Monday, July 9, 2012

Review: Keeping Secret by Sierra Dean

Keeping Secret (Secret McQueen #4) by Sierra Dean
Synopsis (Goodreads):
It’s a nice day for a white wedding. At least that’s what Secret McQueen is hoping for, with her poofy-princess-dress marriage to a werewolf king looming closer and closer by the day. But as ever, nothing can be that easy for a vampire/werewolf hybrid for whom someone still harbors a death wish.

Summoned to the south by her werewolf uncle, who makes no bones about the fact her mate bond with Lucas doesn’t pass muster, Secret learns her furry heritage looks more like a tangled vine than a family tree. Getting her royal uncle’s blessing hinges on finding one of the missing twigs. Even with vampire sentry Holden Chancery at her side, she manages to land up to her neck in a swamp of trouble.

As an assassin’s scope zeroes in, family dramas boil up and a fast-collapsing love square threatens to bury her alive, making it to the church on time could be the least of Secret’s problems.

Product Warnings
Contains a grumpy bride who shouldn’t be wearing wedding white, a motley crew of bridesmaids, a dangerous scenic drive in the woods and a smoking-hot trio of suitors who might be too scorching to touch.
My Thoughts: Before I start this review I have something to get out of the way...
*flails*
*weeps*
*flails*

Yeah. This book sort of flayed me alive. In a "hurts so good" sort of way. I seriously had to put the book down at one point and take a long cleansing breath because poor Secret had thing after thing thrown at  her and I was a MESS. I love that she has the physical  strength to face down the bad guys and not get gutted but emotionally ... oh, Secret!

I'm really wavering on how I feel about her uncle and the hoops he makes her jump through. She wants so badly to have a family connection and he suddenly summons her and wants to vet her relationship with Lucas? Not cool, werewolf king. Not cool at all. Secret's family is so screwy that sometimes I wonder why she isn't even more of a mess.

I loved that Holden was Secret's go-to guy this time (vampire strength and speed are a major plus when battling for your life) and I missed Desmond something fierce. He's my favorite, you know. I loved that Secret got to delve a little more deeply into the werewolf side of her heritage in this book and that she got to see how her mother's side of the family live.

Secret's kicking ass and taking names, breaking hearts and having hers broken - all while battling for her life against numerous baddies out for their pound of flesh. Awesome and heartbreaking, I am DYING for the next book.

Books in this series
0.5. The Secret Guide to Dating Monsters
1. Something Secret This Way Comes
2. A Bloody Good Secret
2.5. Secret Santa
3. Deep Dark Secret
4. Keeping Secret - Kindle

Author Links
| Website | Twitter | Facebook | Amazon |

Reading challenges: Ebook Challenge

Keeping Secret was provided by the author in exchange for an honest review.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Review: Wicked Nights by Gena Showalter

Wicked Nights (Angels of the Dark #1) by Gena Showalter
Synopsis (Goodreads):
Leader of the most powerful army in the heavens, Zacharel has been deemed nearly too dangerous, too ruthless--and if he isn't careful, he'll lose his wings. But this warrior with a heart of ice will not be deterred from his missions at any cost...until a vulnerable human tempts him with a carnal pleasure he's never known before.

Accused of a crime she did not commit, Annabelle Miller has spent four years in an institution for the criminally insane. Demons track her every move, and their king will stop at nothing to have her. Zacharel is her only hope for survival, but is the brutal angel with a touch as hot as hell her salvation--or her ultimate damnation?
My Thoughts: I cannot tell you how excited I was to see that we were getting a spin-off series from the Lords of the Underworld. And... and and and the first book was starring Zacharel, the hard-nosed, emotionless angel who saved Haidee by giving her a pinch of the love he kept in an urn by his bed. *swoon* He has unplumbed depths, guys. UNPLUMBED DEPTHS!

Besides that fact that Zacharel is awesome (true story) and we got to meet up with some of the Lords and their Ladies (also a true story), Annabelle was pretty fantastic. She's been beaten down, over-medicated, seen horrific things, lost everything that means something to her and she's still managed to keep it together and hold onto her sanity. Her brush with the demon world is made even worse because she doesn't know what she's up against. For all she knew, these creatures were just figments of her imagination and she really was bat-shit crazy and deserved to be institutionalized. Yet, she didn't let it break her.

