Wednesday, June 30, 2010

BBAW Link Post

BBAW 2010!

I have entered the following categories for BBAW 2010 and in following with the new guidelines, the following are the links for the requested posts.

Best Eclectic Niche:

Review of Chains of Ice by Christina Dodd
Review of The Phantom Diaries by Kailin Gow
Review of The Walk by Richard Paul Evans
Review of The Magickeepers: The Pyramid of Souls by Erica Kirov
Review of The Last Surgeon by Michael Palmer

Best Author Interviews:

Interview: Get to Know Marilyn Meredith!
Interview: Carolyn Haines
Interview: Heather Long
Interview: Tim Whitney
Character Interview: Emery/Estevan Vega

Best Written Book Blog:

Review: The Confessions of Catherine de Medici by C.W. Gortner
Review: The University by Jeffrey Leever
Review: Double Eagle by Sneed B. Collard
Review: The Things That Keep Us Here by Carla Buckley
Interview: Sarah Addison Allen

Wishing Wednesday

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Ve-sQc-KZPo/TBjrZWbQtzI/AAAAAAAACw8/_Ah_csmOrO8/s1600/stairway_dreams.jpg

Wishing Wednesday is a day that I love to share books that are on my wish list.  Understand, my wish list is the the size of Mount Everest, as I am sure that many of yours is as well, lol.  Anyone who wants to join me in Wishing Wednesday, please feel free to do so!  I would love to hear what you are wishing for!!

Isolation Ward 
Isolation Ward by Joshua Spanogle

Medical thrillers have been rather sickly of late, but Stanford med student Spanogle has applied the paddles and delivered a real jolt of excitement with this debut novel of a dangerous viral outbreak, diabolical medical chicanery and research run amok. Dr. Nathaniel McCormick, an officer in the CDC's Epidemic Intelligence Service, is called to St. Raphael's Hospital in Baltimore, where three young women come to the emergency room complaining of flulike symptoms and, after being admitted, begin to deteriorate in very alarming (and graphic) ways. After their skin begins to slough off in large patches, Nate fears the worst: that a deadly viral disease has been unleashed as part of a terrorist attack. Nate is an intelligent, impulsive, intriguing character, willing to lie and steal from both friend and foe to further the case. Once he learns, at a very high price, that a drug company has been experimenting with a very particular means for treating diseased organs, things begin to come together—but time remains of the essence. Spanogle is a funny, smart and skilled writer at the beginning of what readers will hope is a long and prolific career. (Feb. 28)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. 


Pray for Silence: A Thriller (Kate Burkholder)
Pray For Silence by: Linda Castillo

Speak no evil . . .

In the quiet town of Painters Mill an Amish family is found slaughtered on their farm. Kate Burkholder and her small police force have few clues, no motive and no suspect. Formerly Amish herself, Kate is no stranger to secrets, but she can’t get her mind around the senseless brutality of the crime.

State agent John Tomasseti arrives on the scene to assist. He and Kate worked together on a previous case, and they’re still setting the limits of a complex, difficult relationship. They soon learn that the disturbing details of this case threaten to push those boundaries to the breaking point.

When Kate discovers a diary, she realizes a haunting personal connection to the case. One of the teenage daughters kept some very dark secrets and may have been leading a lurid double life. Driven by her own scarred past, Kate vows to find the killer and bring him to justice—even if it means putting herself in the line of fire

Blindspot
Blindspot by Nancy Bush

The crime scene at an Oregon rest stop is brutal beyond belief - a young man's lifeless body cut to ribbons, and his pregnant girlfriend left alive but comatose. Psychologist Claire Norris is assigned to treat the survivor at a private mental hospital. But there are no clues to the identity of the catatonic 'Jane Doe'. A difficult job only becomes more complicated with the arrival of ex-homicide detective Langdon Stone, who questions Claire's every move. Reluctantly working together, Claire and Lang begin to unravel the chilling truth about a twisted case - one with ties to a killer who is right in their midst, eager to see a mission of evil through to its terrifying end.

Nowhere, Carolina: A Novel (Southern Discomfort)
Nowhere, Carolina by Tamara Leigh


Maggie Pickwick is a lifetime away from her days as head cheerleader and the mistakes she made in high school. Twelve years later, this single mom has traded pompoms for an auctioneer’s gavel, popularity for peace and quiet, and strives to be a good example for her daughter Devyn. She’s keeping it together just fine, too—until an old flame moves back to her little North Carolina town.

Renowned artist Reece Thorpe wants nothing to do with Maggie—not after what she did to him in high school—but he might also be Devyn’s father. Fed by her own pride and fear for her daughter’s happiness, Maggie finds herself on a slippery slope of white lies as she attempts to convince Reece that she’s changed. But the truth has a way of making itself known, and now Maggie’s past and present mistakes could ruin her chance at love.

Seaside Letters
Seaside Letters by Denise Hunter

No matter where you are or how long until we can be together, I'll keep searching for you.-Tucker

Sabrina never intended to fall in love with Tucker McCabe, the man she serves coffee to every morning at a Nantucket cafe--especially since he's unwittingly tied to a past she deeply regrets. But she's fallen hard, though she's kept her feelings a secret.

When Tucker learns Sabrina is the research assistant for a local mystery writer, he asks Sabrina to help him with a little sleuthing of his own...locating an elusive woman he's fallen for online.

If Sabrina accepts the job, she'll spend her evenings in close proximity to a man who can never be hers. If she turns him down, he'll hire someone else--and that would be a disaster. Because if someone else sifts through all those letters and finds out the truth, Tucker will discover her secret...

That the person he's trying to find is her.

(51) Chains of Ice by Christina Dodd

Chains of Ice: The Chosen Ones 
Chains of Ice
By: Christina Dodd

Paperback: 448 pages 
Publisher: Signet Select (July 6, 2010)



Christina Dodd weaves an intricate tale of paranormal bliss and passion, in her newest release, Chains of Ice.

John is one of the Chosen Ones. An incredibly rare and powerful group of individuals, who each have their own special gift. John's gift is his ability to wield strength and power. He can stave off attacks and control objects, with a sort of power force field. When a mission goes inconceivably wrong, leading to the deaths of everyone in his group, with the exception of him and the group's leader, he isolates himself from the world, within the wild.

Genny has always allowed her father to call the shots in her life, even deciding her career path. These decisions, however, have never been made out of love, but rather by what would be most beneficial for him. Little does her father know just how drastically this final betrayal, disguised as a gift, will send Genny's life spiraling.

When Genny Valente receives a gift from her father, which includes a wilderness trip to help scout out and track the coveted Lynx, she is thrilled beyond words. That is until she discovers the strings attached to the gift - the fact that she is to find John Powell and convince him to return to New York and his contracted duty to Gypsy Travel Agency. However, John has no intention of returning to a world that has left his heart, soul and life shattered. Those intentions begin to slip and weaken, however, when he meets Genny, whose life-force is incredibly strong and so difficult to resist. When a partial truth emerges, John's inability to trust changes both his and Genny's lives forever.

Chains of Ice is the third in The Chosen Ones series by Christina Dodd, following Storm of Visions and Storm of Shadows. Each installment focuses on one of The Chosen Ones, telling their story. It is because of this that each story is able to stand alone, and can easily be enjoyed, without feeling as though there are bits and pieces missing.

