Sat. Contest!

Today’s Contest is for:

 

Finn  by Angel Martinez

 

Blurb:


Sanity is relative and the world has room for more than one truth.


When Diego rescues a naked man from the rail of the Brooklyn Bridge, he just wants to get the poor man out of traffic and over to social services. He gets more than he bargained for when Finn turns out to be an ailing pooka, poisoned by the pollution of the city. To help him recover, Diego takes him north to New Brunswick where Finn inadvertently wakes an ancient, evil spirit, the wendigo.


 

While Diego and Finn struggle to find a way to destroy the wendigo before it can possess Diego or kill nearby innocents, Diego wrestles with his growing passion for Finn. Can they succeed in destroying the monster and in navigating a relationship between a modern man and a centuries-old fairy? 


 

My Review of a little known but great book!

 


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Ways to enter for an e-book of this great novel!

–        leave a comment with an email address

–        email me at penelopes.smut@gmail.com

–        RT on Twitter the following : RT @kassa_11 to enter for a chance to win a free copy of Finn!

The Twilight Gods by Hayden Thorne

The Twilight Gods by Hayden Thorne

Blurb:

London during the Great Exhibition of 1851 is a new world of technological advances, eye-popping inventions, and glimpses of exotic treasures from the East. For fifteen-year-old Norris Woodhead it’s a time of spectral figures mingling with London’s daily crowds, and an old rectory in a far corner of the English countryside, a great house literally caught in time, where answers to curious little mysteries await him. Confined by his family’s financial woes, Norris suffers a lonely and unsatisfying time till the day he (and only he) notices “shadow-folks” in the streets. Then a strange widow appears, rents a vacant room in the house, and takes him under her wing. She becomes his guardian, slowly revealing those shadows’ secrets, Norris’ connection with them, and the life-altering choices he has to face in the end.

The Twilight Gods is a retelling of Native American folktale called “The Girl Who Married a Ghost.” Set in Victorian England, it’s an alternative perspective on a gay teen’s coming-out process, with Norris’ journey of self-discovery couched in magical and supernatural terms and imagery.

 

Review:

 

Since this is the same author that wrote the truly fabulous Masks series, I jumped at the chance to read another young adult novel by her. Unfortunately I ended up declining to review this book for the official site due to the obvious, insulting, and demeaning message that is played out with a very heavy hand. Ultimately this book tells young men that to accept your homosexuality you will be ostracized and forced into a martyr like existence where for anyone to even “see” you, you must hide what you truly are. Fabulous message for young gay adults and I only hope none actually read this book.

 

Fifteen year old Norris Woodhead is part of a poor family. With an emotionally absent father and a financially stressed mother, the family has focused on providing good prospects for their three older children. This has left Norris as an often forgotten member of the family and too poor to afford the education he so desperately wants. Instead Norris tends to make useless objects for fun and stare out the window. During one of his mindless staring sessions that Norris starts to realize he can see “shadow people” in the streets. These are specters that no one else can see or interact with but over time become more obvious and clear to Norris. With the help of an unexpected and sudden guardian angel in the form of a widow, Norris seeks to find the answers to the “shadow people” and what it means for his own choices.

 

The plot is somewhat convoluted, especially since the story leaves hints and unanswered questions up until page 200 (out of 233). It is only then that the answers are finally exposed in a very heavy handed metaphorical manner. Subtly is completely lost in this telling and unfortunately not for the betterment of the book. Norris comes to realize that the “shadow people” are actually homosexuals that have all accepted their sexuality and thus must live in isolation in the “twilight.” The reasoning behind this is because “normal” people can’t and won’t accept homosexuals or see them for who and what they are. When a homosexual wants to interact with the normal world, they must put on a “mask” to hide their true self and become visible.

 

This heavy handed and completely obvious correlation to the reaction to homosexuality doesn’t benefit the story or the characters. Instead Norris is offered the choice between his poor family, no friends, lack of education, no real prospects, and watching the petty, miserable antics of his sisters or live in happiness with other gay/shadow people where he can read all he wants, get his much desired education, experience no hardship, no problems, and no misery. To live in this gay wonderland, Norris must simply accept that he is gay and thus become invisible to his family and the real world. A bit of an obvious choice even if the boy wasn’t gay. Furthermore Norris’ acceptance of his homosexuality is tainted by these aspects, which are too one sided, and it’s almost as if his desire for an education is more a deciding factor than the sudden realization he likes boys.

