Author: tamaramorning

Sundays Are for Writing #232

This was a great writing week! I wrote four book reviews: Morgan Is My Name, by Sophie Keetch, Whispers at Dusk, by Heather Graham, A Shadow in Moscow, by Katherine Reay, and A Rogue at Stonecliffe, by Candace Camp, as well as my June reading post. I also read some great books, and I’m looking forward to telling you about them.

Happy writing!

What I Read in June (2023)

Books Read in June: 14
Books Read for the Year:  98/225

Topical Books/Monthly Goal Books:
Beach Read, by Emily Henry (TBR). The banter in this was fantastic! I thoroughly enjoyed this read.
Unravel the Dusk, by Elizabeth Lim (TBR). I still love the magic in this.
Heartbreak Bay, by Rachel Caine (TBR). I’ve been putting off reading this for for a while because I’m so sad that Caine passed away. This book. Man. I’ve enjoyed these books so much, but this one messed with my mind! The people lurking in the shadows, harassing Gwen and blaming her ex-husband’s actions on her, and thinking it’s okay to torment her. That is NOT okay. And the little funhouse of horrors at the end…I’m lucky it didn’t give me nightmares. Yet.
The House at the End of the World, by Dean Koontz (TBR). Another one of Koontz’s the-government-is-not-our-friend thrillers.
The Study of Poisons, by Maria V. Snyder (TBR). How could I resist reading the story of Poison Study from Valek’s POV? LOVED THIS.
The Delusion: We All Have Our Demons, by Laura Gallier (audio). This was pretty fascinating.

For Review:

The Little Italian Hotel, by Phaedra Patrick. I enjoyed this novel of self-discovery, although Ginny got on my nerves a bit before she started making decisions for herself.

Same Time Next Summer, by Annabel Monaghan. This book. This book was fantastic! I was sucked in from the very first page and could not put it down until I devoured every single word!

Charm City Rocks, by Matthew Norman. I enjoyed this romance about a guy who gets a chance with the rockstar he’s admired for decades.

Famous in a Small Town, by Viola Shipman. I enjoyed the first half of this, but the second half felt like an unfinished, messy draft, which did not work for me.

Morgan Is My Name, by Sophie Keetch. This was a fantastic read! I’ve always loved Arthurian legends, and Morgan’s voice brought this to such vivid life! Uther Pendragon and Merlin creeped me out quite a bit, but Morgan was wonderful!

Whispers at Dusk, by Heather Graham. I usually enjoy Graham’s books, especially the Krewe of Hunters books, but this felt both rough and disconnected. The transitions as the characters got to know each other felt beyond rushed.

A Rogue at Stonecliffe, by Candace Camp. I enjoyed this second-chance romance.

A Shadow in Moscow, by Katherine Reay. This started off a bit slow, but it ended up being such a good read! The spycraft from a woman’s point-of-view was so fascinating. Highly recommended!

Left Unfinished:

The Last Drop of Hemlock, by Katharine Schellman. I didn’t get very far in this. The pacing was just too slow.

The Chaperone, by M Hendryx. I read about 20% of this before just accepting I was bored, annoyed, and didn’t care about the characters or what happened.

Cassandra in Reverse, by Holly Smale. I tried to like this enough to finish reading it, because the concept was interesting. No such luck. I found Cassandra unlikeable enough to be unreadable to me—even making allowances for the legitimate issues she clearly has.

The Broken Hearts Club, by Susan Bishop Crispell. The main problem I have with the 20% of this that I read is Imogen’s propsensity to and normalization of lying. I cannot stand liars, so reading about a person whose go-to response is lying, is a no-go for me.

Ciao for Now by Kate Bromley. Violet and her friends just felt superficial and flighty to me, and I had no desire to finish reading this.

Book Review and Blog Tour: A Rogue at Stonecliffe, by Candace Camp    

Image belongs to Harlequin/Canary Street Press.

Title:  A Rogue at Stonecliffe    
Author: Candace Camp  
Genre:  Romance   
Rating:  4 out of 5

When the love of her life left without any explanation, Annabeth Winfield moved on despairingly, knowing she’d never have a love as thrilling as her first ever again. Sloane Rutherford was roguish and daring, but as Annabeth grew up, she realized that their reckless romance was just a passing adventure, never meant for stability. Twelve years later, Annabeth is engaged to someone new, ready to start her life with a dependable man.

That’s when Sloane returns. And he brings with him a serious warning: Annabeth is in trouble.

After spending the past dozen years working as a spy, Sloane thought he’d left espionage behind him. But now a dangerous blackmailer is after Annabeth. Sloane offers to hide his former lover at Stonecliffe, the Rutherford estate, but stubborn Annabeth demands to be part of the investigation. As the two embark on a dangerous and exciting journey, memories of their past romance resurface. Sloane and Annabeth aren’t the wide-eyed children they used to be, but knowing they’re wrong for each other makes a nostalgic affair seem very right…

I enjoyed seeing this continuation of the Stonecliffe series. This was filled with mysteries, secrets, and red herrings, and I thoroughly enjoyed the read. Annabeth’s grandmother was definitely the scariest character in the novel, but she was such a great character! I loved how even the secondary characters were so vivid and believable. This is a solid romance read, perfect for a lazy weekend afternoon.