I absolutely sank into Christina Dodd's writing, her voice, style and characterization are superb and engrossing. The chemistry between Genny and John sizzle, at times the descriptions so vivid it was as though I could reach out and touch the characters and their surroundings. Feelings of empathy, anger, passion, heartbreak and desperation filled me, as I raced through the pages of Chains of Ice.

The paranormal aspect of the story was nowhere near overdone. For me it was the perfect blend of mythology, paranormal and romance. In following with Ms. Dodd's excellent use of balance, in her writing, the heat between Genny and John is heady and sensual, without being overtly so.

With that being said, I do have to be honest in saying that there were a couple of areas within the story, that left me scratching my head. I don't want to get into too much detail for the simple fact that I don't want to give too much of the story away. For me, there was one scene, near the end of the book, that just simply did not seem to fit with what was taking place around it. One other area, which seemed to lend a bit of emptiness for me, pertains to a two year gap, which takes place within the story. I felt that, perhaps, there could have been a bit more elaboration in this particular area. Please note that these incidents are in and of themselves and, as far as I know, are not the result of not having read the previous books in the series.

Even with those two things, Chains of Ice is an excellent tale of love, paranormal, the ability to look beyond self-guilt and find your inner strength. Though this is the first book in this series I have read, I am on the edge of my seat awaiting the next in The Chosen Ones series, titled Chains of Fire, due out September 2010! I also look forward to reading the previous two in this addicting series!

*overall rating 4/5

*my review first published on The Season

About Chains of Ice:

For one magic summer, Genny Valente escapes to spend time as a wildlife observer in the untamed mountains. Little does she know that a beast more fearsome that any beast lurks in the forest…a man, one of the Chosen Ones, betrayed by his gift and tormented by his memories. John Powell has fled his fate and his duty, yet in Genny he sees his one chance for redemption. He will stalk her, kidnap her, love her as only a savage can. But when a new betrayal threatens, John must call on the powers he swore he’d never use again. Then only Genny’s love can save him…if she dares tame the one man she can’t live without…

Excerpt:


CHAINS OF ICE takes up where STORM OF SHADOWS left off. The Chosen Ones desperately need a leader, and John Powell has been suggested as a candidate, but hints of his tormented past make him a risk and finding him in the wild Russian mountains is almost impossible. At the same time, innocent Genny Valente is given a chance to follow her dream and work as a wildlife observer
“Hey, how come the men have to change the tire?” Calvin groused loudly.
During the four hour drive up into the mountains, Genny had come to realize he did everything loudly, and every sound exacerbated the pounding of her headache.
“It’s not like you’re doing anything.” Avni cast Calvin a dark look as she helped Misha place the aged and feeble jack under the fender.
Genny didn’t even think Lubochka knew she was standing behind her, gulping fresh air, until she said, “Genesis, sit down. You’re green.”
Great. Lubochka had eyes in the back of her head.
“Really, Miss Valente, go for a walk.” Reggie handed the iron to Thorsen. “We have enough hands spoiling the broth as it is. You’ll feel better with some fresh air.”
Thorsen grunted as he loosened the lug bolts.
Genny gave an embarrassed smile and fled up the narrow, winding mountain road.
“She’ll get lost, wait and see,” she heard Calvin say.
“Don’t go too far!” Lubochka shouted.
Genny waved a hand and walked around the curve.
They formed the foremost team of wildlife observers in the Russian Ural Mountains. They met in the summer and drove to the small village of Rasputye where they took photos and videos of the Ural lynx. They were three-quarters of the way there now, twilight turned the light a grayish-blue, and it would be dark when they got there. But as far as Genny was concerned, the flat tire had been a Godsend.
She had, disgracefully, been the one who got carsick on the trip. She hadn't actually tossed her cookies, but the dust of the road and the smell of the exhaust combined with the bumpy ride had nauseated her, and everyone in the van knew. Calvin had mocked her, of course. Avni had patted her hand. The men had offered encouragement. Lubochka had tersely told her not to vomit on the equipment.
Now Genny made her way to a fallen log a few feet into the woods, sank down and wrapped her arms around her knees.
Around her, tall trees lifted their branches to the sky. The woods were tall, deep and dark, and somehow Genny thought it smelled old … so old. Something drifted down to the forest floor, and Genny half expected to see that it was one of Hansel and Gretel’s bread crumbs. But it was a pine needle … no, two … no, three … shaken from the trees by the barest wisp of wind. Then the breeze died, and the silence was profound; the soil and trees swallowed every sound.
And someone was watching her.
The hair at the base of her skull lifted. She froze. Warily she looked around.
She saw nothing. Nothing in any direction. This feeling was her imagination… it had to be her imagination…
She did a double take.
Eyes. Pale blue eyes staring at her from the underbrush.
She rose, her gaze fixed on those eyes, a man’s eyes …
“John?” she whispered. And she did, the face that went with those eyes … faded into the twilight.
She was alone again, and all she could hear was her pounding heart.
Around the bend, the Volkswagen roared to life.
Genny backed up, her gaze flicking from tree to tree, trying to see where the man … it had been a man, she was sure … had gone.
She reached the road as the van drove up.
Behind her, someone opened the door.
“Get in, Genny! We’re late already.” It was Avni.
Genny pointed a shaking finger into the woods. “Eyes. Watching me. There … ”
“Oo, the yeti’s been watching her,” Calvin mocked. “Oo, she’s scared of the yeti.”
“No,” Genny said, “it’s not a yeti, it’s —“
And a forty-pound female cat with red fur and distinctive black markings strolled out of the brush, posed for a moment, its eyes fixed on Genny, then turned its back on the astonished group and slid back into the forest.
“My God, Genesis Valente.” Lubochka's voice shook with awe and reverence. “You spotted our first lynx of the season.”
#
John Powell rose from his blind in the underbrush, stepped out on the road, and watched the Volkswagen van chug away, spewing blue smoke out its rusted tailpipe.
The girl had seen through his camouflage, and that surprised him. He had been in Special Forces. He was so adept at camouflage wild animals, all unseeing, had bounded over the top of him.
But then, the girl herself surprised him.
Every year he came out to look over Lubochka's new team. He didn’t fool himself about his motivations. He came to make sure none of the Chosen Ones sneaked in to spy on him.
He wasn’t paranoid; he was realistic. He had signed a seven-year contract to work on a team of Chosen. He had left before his term was completed. There was nowhere on this earth he could run where they couldn’t find him. So sooner or later, they would come and demand his services. Because the Gypsy Travel Agency might serve a higher cause, but its board of directors were ruthless.
Without modesty, John knew he was one of most powerful Chosen in recent memory. Yes, sooner or later they would do what they could to force him to return. But first they would artfully scope out the territory. He figured Lubochka's team was the Agency’s best chance for sneaking up on him, so with a handful of metal debris on the road and the bald tires on Lubochka's van, he guaranteed they would break down.
For the third summer in a row, it worked. In past summers, all unknowing, they had talked to each other and he had listened. So far, no one by word or deed had ever made him suspicious. So far, he’d been lucky and the Gypsy Travel Agency had left him alone. That was the sensible reason for doing what he was doing.
The other reason wasn’t nearly as rational, but much, much more compelling.
He wanted to see Americans: men or women, northern or southern, white or black, he didn’t care. He wanted to hear them talk: in a Texas twang, in bland Hollywood English, in the sing-song cadence from Minnesota or the pinched speech of Boston.       Usually, he was stoic about living in the Ural Mountains so close to Rasputye. He figured that exile was his penance and his punishment, and the only way to keep the world safe from the beast he had become.
Yet like a flagellant, he positioned himself to hear those cherished American voices, and whipped himself with the sound that brought loneliness and homesickness.
Seeing Genesis Valente had been a shock for which he’d been totally unprepared. For the first time since he’d started observing Lubochka's female Americans, he’d been attracted.
No, worse. He’d been enthralled—and he didn’t know why. Usually his women were beautiful, seductive, knowing. They might not choose him to begin with, but once they realized the pleasure he could give them, they flirted, tempted, laughed, met him halfway and more.
Nothing about Genesis’s appearance gave him reason to believe she was that kind of woman.
She was pretty. Not beautiful, but with the kind of face that caught and held his attention. A head full of dark, curly hair pulled back into a careless pony tail. A beautiful olive complexion, a cleft in her chin, and the most exotic golden-brown eyes he’d ever seen in his life. They glowed in her face like coals burning with the kind of rosy hope and enthusiasm he only dimly remembered.
She couldn’t be for real. She just couldn’t be. Because simply seeing her made him feel.
Those events two years ago had cured him of emotions. He was hollow, empty inside, and if he started feeling sorrow or amusement or loneliness or joy, it would mean life was returning to his soul, like blood to a limb that had been frozen.
If there was one thing he understood, it was how painful that could be.
He didn’t want it. He didn’t want it. His power had been contained for so long. Better that it stay contained forever. He couldn’t trust it. He couldn’t trust himself.
Like a bear fleeing a swarm of mosquitoes, he shook his head and fled into the woods. But he couldn’t escape his thoughts.
What was he going to do when the Gypsy Travel Agency sent a representative to demand his return?
He didn’t know.
What was he going to do if Genny's golden eyes mirrored her soul, if she was truly a dreamer, bright and idealistic?
He didn’t know that, either.
He wanted her. He wanted to slide his hands through her dark hair, kiss her warm, tanned skin, ravish her, worship her, teach her how a man who had abandoned civilization made love.
Yet if she was real, if the warmth in her eyes thawed the ice in his veins … then he would have to leave her alone.
Because he would destroy her … as he’d destroyed all the rest.