 

The catalyst for Norris’ revelation is a shadow boy named Tom. Norris supposedly is enamored of Tom and wants a friendship/relationship with him, but at 15 years old Norris doesn’t quite know what that entails. Instead he focuses on the happiness and joy he feels when he’s not alone and among those who accept him unconditionally. There is very little to Tom and almost no characterization afforded him. Tom seems to pop up in scenes to help Norris discover it’s better to be gay but there is very little connection and depth between the two boys. Once Norris accepts he is gay, Tom ceases to be an important figure. Similarly the guardian angel of Mrs. Cavendish is weak and ineffectual. She guides Norris to discovering his sexuality yet refuses to answer any questions and acts more like a shadow person travel guide than an actual emotional and intellectual support for the confused Norris.

 

I was disturbed by the hints that the shadow people were actually all the homosexuals in historical London and thus deeply disappointed this came out to be true. The obvious parallels are overdone and actually accept that to be gay you will never fit in and never be accepted. Why is this a positive message to send to young gay adults? And that the price you pay – losing all your family, friends, and life in a normal world – for the acceptance of who and what you are, is worth it. I’m not even sure the characters in the book agree with such a sentiment let alone anyone reading this. But in the book no one really missed Norris once he was gone and barely looked for him, just accepting his magical disappearance.

 

Other than the problematic message, the story has an engaging voice and interesting prose. The story is mostly handled in a light hearted, fluffy manner where the antics of a poor family are slightly mocked for their petty fights, desire for fashion and reaching above their station and overall present a sad and aloof depiction of a poor family’s life in that era. The story is told from Norris’ third person point of view and he is often detached from the family and daily activities so thus the reader is detached and develops no real connection to this group of people. Their antics are light and mocking without any real bite. The telling is neither humorous nor dour, but more so easy until the end. The book is slightly unfocused as it follows Norris’ day to day life, showing a marked lack of interest and action. It is only through the heavy hand of Mrs. Cavendish and Tom that Norris even considers his sexual orientation and slowly realizes what that means for his future.

 

Overall I’d suggest staying away from this book. Perhaps the sentiment is one that appeals and is relatable to many – feeling isolated and ignored for their sexuality – but it’s also insulting to both heterosexual and homosexual people. But that’s just my opinion. Instead I’ll leave you with the final sentiment the story ends on:

 

Norris’ gaze drifted from one person to the next. “Will they ever see me again?”

 

“Only if they look closely enough,” Tom replied, glancing down at him with a rueful yet fond smile. “Of course, you’ll have a mask to use once you’re done at the great house and are ready to head forth into university. Everyone will see you then.”

 

“But not as I really am.”

 

Tom nodded. “Not as you really are.”

 

Norris fell silent as he mulled things over. “Do you think that it will happen someday? That my family will see me without my mask on?”

 

“It all depends on them, I think.”

 

 

Friday’s Contest!

Today’s Contest is for:

 

Angels of the Deep by Kirby Crow

 

 

Blurb:

Becket Merriday is on the trail of a killer who is murdering beautiful young men in the small town of Irenic. What he discovers an ancient race of immortal beings hunted by an incredibly powerful adversary: the angel Mastema. Soon, Beck and his partner, Sean Logan, find themselves at the center of a deadly supernatural war.

 
My Review of it – a rare 5 stars.


–
Ways to enter for an e-book of this great novel!

–        leave a comment with an email address

–        email me at penelopes.smut@gmail.com

–        RT on Twitter the following : RT @kassa_11 to enter for a chance to win a free copy of Angels of the Deep!

It’s Friday! Coming up…

Hi all! It’s Friday!!! I’m so happy it’s Friday and a weekend and Halloween weekend I could dance. But I won’t since I’m a horrible dancer. Anyway, I have a couple more reviews coming up. Tomorrow check out the review of a new young adult book called “Twilight Gods” that I’d love to have some comments on.