Candace Camp is a bestselling author. A Rogue at Stonecliffe is her newest novel.

(Galley courtesy of Harlequin/Canary Street Press in exchange for an honest review.)

Book Review: A Shadow in Moscow, by Katherine Reay   

Image belongs to Harper Muse.

Title:   A Shadow in Moscow     
Author: Katherine Reay    
Genre:  Historical fiction   
Rating:  4.5 out of 5

Vienna, 1954

After losing everyone she loves in the final days of World War II, Ingrid Bauer agrees to a hasty marriage with a gentle Soviet embassy worker and follows him home to Moscow. But nothing deep within the Soviet Union’s totalitarian regime is what it seems, including her new husband, whom Ingrid suspects works for the KGB. Upon her daughter’s birth, Ingrid risks everything and reaches out in hope to the one country she understands and trusts–Britain, the country of her mother’s birth–and starts passing along intelligence to MI6, navigating a world of secrets and lies, light and shadow.

Washington, DC, 1980

Part of the Foreign Studies Initiative, Anya Kadinova finishes her degree at Georgetown University and boards her flight home to Moscow, leaving behind the man she loves and a country she’s grown to respect. Though raised by dedicated and loyal Soviet parents, Anya soon questions an increasingly oppressive and paranoid Soviet regime at the height of the Cold War. When the KGB murders her best friend, Anya picks sides and contacts the CIA. Working in a military research lab, Anya passes along Soviet military plans and schematics in an effort to end the 1980s arms race.

Alternating points of view keep readers on their toes as the past catches up to the present when an unprecedented act of treachery in 1985 threatens all undercover agents operating within the Soviet Union, and both Ingrid and Anya find themselves in a race for their lives against time and the KGB.

I didn’t thin it would be possible to read this straight through in one sitting, but I was wrong. The first part felt a little bit slow, but then I grew engrossed. I usually have a favorite when a book is told in dual POVs, but this time I didn’t. I loved Ingrid’s story, and I loved Anya’s, too. The Cold War setting was absolutely chilling, and I found myself on the edge of my seat through the whole last third of the book. An excellent read!

Katherine Reay is a bestselling author. A Shadow in Moscow is her newest novel.

(Galley courtesy of Harper Muse in exchange for an honest review.)

Book Review and Blog Tour: Whispers at Dusk, by Heather Graham   

Image belongs to Harlequin/MIRA.

Title:   Whispers at Dusk     
Author: Heather Graham    
Genre:  mystery/thriller   
Rating:  3.5

When darkness falls, there’s nowhere to hide.

Four bodies have been discovered along Europe’s riverbanks, placed with care—and completely drained of blood. Pinpricks on their throats indicate a slender murder weapon, but DNA found in the wounds suggests something far more sinister. Tasked with investigating, the FBI recruits Agents Della Hamilton and Mason Carter to Blackbird, an international offshoot of the Krewe of Hunters. If you want to catch a vampire killer, you need agents who can speak with the dead.

The pair travel to Norway, where the shadowy forests of Lillehammer reveal a gruesome scene. The killer is thirsty for more victims, and the bloodless trail soon leads Della and Mason to a group that believes drinking blood is the key to immortality. To catch the culprit of such an intimate crime, the agents will have to get close. Mason’s already lost one partner; he’s not ready to risk Della as bait. But sometimes justice requires a sacrifice…

Normally, I’m a big fan of Graham’s works, especially the Krewe of Hunters books, but this one just felt rushed. Mason meets Della, and they move from being strangers to BFFs to more without any time or transition at all. It didn’t feel believable in the slightest, and that made the rest of the book feel jarringly off.

I love the ghostly helpers and the international setting, but none of the relationships in the book—not just Della and Mason, but between them and the other agents as well—felt organic and natural. Instead, they felt almost like caricatures, and that turned me off from reading any more of this series.

Heather Graham is a bestselling author. Whispers at Dusk is her newest novel.

(Galley courtesy of Harlequin/MIRA in exchange for an honest review.)

Book Review:  Morgan Is My Name, by Sophie Keetch   

Image belongs to Penguin/Random Hose Canada.

Title: Morgan Is My Name       
Author: Sophie Keetch     
Genre: fantasy     
Rating:  5 out of 5

Young Morgan of Cornwall lives a happy life in Tintagel Castle until King Uther Pendragon, with the help of the sorcerer Merlin, murders her father and tricks her mother into marriage. Furious, brilliant, and vengeful, Morgan defies her brutal stepfather, taking up a secret education, discovering a lifelong affinity with the healing arts, and falling in love with a man far beneath her station. However, defiance comes at a cost. Used as a bargaining chip in her stepfather’s war games, Morgan finds herself banished to a world of isolated castles and gossiping courts, amidst the machinations of kings, sorcerers, and men.