About Christina Dodd:

Readers become writers, and Christina Dodd has always been a reader. As she was growing up, she read everything, but discovered, because she liked humor, that she liked romance best. In romance, the relationship between one man and one woman holds center stage, and that’s always good for a laugh.
A woman wants things like world peace, a clean house, and a deep and meaningful relationship based on mutual understanding and love. A man wants things like a Craftsman router with attachments, undisputed control of the TV remote, and a red Corvette which will miraculously make his bald spot disappear.

So while Christina was working as a draftsman, she would read during the lunch hour, go back to work to design a sawmill, and plot the conclusion of the story in her mind. The book never ended like that, and she liked her endings better. When her first daughter was born, she told her husband she was going to quit work and write a book. It was a good time to start a new career, because how much trouble could one little infant be?

Quite a bit, it seemed. It took ten years, two children and three completed manuscripts before her first novel, CANDLE IN THE WINDOW, was published.

In the seventeen years since, her novels have been translated into twelve languages, featured by Doubleday Book Club, recorded on Books on Tape for the Blind, won Romance Writers of America’s prestigious Golden Heart and RITA Awards and been called the year’s best by Library Journal. Christina Dodd herself has been a clue in the Los Angeles Times crossword puzzle (11/18/05, #13 Down: Romance Novelist named Christina.) Christina is a regular on the USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and the New York Times Bestseller Lists. Publishers Weekly praises how Christina’s writing style “showcases Dodd’s easy, addictive charm and steamy storytelling.”

Christina's releases for 2010 will include her first new historical in four years, IN BED WITH THE DUKE, coming in March. Yes, IN BED WITH THE DUKE is one of the Governess Brides as well as the much-requested story of Michael, the brother from MY FAIR TEMPTRESS! In July and August, Christina will publish CHAINS OF ICE and CHAINS OF FIRE, the highly anticipated continuation of her acclaimed paranormal series, the Chosen Ones. Her legions of fans always know that when they pick up a Christina Dodd book, they’ve found a story “For the wild at heart!”

* Please be sure to visit Christina Dodd's awesome website!



Tuesday, June 29, 2010

(50) The Tutor by Hope Tarr

The Tutor (Harlequin Blaze) 
The Tutor
By: Hope Tarr

Mass Market Paperback: 224 pages 
Publisher: Harlequin (July 1, 2010)



Hope Tarr brings sensuality to a peak with her newest historical release, The Tutor. Following the conclusion of her “Men of Roxbury House” Victorian trilogy, Hope Tarr decided to give secondary characters innocent Lady Beatrice Lindsey and rogue Ralph Sylvester, their own story.

The Tutor begins with Ralph and the horrors of his childhood, giving readers a bit of a background on him and what he has had to endure growing up, thus the reason for his instabilities. The story then focuses on the “present” with Lady Beatrice (Bea) leaving her newly married sister’s, Lady Katherine, home to return to London at the summons of her father. There is a sizzling spark between Bea and Ralph, who works for her sister’s husband, Rourke, and who is also a good friend. Bea’s sister tells her, however, that Ralph ‘eats little girls like her for breakfast’, and to set her mind away from the likes of him.

It is nine months later and Bea is betrothed to a kind, stable, yet fairly boring man. Bea comes to stay with her sister for a week and once again is met by Ralph. It is with a bit of thought that Bea comes to the conclusion that Ralph would make the perfect tutor for her, with his many accomplished ways in… sex. After an encounter of little satisfaction with her betrothed, Bea takes it upon herself to learn the pleasurable ways of lovemaking, thus allowing her to teach them to her soon-to-be husband.

Ralph is shocked and surprised by Bea’s request to be taught the pleasures of the flesh. But given he’s yearned for Bea since setting eyes on her all those months ago, this seems like the perfect solution. What neither of them counts on is that as their sexual desires are met, their hearts blossom and tangle themselves deeply within one another’s souls.

Both Bea and Ralph deem themselves unworthy of one another and there is still the troublesome fiancé waiting for Bea. The clock is ticking, and the week of Bea’s stay is coming to an end and the end of nightly delights and daily teasing between the two—forever. While able to overcome any insecurities of the body, will Ralph and Bea be able to overcome the insecurities of their hearts, before it is too late?

In all honesty, I have to say that The Tutor sizzles. The lovemaking scenes cover a vast array of activities, including bondage, oral sex, submission, as well as self pleasuring. However, Hope Tarr’s writing style puts these scenes in a very well written way, without making it pornographic or crude. The chemistry between Ralph and Bea is mesmerizing and titillating. In addition to the strong physical scenes and attraction between the two, the story of their blossoming love is enduring. The combination of all angles makes for a very hard-to-put-down story and one that will leave the reader with a smile on their face.

I do want to mention, that while The Tutor focuses on characters from a previous series, which I have not yet had the pleasure to read, I had absolutely no trouble getting into the story and characters as a standalone book. The way the story opens gives a bit of needed background information, with tidbits of previous incidents throughout to keep the reader up to speed.

Hope Tarr does a fantastic job setting the historical time with the use of period dialect. One such instance that stands out is the term for condom which was once called a “French Letter ”. Another instance is the term of one being pregnant is “breeding”. I do have to admit that the idea of a pregnant woman being a woman in “breeding” wasn’t too thrilling to me. However, it does show the setting of the times, which is the early 1890’s.