 

In other news, do you know that the entire month of November, All Romance Ebooks (ARe) is fulfilling wishes? Every day in Novemeber, ARe will buy one user’s wishlist. Just like that. Christmas certainly has come early and to enter for that day’s drawing you simply need to buy a book. I mean seriously, how many of you out there DON’T buy 7 books a week? So maybe space it out and get entered into the drawing. Don’t forget to make your wishlist though!

 

I think this is a really neat contest and here is the official email from ARe if you didn’t get it.

 

Want to win all the books on your wish list?

 

ARe turns 3 in November and we’ll celebrate by making your wishes come true!

 

Every day in November we will choose a winner at random from that day’s purchasers and buy them the books they have on their wish list. *

 

To participate simply fill your account wish list with books you’d like to read (be sure to log in first) and then every day that you’ve made a purchase, you’ll be eligible to win.

 

So what are you waiting for? Head to your All Romance/OmniLit account and start making out your wish list so we can make your wishes come true!

 

*up to $100.00 per customer

 

Also coming up on Monday is my publisher pricing report (a few days late) but this one is fascinating. Cocktease helped me out and suggested Loose Id and wow! I think you’ll be really surprised about this result, I know I was. It was also tough looking at their backlist and seeing a bunch of interesting titles and covers that drew my eye. Attracted to the pretty and shiny, even if I know it’ll be bad? Yea that’s me.  I still covet several books off their backlist. But be sure to check back for their pricing breakdown on Monday – it’s incredible.

 

Also next week is my analysis of the poll I did 2 weeks ago. I was curious about buying habits and the answers were very interesting. They prompted to do a little more research and the results of which you’ll see next week. Sure to be a packed first week of November! If you haven’t voted in the poll, you still can HERE!

 

Thurs Contest!

 Today’s Contest is for:

 

Tigers and Devils by Sean Kennedy


Blurb:


 

Football, friends, and film are the most important parts of Simon Murray’s life, likely in that order. Despite being lonely, Simon is cautious about looking for more, and his best friends despair of him ever finding that special someone to share his life. Against his will, they drag him to a party, where Simon barges into a football conversation and ends up defending the honour of star forward Declan Tyler — unaware that the athlete is present and listening.

 


Like his entire family, Simon revels in living in Melbourne, Victoria, the home of Australian Rules football and mecca for serious fans. There, players are deemed gods and treated as such – until they do something to cause them to fall out of public favour. Declan is suffering a horrendous year of injuries, and the public is taking him to task for it, so Simon’s support is a bright spot in his struggles. In that first awkward meeting, neither man has any idea they will change each other’s lives forever.


 

As Simon and Declan fumble toward building a relationship together, there is yet another obstacle in their way: keeping Declan’s homosexuality a secret amidst the intrusion of well-meaning friends and an increasingly suspicious media. They realise that nothing remains hidden forever… and they know the situation will only become more complicated when Declan’s private life is revealed. Declan will be forced to make some tough choices that may result in losing either the career he loves or the man he wants. And Simon has never been known to make things easy – for himself or for others

 

 


–
Ways to enter for an e-book of this great novel!

–        leave a comment with an email address

–        email me at penelopes.smut@gmail.com

–        RT on Twitter the following : RT @kassa_11 to enter for a chance to win a free copy of Tigers and Devils!

Body & Soul: a PsyCop Novel by Jordan Castillo Price

Body & Soul: a PsyCop Novel by Jordan Castillo Price

 

Blurb:

Thanksgiving can’t end too soon for Victor Bayne, who’s finding Jacob’s family hard to swallow. Luckily, he’s called back to work to track down a high-profile missing person.

 

Meanwhile, Jacob tries to find a home they can move into that’s not infested–with either cockroaches, or ghosts. As if the house-hunting isn’t stressful enough, Vic’s new partner Bob Zigler doesn’t seem to think he can do anything right. A deceased junkie with a bone to pick leads Vic and Zig on a wild chase that ends in a basement full of horrors.

