm of fan fiction.

I do not like Adrian.  Maybe I will after I get some back-story in future books, but I can’t like a person/angel/whatever, who would deliberately do what he did to Jim.  Eddie, however, I like well enough, and I want to adopt Dog.

Rating:  4 out of 5 stars

Black Dagger Brotherhood

I am totally obsessed with these books! 

Out of curiosity, I checked out Dark Lover from the library.  Read it in one night, fell completely in love with Wrath, then rushed to the computer so I could request the others.  Problem.  I got Rhage, Zsadist, and Vishous.  But not Butch.  Did I stop at Zsadist and wait like a good little girl?  Uhhh, no!  LOL.

I am so impatient to get Butch and Phury!  Can’t say I particularly care for Rehvenge, right now.  He can wait.  The Brothers cannot.

My favorite?  Most definitely the king.  All of that quiet intensity is just so sexy!  After that, I guess it’s a toss up between Rhage and John Matthew.