But some desires are not easily forgotten, and the search for her independence is a quest Morgan cannot give up. As the era of King Arthur approaches, she must use all her wit, knowledge, and courage to fight against those who wish to deny her intelligence, crush her spirit, and control her body. But, in seeking her freedom, Morgan risks losing everything–her reputation, her loved ones, and her life.

I love Arthurian legends and retellings, but most are not as well-done as this one. I truly loved this read! Morgan is a fascinating character as a child, and she only grows more fascinating as she gets older. I loved her forceful personality, her wit, and her determination to live her own life. Uther Pendragon—and Merlin, too—was a horrible person in this story and he made my skin crawl. Morgan, however, is vibrant, inspiring, and had me rooting for her from the first page.

Sophie Keetch is Welsh and lives in South Wales. Morgan is My Name is her new novel.

(Galley courtesy of Penguin/Random House Canada in exchange for an honest review.)

Sundays Are for Writing #231

Well…I wrote no book reviews this week because of work chaos and DNFing Ciao for Now, by Kate Bromley (I’m not sure why I thought that was going to be a good fit for me in the first place: I avoid social media and superficial people like the plague). I did write a post over on A Little Bit Greener, though: Hello, beautiful! Hopefully this week will be a better writing week!

Happy writing!

Sundays Are for Writing #230

Work was absolutely crazy again this week, so I only wrote two book reviews: Charm City Rocks, by Matthew Norman and Famous in a Small Town, by Viola Shipman. You should read the first book, but don’t waste your time with the second. I’m hoping this week will be a little less crazy.

Happy writing!

Book Review and Blog Tour: Famous in a Small Town, by Viola Shipman

Image belongs to Harlequin/Graydon House.

Title:  Famous in a Small Town
Author:  Viola Shipman   
Genre: Fiction    
Rating:  2 out of 5

For most of her eighty years, Mary Jackson has endured the steady invasion of tourists, influencers and real estate developers who have discovered the lakeside charm of Good Hart, Michigan, waiting patiently for the arrival of a stranger she’s believed since childhood would one day carry on her legacy—the Very Cherry General Store. Like generations of Jackson women before her, Cherry Mary, as she’s known locally, runs the community hub—part post office, bakery and sandwich shop—and had almost given up hope that the mysterious prediction she’d been told as a girl would come true and the store would have to pass to…a man.

Becky Thatcher came to Good Hart with her ride-or-die BFF to forget that she’s just turned forty with nothing to show for it. Ending up at the general store with Mary is admittedly not the beach vacation she expected, but the more the feisty octogenarian talks about destiny, the stronger Becky’s memories of her own childhood holidays become, and the strange visions over the lake she was never sure were real. As she works under Mary’s wing for the summer and finds she fits into this quirky community of locals, she starts to believe that destiny could be real, and that it might have something very special in mind for Becky…

I enjoyed the first half of this novel. The characters are quirky and interesting and the friendship between Becky and her BFF is great. But then, everything changed. I felt like I was reading an outline of a novel, not an actual novel. There were scenes, but they didn’t follow any logical path and there were no transitions to link them to the preceding scene. Supposedly the road trip/vacation is supposed to last for month, but in one scene the two women had just arrived at their destination, and the next scene the vacation was almost over. This was very jarring to me as a reader. I was not a fan of this novel, because it felt like the author didn’t do the work of actually completing and polishing the novel.

Viola Shipman is the pen name of bestselling author Wade Rouse, who chose his grandmother’s name as a pen name to honor her. Famous in a Small Town is his newest novel.

(Galley courtesy of Harlequin/Graydon House in exchange for an honest review.)

Book Review: Charm City Rocks, by Matthew Norman  

Image belongs to Random House.

Title: Charm City Rocks       
Author: Matthew Norman    
Genre:  Romance   
Rating:  4 out of 5

Billy Perkins is happy. And why wouldn’t he be? He loves his job as an independent music teacher and his apartment in Baltimore above a record shop called Charm City Rocks. Most of all, he loves his brainy teenage son, Caleb.

Margot Hammer, on the other hand, is far from happy. The former drummer of the once-famous band Burnt Flowers, she’s now a rock-and-roll recluse living alone in New York City. When a new music documentary puts Margot back in the spotlight, she realizes how much she misses her old band and the music that gave her life meaning. 

Billy has always had a crush on Margot. But she’s a legitimate rock star—or, at least, she was—so he never thought he’d meet her. Until Caleb, worried that his easygoing dad might actually be lonely, cooks up a scheme to get Margot to perform at Charm City Rocks.

It’s the longest of long shots, but Margot’s label has made it clear that any publicity is an opportunity she can’t afford to miss. When their paths collide, Billy realizes that he maybe wasn’t as happy as he thought—and Margot learns that sometimes the sweetest music is a duet.

I really enjoyed this read! I’ve never had any desire to visit Baltimore, but I loved how this city was such a big character in the story, and I loved the characters themselves. Even Billy’s cardigans. The family dynamics in the novel were interesting, to say the least, and they added so much to the story. Thoroughly enjoyed getting to know these characters!

Matthew Norman is from Nebraska. His newest novel is Charm City Rocks.

(Galley courtesy of Random House in exchange for an honest review.)