 

Review:

 

The third book in the PsyCops series and while these novellas are fun to read and enjoyable, they are starting to feel like fluff and completely unnecessary. This particular offering, Body and Soul, is even more unfocused than the last book in the series and seems to do nothing to further the characters development or the series in general. It’s an easy read with an engaging voice, great dialogue and tight descriptions but the mystery portion is definitely the weakest of the book and the progression of the series is non-existent. Fans of the series will likely want to continue with the unique setting and entertaining voice of Vic, but hopefully the next few books are tighter with a purpose to their actions.

 

Here Vic is called into work during the Thanksgiving holiday. He is to find a group of seemingly random but connected missing persons, one of whom is the son of a political player in Chicago. While this investigation is going on, Jacob is house hunting and Vic must help ensure that their future house is ghost free and an appropriate sanctuary.

 

The story has some interesting promise with Vic meeting Jacob’s family but this is ruined with the long and unnecessary information offered at the beginning. No doubt this is meant to catch readers up and remind them of the past books but it felt repetitive and lengthy as the conflict that could happen fizzles out and goes nowhere as Vic soon leaves the family holiday anyway. The mystery he leaves for is also full of possibility but again goes nowhere really and the final resolution is absurd, slightly confusing, and uninteresting. This is frustrating as the mystery portions of the books are increasingly becoming unnecessary and pointless. They allow Vic’s internal dialogue and commentary to litter the page in an appealing way but the purpose to the movements and actions is diluted and without purpose.

 

Furthermore the progression of Vic and Jacob’s relationship to the point of living together and even using the dreaded “L” word appears in this offering, but very little attention and time is actually spent on the two. Instead the story seems to meander from the day to day workings of the investigation, which largely offer no insight into the mystery as almost all their efforts are fruitless. The narrative follows the crazy twists and turns of Vic’s mind and his ability to see and talk to ghosts. This offers the most entertainment and humor as Vic’s first person narrative keeps the story moving, interesting, and with a gritty detail that hallmarks the series. However, there is very little actual depth and meaning to these activities. Vic drifts from scene to scene, mostly talking to ghosts or in his mind about his addictions and fears and past, while the other members of the cast orbit around Vic with small insertions such as dialogue or sex or commentary.

Here there is no additional depth to Jacob’s character and any time Vic does or says something strange, Jacob seems to be turned on. This is explained that Jacob has a bit of a fetish about paranormal activity which unfortunately had me wondering this particular book if Jacob really loves Vic or just gets off on Vic’s paranormal ability. This was an uncomfortable feeling and one I actively worked to ignore/put aside since I like the couple a lot but wanted more depth and emotion between the men and not just the paranormal aspects. Of course these cloud and overwhelm Vic on an almost constant basis but there has to be more to their relationship. I’m waiting to find out what that is exactly and hopefully that will be apparent in future books.

 

So while I really enjoy reading these, when I put this particular book down I realized I could have skipped it entirely and moved on to the next book. This goes nowhere, adds nothing although thoroughly entertaining to read. I will say this is not the new 2nd edition that is coming out in a week of so (perhaps I should have waited?) so perhaps the new edited edition is tighter and more polished. Either way, I’ll continue on to Secrets and I really love the Vic/Jacob match up, so here’s to hoping there is more depth.

Get it HERE!

 

Weds. Contest

Today’s Contest is for:

Soft Focus by Reno MacLeod and Jaye Valentine

Blurb:
Ethan Bouwer has always been the adventurous sort. A freelance nature photographer, he travels the globe and writes erotica on the side whenever things get a bit slow. Hunting for a topic for his next writing project, he stumbles upon a man named David Turner and the taboo world of BDSM. His curiosity piqued, Ethan discovers that David Turner and his beautiful partner Kiyoshi are coming to town for a convention.
 

Ethan makes arrangements for them to meet, but little does Ethan know that he is about to embark on a safari into a world more wild and untamed than anything he has ever encountered before.


–
Ways to enter for an e-book OR a print copy (your choice!) of this great novel!

–        leave a comment with an email address

–        email me at penelopes.smut@gmail.com

–        RT on Twitter the following : RT @kassa_11 to enter for a chance to win a free copy of Soft Focus!

Tuesday Contest

 Today’s Contest is for:

Like Coffee and Doughnuts by Elle Parker

 

Blurb:


Dino Martini might accept his friend Seth as a lover–if they can stay alive. 