The Tutor is an excellent story for anyone looking for a fun, steamy read. I do want to say that three quarters of the story is sexually based, so be prepared for that. Hope Tarr is a most delightful author and I greatly look forward to reading more by her in the very near future.

*overall rating 4/5

*review first published on The Season

About The Tutor:

Lady Bea Lindsey is desperate. She's newly engaged to a very nice but dull gentleman and is fully aware that if she wants any joy in her marriage bed, she'll have to call the shots. But first she needs to be taught. And who better to instruct her than irresistibly sexy rogue Ralph Sylvester?

Ralph is surprised by Bea's request, but he can't turn down the woman he's lusted after for the past nine months. He agrees on one condition. For the next seven days and nights, Bea must relinquish total control to him. No pleasure will be off-limits, no act of lovemaking forbidden, no desire too shocking.

It's every man's fantasy. Until the student surpasses the teacher…

Excerpt:

*Please note that this excerpt is slightly trimmed for online reading. When you get the book in hand be sure not to skim this section in the book as some tidbits were left out. Enjoy!

Secretly delighted to be without a chaperone, Ralph offered Beatrice his arm. "Shall we?"
She nodded and laid her smooth hand and slender forearm atop his sleeve. The frisson of awareness that light touch set off was almost alarming. It was alarming.
"Tell me, do I seem dreadfully grownup to you?" She looked up at him through her lashes, the old shyness spiced with a knowingness that was refreshingly, intriguingly new.
"Dreadfully." He steered them toward the dining room door.
Her heeled slippers put them on equal footing, reminding him of all the many advantages being of a like height might bring when seeking to have sex standing. Feeling as though his flesh was afire and his clothes too tight, he led them out into the corridor.
The library was on the same level. They had to cross the minstrel's gallery to get there. Moving them along at a slow stroll, Ralph pointed out the various improvements made since her last visit, shamelessly angling for more time alone with her.
Halfway through, she stopped and turned to face him. "Ralph?" Her cornflower blue eyes lifted to his.
His heart skidded to a stop along with his feet. "Y-yes?"
One word from her and he'd gladly forgo duty and decency and even his friendship with Rourke. One word was all that kept him from opening one of the doors adjoining the gallery and pulling her within.
"You have a spot of frosting on your cheek. May I?" She moved to the front of him.
Deflated, he nodded. "Yes, thank you."
She slid the tip of her forefinger into her mouth, whetting the digit. She hesitated and then reached up. "Sorry, I don't have a handkerchief at hand," she said, swiping at the spot.
"I don't mind," he said. Indeed, had he suspected such a happy outcome, he would have smeared himself with the stuff.
Her upturned face brought their mouth all but meeting. Were this another place and time, were they two very different people, he might have happily seized hold of her buttocks, lifted her high against his hips, and taken her against Kate's prized leather wall papering.
"There, I've got it." She stepped back, licking frosting from her finger and like as not the salt from his skin, too. "Now you're perfect," she added, her grave gaze traveling over him and, he fancied, lingering on his lips.
"Thank you...milady." Even with nine months' of shored up fantasies involving every exotic sexual position his mind could fathom, still he didn't forget the gulf in their stations.
She tilted her face to the side, pretending to study the gilt-framed landscape lying just beyond him. "So formal you are, Ralph," she said, reaching around him and touching the edge of the frame, her loose three-quarters length sleeve falling back to reveal the shapely arc of slender, white elbow. "Shall I address you as Mr. Sylvester then?"
He remembered her asking him the same question nine months ago and smiled. "I'd rather you didn't." He took a step toward her, his pulse thrumming. "It's one thing for a married matron such as your sister to call me by my surname, but a beautiful unattached young woman doing so would have me feeling old."
Like a lamp being turned down, the teasing light in her eyes dimmed. She stepped back, spoiling the moment.
"Yes, well, I suppose we should be getting on. Surely Kate and Rourke will have finished tucking Lucy in. I think it's wonderful that Rourke is such an involved father."
"I suppose," he said, still too drunk on jasmine to give much thought to fatherhood or babies.
Her face fell. They walked the rest of the way in suddenly awkward silence.
Reaching the library, he released Bea with reluctance and stepped back for her to precede him.
"There you are," Rourke called from the rose marble mantel shelf upon which several silver-framed photographs of Kate and Baby Lucy commanded pride of place. "Och, Sylvester, you must have taken the lass the roundabout way."
"Yes, we thought you two must have gotten lost," Kate chimed in, sharp-eyed gaze darting between them.
Ralph did indeed feel lost only not in the way Kate meant. For a handful of magical moments he'd lost himself in Beatrice Lindsey and the foolish fantasy they might somehow find a future together, but Beatrice's stiffening beside him crushed it.
"Lady Beatrice was catching me up on London gossip."
He slanted his gaze to Beatrice, who'd slipped behind the camel-back sofa as though seeking to set some barrier between them.
Her hands plucking at the sofa's curved back, she sent him a grateful smile. "Were it not for Ralph guiding me, I should have found myself quite lost," she said brightly, a bit too brightly.
She left the furniture and floated about the room like a fairy, pausing from time to time to remark upon the handsomeness of the recently redone jade-colored walls decorated with white Chippendale scrollwork in the fashionable Gothic mode, the burled walnut Eastlake chimney piece, and various other improving features. Nervous as a cat, Ralph thought, wondering why. As much as he might want to believe he was the cause, he suspected it was another matter entirely.
Hattie entered followed by a parlor maid in a neat lace-frilled cap, black dress and bibbed apron, the latter bearing a silver tray of champagne flutes. Ignoring the serving girl's gimlet-eyed gaze—he'd turned her down for sex but the other day—Ralph accepted his flute, wondering what more wanted for celebrating. The absentee birthday baby was tucked snugly into her crib.
Pushing away from the fireplace, Rourke raised his glass. "To our dear sister, Bea who we are verra pleased to have with us on this happiest of occasions." He turned to Bea who, along with Kate, had drawn up by his side. "And yet at it's sad we are to welcome you back only to part with you so soon again."
Part with you? Was Beatrice about to embark on some sort of journey? There was a great fashion these days for well-bred young women of means to hare off on The Orient Express to Istanbul and back. He'd made a wager of sorts on that vogue sometime back, but like the majority of his wagers it had never come through.
A broad grin split Rourke's face. Addressing Bea, he said, "Katie only just told me your grand news."
Foreboding hit Ralph like a fist. What grand news?
Rourke turned to Bea. "If you and Mister....." Breaking off, he turned to Kate.
"Mr. Billingsby," she provided, setting her untouched champagne down upon the marble mantel.
"If you and Mr. Billingsby are half as happy as your sister and I, then it's blissful you'll be indeed."
Ralph cinched his fingers about his flute and focused every fiber of his being on not snapping the fragile stemware in twain. Around him glasses clinked, stopping in silence at his. Impervious to their stares, he knocked back his flute, emptying it in a single sparkling swallow, too bruised to care how coarse he must seem, too numb to taste the fine French bubbles as anything better than brine.
Saluting Beatrice with his empty glass, he asked, "When does the happy event take place, milady?"

She bit at her bottom lip but didn't answer. No matter. She was as good as gone. For the second time in his life, a woman he loved was walking away from him. At least his mother had looked back at him. Since her announcement was made, Bea hadn't bothered to lift her gaze from the floor.
Beaming, Kate answered for her. "In three weeks, our Bea-Bea will walk down the aisle as a bride!"




