Saturday, February 23, 2019

Lady Notorious by Theresa Romain

Lady Notorious (Royal Rewards, #4)Cass Benton works with her brother as private investigators. Well, her brother is the one on the books but his boss definitely knows that Cass is involved. When the book opens, Cass is posing as a maid in a ton house while her brother is a footman. While he is shtupping the lady of the house, Cass is busy saving the husband from murder. Which is pretty much their relationship. Cass is super serious while her brother takes life a lot more lightly.
They're in the house in the first place because of George, Lord Northbrook. He's the son of a duke who joined a tontine when he was a young man. Now members are dying off mysteriously and George wants to prevent both his father, and the lord of the house Cass and Charles were in, from meeting the same fate.
Romain can hit books out of the park for me but this was not one of them. I didn't see that George and Cass had the type of chemistry that would weather their class differences in this time. It was an okay read but not one of my faves.

Three stars
This book comes out February 26th
ARC kindly provided by publisher and NetGalley
Follows Lady Rogue

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Secrets of Paper and Ink by Lindsay Harrel

The Secrets of Paper and InkThis seemed like a catnip book for me: a woman trying to find a way out of the morass created by her past moves across an ocean to work in a bookstore. The book opens with her returning to work... and realizing she's still not ready to be there. So she answers and work in a bookstore where the owner has problems of her own.
This is a really well-written book and I liked the way the characters were developed. But-- there was a deep dive into Christianity that was NOT explained either in the synopsis of the book nor in the tags for genre. I don't mind reading books that do this but I appreciate a warning when you think that you're reading a book about women who are figuring out their own lives and then you're told that, no, actually, God has been steering them all along.

Three stars
This book comes out February 26th
ARC kindly provided by NetGalley and publisher

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

California Girls by Susan Mallery

California Girls by Susan MalleryThree sisters: the youngest, Ali, who is about to get married, those oldest, Finola, who has the perfect marriage, and the middle, Zennie, who is not really interested in dating. All of them are dealing with personal crises and milestone. Ali's fiancé's brother shows up. The fiancé doesn't especially want to get married but he's not going to tell her himself. Finola's, who is a TV personality, husband shows up half an hour before she's going on air to tell her that he's been having an affair. Zennie has a best friend who can't get pregnant, would she mind being the surrogate?
I generally like Ms. Mallery's non-series books. This had some really big themes that I thought were handled sensitively and well. But there were a couple of things that brought the book down for me. One was the views on Finola's marriage. We were just told that she accepted blame for it going south but we never really saw how she played into it. A big part of her ending was that she realized what part she played but... it felt forced; more tell than show. And I wish we had seen more of Zennie's romance. It was just tacked on at the end.

Three stars
This book comes out February 26 
ARC kindly provided by Harlequin-Mira and NetGalley

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Sorry Not Sorry by Sophie Ranald

Sorry Not SorryCharlotte is a good girl. But that hasn't really gotten her where she wants in life. Her job is incredibly hard (though it did help her get out of a dead-end relationship), her best friend is moving to the suburbs AND getting married, and she's depressingly single.
One night, she gets quite down and semi-drunk and starts listening to a podcast about how to break out of her rut. There are some quite lovely suggestions that she sometimes follows, sometimes not. On the way, she meets a romantic-interest-architect, makes a new friend, resettles her relationship with old friends, and figures out what is going to be her number one priority in life.
This book was a little rough in parts - like the story didn't really flow. But it was a nice story overall and I would try this author again.

Three stars
This book comes out February 13
ARC kindly provided by NetGalley

Monday, February 11, 2019

Testament to Murder by Vivian Conroy

A Testament to MurderThis is set up as a quintessential English country house (or vacation house) murder. A cranky, old, very wealthy, dying man invites nine potential heirs and tells them that he is going to be choosing one person every night at midnight to be the beneficiary of his will. No one will know who it is but each day, someone might end up being his sole heir, or being written out of the will. He is setting up the perfect scenario for someone to be murdered.
And someone is, but it's not the old man. Through a series of winding expositions, we learn the true solution. Or do we?
It is a short read but is one that starts slow until it careens toward an ending that was interesting but very convoluted.

Three stars
This book comes out February 18
ARC kindly provided by NetGalley and publisher

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

The Gun Also Rises by Sherry Harris

The Gun Also Rises (Sarah Winston Garage Sale Mystery #6)Belle Winthrop Granville is a grande dame who is selling off her massive book collection. Her first editions and books in the library are being sold by a local dealer. Her paperbacks and popular fiction, she's asked garage sale whiz Sarah Winston to deal with. Too bad Sarah is once again having to dodge bullets. It might just have something to do with the bundle of papers that Sarah discovered that seem to be the papers Hemingway's first wife lost on a trip to Paris.
There is, as usual, a lot going on in this story. There is also a first edition Hemingway, a group of treasure hunters going after the same thing, a murder, rivalries, and an old army friend and his wife who are having some problems. It makes the book a bit disconnected in places but regular Harris readers won't be deterred.

Three stars
This book came out January 29
ARC kindly provided by publisher and NetGalley
Follows I Know What You Bid Last Summer
Followed by Let's Fake a Deal

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

How to Be Better at Almost Everything by Pat Flynn

How to Be Better at Almost Everything: Learn Anything Quickly, Stack Your Skills, DominateI've always liked the idea of Jack-of-all-trades-master-of-none so the title of this book really spoke to me. You read books like Malcolm Gladwell's "Tipping Point" that talk about the merits of becoming an expert at something but there aren't a lot of books (at least that I've seen) about the idea of generalism. So this was something I was excited about reading.
I have a feeling that regular readers of Pat Flynn will like the style of writing for this. It did not resonate with me at all. The vast majority of the story examples of how these principles work were about him and how it worked for him. Well, how does skill-stacking work in general? Where are the studies that show it works for the general populace? And why is there a mixture of "we" and "you" in the instructional part of the series?  If the book focused less on the author and more on how these skills could help the reader, I would have liked it more.

Two stars
This book came out January 29
ARC kindly provided by publisher and NetGalley