 

Dino Martini is an old-school P.I. in a modern age. Sure, he may do most of his work on a computer, but he carries a gun, drives a convertible, and lives on the beach. Best friend and mechanic Seth Donnelly will back him in a fight, and there’s not a lot more Dino could ask from life. 




Until his world is turned upside down. 



 

A dangerous case and a new apartment are just the start. His friendship with Seth has turned into a romance, only Dino has never had a boyfriend before. Can he handle this sudden twist? Just as he begins to believe it’s possible, he loses Seth in more ways than one…

 


Ways to enter for an e-book of this great novel!

        leave a comment with an email address

        email me at penelopes.smut@gmail.com

        RT on Twitter the following : RT @kassa_11 to enter for a chance to win a free e-copy of Elle Parker’s Like Coffee and Doughnuts

Jet Mykles’s Just for You

Just for You by Jet Mykles

Blurb:

Justin falls for Kevin the instant they pass each other on a sidewalk. Only, Kevin’s not gay. The higher ups at Kevin’s company are gay, however, and Kevin’s accidental meeting with Justin gives him an idea how to get around his controlling female supervisor. If he can gain access to the top men at an exclusive gay club, he might be able to finally share his ideas.

Justin instantly agrees to be his date, despite the obvious heartbreak that’s headed his way for going out with a straight man. At the club, Kevin gets a chance to meet the company owner, Victor Chen, and the man seems interested… both in his ideas and his date.

Kevin can’t deny his attraction to Justin, but he’s not gay. Right? He should step aside and let Justin have a chance to date Victor, who’s gorgeous, rich, and shares Justin’s interest in fashion. Despite his internal struggles, he really wants to explore their growing bond. Justin is certainly game, but a part of him knows they can’t have a future together…can they?

 

[I love PL Nunn’s work.]

Review:

 

This is a cute, fun, flirty and easy story with a classic gay for you main character, a self-esteem crisis and some over the top stereotypes. Adding to the mix is Mykles’ great prose and way with characters and this story may be full of clichés and some outrageous elements but it’s delightful and entertaining to read. Mykles has a way with characters and stories that inject humor into what could otherwise be ridiculous. Fans of the author will definitely want to check out this offering just as those readers looking for something light and quick will devour this story in one sitting.

 

The story starts off with a bang when flamboyant clothier Justin sees the man of his dreams on the sidewalk. Chasing down his prince charming Justin is heartbroken to learn that Kevin is sadly not gay but Justin can’t help offering his name just in case Kevin changes his mind. As luck would have it, Kevin suddenly needs to pretend to be gay to advance at work and Justin comes in very handy. What starts as a ruse soon becomes more as Kevin realizes he just may be gay for the right man.

 

Justin may be a stereotype gay man but he’s hilarious, entertaining, and thoroughly absorbing. His initial over the top personality soon shows more depth as he struggles with letting his heart run away to a straight man. Justin shows an ease and confidence that contrasts starkly with Kevin’s mess of confusion, fear, and insecurity. Justin’s few moments of doubt are heartfelt and create a solid characterization that extends beyond the classic fashion obsessed outline. Similarly Kevin shows refreshing delight in his ease in accepting his desire and feelings for Justin. Kevin doesn’t agonize about suddenly wanting and caring for a man, instead Kevin wonders why Justin would want him over a more attractive, more successful confident gay man. The nice change to this crisis of self confidence is that the scenes felt honest and would have happened even if Justin was female. Kevin needed to gain security and appreciation for himself, regardless of his partner’s gender.

 

The plot itself bounces around some with the emphasis first on Kevin breaking into the upper ranks at work in their gay men’s club but then evolves into the head of the company aggressively pursuing Justin. The main conflict comes with Kevin’s passive nature and Victor’s pursuit. The various secondary characters are fun and especially the little seen Frank and Glenn/Rachel. All three of these were interesting and entertaining, more so than the outrageous cliché of Luis and Kat, so the only complaint would be too little was seen of these great characters. Other than this, the story is meant to be humorous and light, not taking each element too seriously and injecting an element of fun which lets the reader laugh at the ridiculous antics. The quick pace, engaging prose, and solid writing creates a winning offering you won’t want to miss. 

Get it HERE!