About Hope Tarr:

A lifelong romance reader, Hope Tarr dreamt of being a writer ever since she first touched the bright orange keys of her Fisher Price typewriter. That dream has weathered a master's degree in psychology and a Ph.D. in education, as well as a seven-year stint as a research consultant in Washington, D.C. One day in 1993 after writing one too many technical reports, she sat herself down to face the cold, hard truth: she didn't want to analyze people or teach them. What she wanted was to write about them!

Setting is an important aspect of Hope's books. It's A Wonderfully Sexy Life (Harlequin Blaze, December 2006), Hope's Blaze debut, takes place in her native Baltimore, Maryland, home to steamed hard-shell crabs, neighborhood enclaves like Little Italy and Highland Town, and wonderfully quirky characters who hail strangers and friends alike as "Hey, hon."

For more than five years Hope lived in Fredericksburg, Virginia, and the downtown historic district served as the setting for her paranormal romance, The Haunting. Hope's heroine, Dr. Maggie Holliday, just happens to buy a historic house that looks a heck of a lot like her creator's former turn-of-the-century Victorian.

A second-chance-at-love story set in New York City and Belize, Every Breath You Take is the first book to be written from Hope's new home: Manhattan. In the style of Candace Bushnell's Sex and the City, the novel offers a rich panorama of Hope's favorite spots—Union Square, The Strand bookstore, The Roosevelt Hotel and Sardi's.

Hope adores chatting with readers. She is a frequent guest blogger on romance-fiction forums, maintains an active presence on social networking sites such as Facebook and posts regularly to her author blog at www.hopetarr.com, where she also runs monthly and special contests.



(49) How to Beguile a Beauty by Kasey Michaels

How to Beguile a Beauty (Hqn) 
How to Beguile a Beauty
By: Kasey Michaels

Mass Market Paperback: 368 pages 
Publisher: HQN Books (May 25, 2010)



How to Beguile a Beauty is a tender, sweet, regency romance, tinged with a hint of mystery.

A year later, Lady Lydia is still mourning the lose of her beloved Captain (Fitz), after the war violently took him from her. Tanner, who swore on the Captain's deathbed to watch over, protect and take care of Lydia, is starting to develop deep and ever growing feelings for her, that reach far beyond those of protector. How can he convince Lydia that his feelings for her, far outreach those of his promise to his dear friend?

Lydia knows that Tanner is every bit the gentleman and will uphold his promise, no matter what. However, she is tired of feeling like a burden and falling into the slot of "poor Lydia", especially now that her sister has left with her betrothed. When the companionable looks from Tanner hint at more than friendship, how can she be assured the feelings are from Tanner's heart, rather from his sense of duty? Enter, Tanner's good friend Baron Justin Wilde, who has an anything but innocent background, and whose eyes have been caught by Lydia's beauty and sauciness. Toss in Tanner's supposed intended, Jasmine, and you have the ingredients for a rather interesting tryst.

During a visit with Justin, Tanner realizes that his family's jewels have been replaced with glass and paste. He now knows there is a betrayer swarming around. Tanner has an idea who is behind this wretched deceit, but he cannot be positive. To see just how far this travesty has gone, Tanner invites Justin to travel to his home, to decide the authenticity of his additional jewels in the family collection.

It is decided that a week in the country, at Tanner's, estate is exactly what is needed for everyone. With that, Lydia, Tanner, Jasmine, Justin and their servants make their way to Melvern Hall. Along the journey, Lydia makes some shocking discoveries about Jasmine, a near scuffle takes place, and a dead body is discovered.

An intriguing story? Yes, by all means. Kasey Michaels is well known for her contemporary romances, chocked full of humor and mischief, her historicals are no different. Heroine, Lydia, is a delightful character that I adored. She may have began on the reserved side, but as the story progresses, watch out! Strength and sassiness soon weave tightly with beauty and intelligence, making for a most magnanimous character!

The story flows rather well and is a quick and engrossing read. Let it be known that this is part of a series, following How to Tempt a Duke and How to Tame a Lady. To be honest, while I have read Ms. Michaels' contemporary work, this is my first historical by her. With that being said, I never felt lost or as though I was missing part of the story by not having read the previous books in this series. From the way Ms. Michaels writes How to Beguile a Beauty, one can completely enjoy it as a stand alone, or part of the series. The romance between Tanner and Lydia is sweet and gentle, befitting their personalities perfectly. Readers will be satisfied with the ending - which does contain a few twists and turn, compliments of the mystery aspect of the plot. All in all, How too Beguile a Beauty is an enjoyable historical romance that will warm the heart and bring a serene smile, as the final page is turned.

*overall rating 4/5

*review first published on The Season

About How to Beguile a Beauty:

The lonely life of a spinster…
 
When her beloved dies in battle, Lady Lydia Daughtry assumes she’ll never love again. Until a deliciously handsome duke awakens a part of her she never knew existed. But how can she have such feelings for Tanner Blake, who is a constant reminder of all she has lost?

The least likely man to the rescue…
 
Tanner Blake, Duke of Malvern, promised his dying friend he’d take care of his “dearest Lyddie.” So how dare he covet the lush, lovely young woman for himself — especially since he is all but betrothed to another? His solution: find Lydia a suitable husband immediately. But when both their lives become fraught with mystery and danger, Tanner’s vow becomes intensely personal . . . renewing his desire to keep Lydia by his side forever.

Excerpt:


Chapter One

The sun shone brightly as the traveling coach with the gold Basingstoke crest discreetly painted on its doors moved away from the flagway and out into Grosvenor Square. The magnificently liveried driver, a pair of similarly clad grooms hanging onto the rear rails for dear life, deftly swung the equipage about, and the team of fine black horses and the four accompanying outriders pranced their way toward the end of the Square, to the streets of London, and off to a great wide world of excitement and newfound love. Harness jingled. The sharp sounds of iron-clad shoes striking the cobblestones sent up the message, Farewell — fare thee well.
The moment was a picture, really, a fine portrait set into motion. Adventure Awaits would make a fine title. Especially if the artist could capture the laughing Lady Nicole Daughtry, her bonnet discarded so that the sun fell fully on her face, as if the gods themselves had wished a closer look at her fresh, young beauty. Leaning rather precariously out the off-window, she continued to wave and blow exuberant kisses back toward the mansion until the coach reached the end of the Square and disappeared from sight.
And that was that. There was nothing more to see. Even the sun, that had deigned to appear amidst a Season noted most for damp and rain, withdrew behind a cloud, and the world turned grey once more.
Lady Lydia Daughtry pushed down the sash and backed away from the window on the second floor of Ashurst House, to seat herself on the tufted light blue velvet padded bench in front of her bed. She sat with her back ramrod straight, her hands, else they tremble and betray her, neatly folded in her lap. Another portrait, yes, but one entirely without the fire and light she had just witnessed. After a few minutes of thus imitating a statue, she quietly sighed, her bosom rising and falling almost dramatically, before she resumed her quiet, even breathing.
To the casual observer, she was, as always, an island of calm. No one would think that her heart was pounding furiously, or that she felt perilously close to indulging in what her former governess would have condemned as a tantrum.
Not that the Lady Lydia ever had tantrums (If you threw something fragile against, for instance, a nearby wall, and it broke, you’d only have to clean up the pieces. So, really, what was the point?).
Her twin, however, the newly absent Lady Nicole, had manufactured any number of tantrums as a young child. The most memorable remained the last, the day their mother had wed her third husband and then immediately shuffled off her three children once more to Ashurst Hall. Children were not, it seemed, important once there was a new man in Helen Daughtry’s life. But if Nicole wasn’t to be deemed important, she would at least be noticed, most especially when she’d loosed a heavy silver vase at her new stepfather’s head.
The man really should have ducked.
Lydia smiled at the memory. Nicole did, with such marvelously dramatic flair, all the things the stick-in-the-mud, cautious Lydia only dreamt of doing.
And now Nicole was gone. Her sister, her twin, her heart-mate, was off on her way to meet the mother of her fiancé, Lucas Paine, the Marquess of Basingstoke. And life for neither Lydia nor Nicole would ever be the same.
Lydia had never in her eighteen years known a day without Nicole by her side. The laughing Nicole. The adventurous Nicole. Nicole, who could find excitement anywhere, and manufacture some on her own if none was to be found.
In the Ship of Life for the twins, Nicole had been the wind in the sails. Lydia, as she often thought of herself, had been the anchor. Her sister had pooh-poohed that, saying Lydia was the rudder, the one who steered them both along the straight and narrow and kept Nicole from making an entire cake of herself with her mad starts. But Lydia knew that Nicole was only being kind.
Because, as everyone else well knew, there wasn’t an ounce of excitement in Lady Lydia Daughtry’s entire body. She was quiet, pleasant, obeyed all the rules, never caused anyone so much as a modicum of trouble. To her own mind, she imagined doorstops were more adventuresome. And definitely more interesting, even if the only time anyone noticed one of them was when they tripped over them and stubbed their toes.
When Nicole was in the room, nobody noticed Lydia. Her sister’s wide smile, glorious dark hair, shining eyes, infectious laugh and, well, rather luscious body, drew all attention. Even her freckles were exciting. Leaving the slim, blonde, blue-eyed Lydia to rather fade into the wallpaper. And that was precisely how Lydia liked it.
But now her shield was gone.
She’d known this day would arrive at some point. But then steady, older, gentle Captain Swain Fitzgerald would have been her protector, her safe harbor.
Except that Captain Fitzgerald had perished at Quatre Bras a year earlier, his death devastating her because she’d loved Fitz with all of her young heart, yes, but also in ways her family would never understand. She’d thought that with her Captain she’d found the answer to never having to leave her cocoon of shyness to face the world alone.
Proving to herself that she was something no one had ever suspected of her. She was extremely selfish. Perhaps she hadn’t deserved the Captain’s love and devotion.
If she were a more dramatic sort, she might even believe that God had punished her selfishness by taking the Captain from her. But Lydia was also intelligent, and she knew that God would not allow one person to die in order to teach another person a lesson.
Still, as time passed, nearly a year now since the Captain’s death, doubts about her love for the man had begun to creep into her brain during quiet moments. How much had she really loved him? How much had she loved the idea of love … of being always safe, protected? She’d been only seventeen. Even the Captain, in his letters to her, had warned her of her youth, and promised that he would court her slowly once he’d “put Boney back in his cage.”
For most of her young life she and Nicole and their brother, Rafe, had been shuffled back and forth between their home at Willowbrook to the late duke of Ashurst’s estate — depending on their mother’s mood and marital status. Nicole had made her feelings plain on the subject of their nomadic existence. Rafe had gone off to fight Napoleon, kicking the dust of both estates off his boots until finally returning home to learn that his uncle and cousins had died, and he was somehow now the duke himself.
And Lydia? She had never complained. She’d hidden in books, and behind Nicole’s warming fire. But that didn’t mean she hadn’t felt the pain of being less than well-loved by her mother, and merely tolerated by her uncle and cousins.
So, yes, she had been drawn to the Captain, Rafe’s good friend and fellow soldier. He’d been older, wiser, tall and strong and solid, and he’d seen past her quiet exterior and found something about her that he’d liked. That he’d loved. It had been impossible not to love him back.
Together, they would have been happy for all of their lives.
She blinked away the tears that stung at her eyes. He’d loved her. She’d loved him. She could not, would not forget that one real truth, no matter how her mind sometimes plagued her. And she would never forget Captain Swain Fitzgerald, not ever. She may have learned to live without him over this past year, but then she’d had Nicole ever by her side, hadn’t she?
Lydia didn’t want the world the way Nicole did. She didn’t smile easily, didn’t trust often; she preferred to hide in books … and behind the effervescent Nicole, living vicariously through her outgoing twin.
Now she would face the world alone. It was a daunting, if not even terrifying thought for someone of Lydia’s quiet sensibilities.
She longed to leave London, leave the Season, to escape back to Ashurst Hall and a quiet life. But Rafe was the Duke now, and he still had business in the city, so that they would not return to his estate until after the King’s birthday in June at the earliest. He was much too busy to devote his precious free evenings squiring her about Mayfair. His wife, Charlotte, carrying their first child, did not go into Society. Lydia’s once-again widowed mother had set sail for Italy, fleeing from yet another of her romantic indiscretions … and now Nicole was lost to her.
How was she to go to balls and routs and musical evenings accompanied only by her chaperone? Mrs. Buttram would go off to natter with the other paid chaperones, and Lydia would be left to sit against the wall with all the other overlooked debutantes, all the desperate, reaching females tossed into the Marriage Mart with the mission of securing a rich or at least titled husband.
The heat, the cloying smell of too many hot-house blooms, too many unwashed or overly perfumed bodies. The ignominy of a nearly blank dance card, the occasional turn around the room with either some bored young lord on orders from his mama to squire a few of the wallflowers, or a crass inquisition from some adventurous fortune hunter who asked pointed questions about her dowry.
The thought alone was enough to make Lydia feel physically ill.
Of course, she could always count on Tanner Blake, the Duke of Malvern, to dance with her at least once an evening. It had been His Grace who had brought them the news about Captain Fitzgerald the preceding Spring. It had been His Grace whom Lydia had condemned as a liar, his broad chest the one she had beat her fists upon in a terrifying burst of raw emotion, hating him for the words he spoke, struggling to be free of his strong arms, his attempts to comfort her as her world, all her dreams, shattered.
She hadn’t been fair to the man. Lydia knew that. She had blamed him, blamed the messenger. Ever since that horrible day, ashamed of her unseemly hysterical outburst, she had tried her best to avoid the duke if at all possible. A return to Ashurst Hall had given her time and space, away from the duke. Long months during which she’d hoped he would forget her outburst, forget her.
Except that the man wouldn’t go away. Ever since they’d all come back to town for another Season, even now, as he seemed to be mere days from announcing his betrothal to his third cousin, Jasmine Harburton, he remained a frequent visitor in Grosvenor Square.
And Lydia knew why.
The Captain had been his friend; he’d said he wished for Lydia to be his friend. Tanner Blake’s persistence had won out over her embarrassment, and her normal clear-headedness had replaced her irrational dislike for the man. For that alone, she was grateful to the healing powers of time and distance. But why hadn’t he simply now told her the truth? That the Captain, as he lay dying, had asked him to “take care of my Lyddie.”
How terrible to force a man into agreeing to such an obligation. Yet how much worse it was to be that obligation. She believed the duke saw her as an object of charity, deserving of sympathy, which also forced her into the role of a young woman still daily, actively, grieving her lost love. Even as she hoped, prayed, she could leave this limbo she had existed in for the last year, with the Captain still always alive in her heart, but as a cherished memory rather than a constant ache.
The Duke of Malvern was a good man. An honorable man. But did he ever see her as anything other than an obligation? And why was it becoming increasingly important to her that he think of her only as Lydia, and not some appendage to the past?
That was a question she couldn’t even have asked of her twin.
There was a knock on Lydia’s bedchamber door, and she quickly wiped at her damp cheeks as she called out, “Yes, please come in.”
Charlotte Daughtry, Duchess of Ashurst, looking young and slightly flushed in the London heat as she carried around a belly that seemed to increase daily, entered the room, her head tipped to one side as she looked at Lydia. “I thought I’d give you some time by yourself. She’s really happy, sweetheart. Be happy for her.”
“I am,” Lydia said sincerely, getting to her feet and accepting Charlotte’s hug. “Lucas adores her, and she him. But I will miss her.”
Charlotte idly rubbed at her perfectly round belly. “We’ll all miss her, but it isn’t as if she’s gone to the ends of the earth. She and Lucas will be coming to Ashurst Hall in July, to see her new niece or nephew — please, God the babe will have arrived by then — and also so that we can make plans for the wedding. By the way, it will be your job to talk her out of arriving at the church on horseback, with some of the little girls from the village prancing along ahead of her, streamers in their hair, tossing rose petals. Lucas, I’m afraid, is so besotted he’d grant her anything.”
Lydia smiled even as she blinked away fresh tears. She loathed feeling like a watering pot; she’d always been so careful to hide her emotions, especially the stronger ones, which tended to frighten her. “Actually, I think that would be very nice. Very … Nicole.”
“Don’t tell Rafe, but I agree. Oh, speaking of Rafe, he’s downstairs with our friend Tanner, who has come to take you for a drive on this unusual warm day in dreary London. It’s so lovely to see the sun, even when it plays hide-and-seek with us as it is today. Honestly, the only reason I came upstairs instead of leaving you some time to yourself was to tell you about Tanner’s offer. Not only am I as big as two houses, I may be turning senile. At any rate, Tanner somehow knew Nicole was leaving today, and thought he’d bear you company. Such a wonderful friend, isn’t he? So you go fetch your bonnet and pelisse, and I’ll tell him you’ll be down directly.”
Lydia nodded, finding it difficult to speak, holding in her sigh until Charlotte had quit the room.
Was this to be her life for the remainder of the Season?
Charlotte and Rafe happily married; kind, caring, but also very much wrapped up in each other. Captain Fitzgerald, irrevocably lost to her. Nicole, her very best friend, off on a new adventure in her life.
And Tanner Blake, the man she’d initially taken in such dislike through no fault of his own, the man who still seemed so doggedly determined to live up to his promise to his friend Fitz, could soon be married as well, with a whole new set of obligations.
Why, were she the dramatic sort, she would say that she was alone in the midst of a multitude, which was not a very pleasant place to be.
“If the exercise weren’t so fatiguing,” she told herself, “I should most probably throw myself to the floor and drum my heels against the carpet. Nicole always vowed it made her feel better. But I’m much too polite and restrained and civilized. Much too dull and boring. No wonder I sit with the desperate wallflowers. I may as well be invisible. Then again, if my inside were on my outside, if I were to act as I think and damn the consequences, like Nicole, I should probably shock everyone to their cores, including myself.”
Lydia allowed herself another deep sigh before she lifted her slightly pointed chin and dutifully went in search of her pelisse and bonnet. The bonnet with the sky blue ribbon Captain Fitzgerald had picked out for her last Season, saying it went so well with her eyes. Thus armed, she then headed for the staircase, having firmly decided that she was a Daughtry, not a mouse, and it was time she began acting like one.

Kasey Michaels's pictureAbout Kasey Michaels:

York Times and USA Today bestselling author of more than 100 books (she doesn't count them). Kasey has received three coveted Starred Reviews from Publishers Weekly, two for the historical romances, THE SECRETS OF THE HEART and THE BUTLER DID IT, and a third for contemporary romance LOVE TO LOVE YOU BABY (that shows diversity, you see). She is a recipient of the RITA, a Waldenbooks and Bookrak Bestseller award, and many awards from Romantic Times magazine, including a Career Achievement award for her Regency era historical romances. She is an Honor Roll author in Romance Writers of America, Inc. (RWA)
 
Kasey has appeared on the TODAY show, and was the subject of a Lifetime Cable TV show "A Better Way," in conjunction with Good Housekeeping magazine, a program devoted to women and how they have achieved career success in the midst of motherhood (short version: "with great difficulty").

A highly praised nonfiction book, written as Kathryn Seidick, "...OR YOU CAN LET HIM GO," details the story of Kasey and her family during the time of her eldest son's first kidney transplant. 

Kasey has written Regency romances, Regency historicals, category books including novellas and continuities and a few series "launch" books, and single title contemporaries. She has coped with time travel, ghosts, trilogies, the dark side, the very light side, and just about everything in between. Hers is also the twisted mind behind her ongoing Maggie Kelly mystery series starring a former romance writer turned historical mystery writer whose gorgeous hunk of a fictional hero shows up, live and in color, in her Manhattan living room – to melt her knees, to help her solve murders, and to leave the top off her toothpaste. And, says Kasey, she's just getting started!

*Please be sure to visit Kasey Michaels' website for all of her great books and information on what she is up to! 


Friday, June 25, 2010

Interview: Get to Know... Matthew Cory!


Welcome to another edition of "Get to Know..." I don't know about you, but I am having a blast with these interviews, getting to know people better and reading everyone's delightful answers!  This week's special guest is author Matthew Cory!  I "met" Matthew awhile back when I had the opportunity to read and review his book Like Glass.  This is a marvelously powerful and engrossing story that I sincerely hope everyone has the chance to read.  If you missed my review (click here) to check it out!

In the meantime, please get comfy, sit back, relax and enjoy this delightful interview with Matthew Cory!  Please feel free to leave questions and comments!

Matthew Cory
Please share with us a favorite memory?

My favorite memory so far would have to be my wedding.  I know that's kind of sappy, and I know its a lot more than just a single memory, but I really can't narrow it down any better than that.  My wife and I got married in a beautiful park in Washington state, on a bridge over a river - really looked like something out of a painting.  And due to a "technical error" (her mom pushed the wrong button) my wife walked down the aisle - well, bridge in this case - to music I'd written a few years before hand.

The entire ceremony was just perfect, my new wife was (and still is) the most beautiful woman I'd ever seen, and everything both leading up to it and after it was simply wonderful.  I can't think of anything I've done so far in this life that even compares to it.

Please describe a perfect meal - including menu and those present?

Hmmm... a perfect meal...  This is kind of a tough one, as I'm not terribly picky when it comes to food most of the time - as long as it doesn't run away, I'll eat it.  (And that's arguable too; probably more accurate to say "as long as it doesn't run away too fast for me to catch it".)

That said, I'm definitely partial to seafood and italian food, so either of those would be fair game.  The most important part of the meal is the wine involved however.  I'm not very picky about that either, as long as there's reasonably large quantities.

For the people, definitely my family and our close friends.  I'm lucky enough to get along with my in-laws, and even luckier in that we often get together for family dinners.  Its always a blast, and my mother-in-law is an excellent cook (as most hispanic mothers are).  I've made out pretty good in that area, which may well be why I have a difficult time coming up with a good answer for this one - it isn't something I've really had to worry about.

What are some of your favorite ways to relax?

What is this you speak of, this "relax"?  Sounds European.

I work as a software developer for my day job, and I don't get much relaxation time during the week.  I read every night in bed, so I'm sure that counts for something.  On the weekends, if I'm really lucky, the wife won't have any plans and I can go back and forth between Facebook games and sleeping on the couch.

If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be and why?

Strangely enough, I'm living there now: El Paso, Texas.  On one hand its absolutely miserable, and I wanted little else more than to get out of here when I was growing up.  But I did get out for a few years, and realized that this is where I belong.  The weather's great, the scenery is beautiful (though definitely worlds away from Washington state), and it's home.  Always has been, no matter what I've tried to tell myself.

If you could only read books by one author, who would it be? *I know, this is an inconceivable thought, lol

Oh wow.  Is that even humanly possible?  I guess I'd have to fall back onto Stephen King.  I've read a few authors I like about as much - maybe even a little more - but you just can't beat his writing style.  Always feels like you're talking with a friend (albeit one you probably wouldn't feel comfortable leaving your kids with for a week).

Share with us a few of your dreams.  Also whether they have been fulfilled or are still a work in progress.

Right now, my main dream is to make a living off of my writing - really original, huh?  I have a hard time focusing on writing while trying to keep up a rather demanding day job, and I just hate that.  All I really get out of my job is a paycheck and a headache, and life's just too short for that.  At the same time though, I've found that many people are generally not very pleased if you decide that you won't pay them for things like rent, utilities, food, etc.  How selfish of them, right? ;)

It's moving along slowly but surely.  Like Glass and Shattered are both being published by HandE Media, a UK-based publisher.  Like Glass is due out in November on that side of the Atlantic, and next November (2011) it should be on US shelves.  Shattered is a little up in the air right now, but the basic plan is that it'll be out a year after Like Glass in both locations.

So, once those are out and have taken over the NYT best seller list, I should be doing all right.  And then there'll be movie deals, and endorsement contracts, and I'll have to make public appearances, etc.  You know, the usual story.

What are some of your guilty pleasures?

Guilty pleasure?  Don't tell anyone I said this, but honestly I kind of enjoy watching Glee sometimes.  My wife's a big fan of the show - a "gleek" I believe the term is - so I end up watching it with her.  I don't think I'd ever turn it on myself given a choice, but when she makes me sit down and watch it with her I start to get into it.

If you could leave the world with one piece of advice, what would it be?

It's a cliche many times over, but it's still the most important thing: follow your heart and your dreams, and don't let anyone tell you different.  Your dreams may seem miles away, and you might not be able to think of anyway you'll make it to them right now.  But don't give up.  The only thing that keeps me going to my day job everyday (aside from my wife telling me I can't stay home) is knowing that it's only temporary as long as I bust my rear end and move towards something better.

It's not always easy, that's for damned sure, and there's plenty of times I'm ready to just throw in the towel.  But you can't give up.  You get knocked down, you need to get back up and shake it off.  Sure it hurts, and I'll be the first to grant you that you need time to get things back together.  Just get them together and get back in the ring.

About Matthew Cory:

Matthew Cory was born — and mostly raised — in El Paso, TX.  He spends his time trying to write, and makes a living developing software and internal websites for a locally-owned insurance company.  He currently lives with his wife in El Paso, though at the time Like Glass was written, they resided in western Washington state (where most of the novel takes place).

Over the years, he has spent some time as a musician, focused mostly on the piano and composing his own works.  It is from this experience that Like Glass and Shattered builds their musical background.

*You can find Matthew at his website:  http://matthewcory.com/  and on Twitter: http://twitter.com/MCoryAuthor





Like Glass
What would you do if the one person you hated most Died? If the person who stole The love of your life Would never see another day? How would you feel? Would you laugh? Would you cry? This is the issue that Rob Jackson faces. This is the dilemma that Like Glass begins with. A phone call from his brother's widow begins his turmoil. A phone call from a voice he tried to forget launches the avalanche. How would you feel?

Like Glass is, in essence, a love story. To say it’s a romance would be misleading though; at its heart lies the turmoil a man faces as he deals with the death of his brother. The psychological battles Rob Jackson faces reach a climax when he looses further loved ones after coming to terms with the brother he’d disowned and the love that he lost.

The novel begins with the story of how Rob and Janet first meet during their college years.  After a short but wonderful romance between the two, Janet has an affair with Rob’s brother, resulting in a pregnancy.
When Rob attends his brother’s funeral, roughly eight years later, he is forced to face the past he’d tried diligently (and unsuccessfully) to forget.  As he tries to hide the love he still feels, he finds himself fighting a loosing battle with the hatred he held for so long.




*If you would like to participate in this series, please send an email to me at cafeofdreamsbookreviews@yahoo.com and I will send the questions to you. This is open for authors and bloggers! I'm hoping to make this an extended event and have several great responses so far!! I hope everyone enjoys, has fun and if you have a question for the person being interviewed, please feel free to ask away!

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Wishing Wednesday

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Wishing Wednesday is a day that I love to share books that are on my wish list.  Understand, my wish list is the the size of Mount Everest, as I am sure that many of yours is as well, lol.  Anyone who wants to join me in Wishing Wednesday, please feel free to do so!  I would love to hear what you are wishing for!!

Pretty Little Liars
Pretty Little Liars by Sara Shepard

Everyone has something to hide—especially high school juniors Spencer, Aria, Emily, and Hanna.

Spencer covets her sister's boyfriend. Aria's fantasizing about her English teacher. Emily's crushing on the new girl at school. Hanna uses some ugly tricks to stay beautiful.
But they've all kept an even bigger secret since their friend Alison vanished.
How do I know? Because I know everything about the bad girls they were, the naughty girls they are, and all the dirty secrets they've kept. And guess what? I'm telling.

A Timely Vision (A Missing Pieces Mystery) 
A Timely Vision by Joyce and Jim Lavene

Meet Dae O'Donnell, a woman with a gift for finding lost things-and the stories behind lost lives...

Dae O'Donnell is the mayor of Duck, North Carolina-and the person everyone turns to when they've lost something. One touch and Dae can find it, and missing pieces seem to find their way to her, whether she wants them to or not.

When Miss Mildred asks Dae to find her missing watch, Dae finds herself looking for more than mislaid jewelry-she must prove the town matriarch isn't a cold-blooded killer.


Night of the Living Deed (A Haunted Guesthouse Mystery) 
Night of the Living Deed by E.J. Copperman

Welcome to the first Haunted Guest House mystery-the getaway every reader can afford.

Newly divorced Alison Kerby wants a second chance for herself and her nine-year-old daughter. She's returned to her hometown on the Jersey Shore to transform a Victorian fixer-upper into a charming-and profitable-guest house. One small problem: the house is haunted, and the two ghosts insist Alison must find out who killed them.

The Burying Place
The Burying Place by Brian Freeman

Lieutenant Jonathan Stride is quietly recovering from injuries sustained on his latest case when a rich doctor's baby is kidnapped and his peace is shattered. As suspicion builds that the doctor may have staged the baby's disappearance, the relationship between the doctor and his wife and neighbors begins to disintegrate. Stride and his lover and partner Serena find themselves on opposite sides of the case, with Stride pursuing evidence that incriminates the doctor and Serena trying to prove that the baby really was abducted. Meanwhile, Stride's colleague Maggie and her headstrong young partner are tracking a man responsible for a violent crime wave in the rural areas of Duluth. There seems to be no connection between the cases until a victim with ties to the doctor's case turns up murdered in the signature style of the Duluth killer.