I loved the slow build-up of their romance. Zacharel has no concept of romantic love and has never felt lust until Annabelle stirs in it him. Annabelle's socialization skills are a little rusty and Zacharel barely cracks a smile. Watching the two of them unthaw around one another was fun. And sexy. Oh, yes. Sex-ay.

Have I mentioned Zacharel's army yet? LOVE THEM! There's so much going on with those guys. They're all so wonderfully broken. I can't wait until we get their stories. Can't wait at all.

Books in this series
1. Wicked Nights - Paperback | Kindle
2. Beauty Awakened

Author Links
| Website | Twitter | Facebook | Amazon |

Review: The Darkest Seduction by Gena Showalter

The Darkest Seduction (Lords of the Underworld #9) by Gena Showalter
Synopsis (Goodreads):
Possessed by the demon of Promiscuity, immortal warrior Paris is irresistibly seductive—but his potent allure comes at a terrible price. Every night he must bed someone new, or weaken and die. And the woman he craves above all others is the one woman he'd thought was forever beyond his reach…until now.

Newly possessed by the demon of Wrath, Sienna Blackstone is racked by a ruthless need to punish those around her. Yet in Paris's arms, the vulnerable beauty finds soul-searing passion and incredible peace. Until a blood feud between ancient enemies heats up.

Will the battle against gods, angels and creatures of the night bind them eternally—or tear them apart?
My Thoughts: Paris' story has been so long in the making that I was almost afraid that his book wouldn't live up to my expectations. No worries, though. It lived up to them, surpassed them and kicked them a few times just to make sure I knew how good it was. Gena Showalter has given us a book of epic proportions and I think I love it. STUFF happens in this book, guys! STUFF! And lots of it! *bliss*

Considering how much I've enjoyed the other books in this series, I shouldn't be surprised by how much I liked this one but ... I am. I loved Paris. He projects this image of a carefree, sex addicted lover of women but part of him hates what he has to do to keep strong. In his mind, he's using every woman he has sex with - even if he's giving her mind-blowing orgasms and she's enjoying every minute of it. The fact that he needs them like he does has been wearing on him for thousands of years. I loved that his obsession with finding Sienna turned him into something dark and lethal. Heck, I pretty much loved everything about Paris.

I was also taken with Sienna. Her horror over the knowledge that she and so many of the lower level Hunters had been lied to and basically brainwashed to believe that all demons were bad made me like her. Her drive to find her sister and right that wrong made me adore her even more. Simply put, her life experiences have shaped her into someone who is perfect for Paris and his demon. I just flat out liked her. I liked that she was accepting of Paris' past - although, honestly she'd have to be considering how many women he'd slept with in his very loooooooong life. I liked that she continually put his well-being above her own. I liked that she knew that gaining Paris' trust was going to be a long and rocky road.

Oh, guys. Big things happen in this book. BIG THINGS. I was blown away by the leaps and bounds the overall arc took. I'm looking forward like crazy to Zacharel's story now and I can't wait to see the rest of the Lords get their HEAs.

Books in this series
0.5. The Darkest Fire
1. The Darkest Night
2. The Darkest Kiss
3. The Darkest Pleasure
4. The Darkest Whisper
4.5. The Darkest Angel
5. The Darkest Passion
6. The Darkest Lie
7. The Darkest Secret
8. The Darkest Surrender
9. The Darkest Seduction - Paperback | Kindle

Author Links
| Website | Twitter | Facebook | Amazon |

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Review: The Darkest Surrender by Gena Showalter

The Darkest Surrender (Lords of the Underworld #8) by Gena Showalter
Synopsis (Goodreads):
Possessed by the demon of Defeat, Strider cannot lose a challenge without suffering unimaginable pain. For him, nothing stands in the way of victory. Until Kaia, an enchanting Harpy, tempts him to the razor's edge of surrender.

Known among her people as The Disappointment, Kaia must bring home the gold in the Harpy Games or die. Strider is a distraction she can't afford because he has an agenda of his own-steal first prize, an ancient godly artifact, before the winner can be named. But as the competition heats up, only one prize will matter-the love neither had thought possible...
My Thoughts: Hold on, my inner cover whore is drooling. *blink blink* Geez. I could stare at this cover all day and not get bored.Okay. I think I'm done. Maybe. There might be long, protracted pauses while I stare at Strider but considering he is "the strongest, sexiest and smartest" of the Lords (his words, I swear!), I think it's totally justified.

So. Strider. Besides having a totally lickable cover, he is pretty darn awesome. I might have become slightly infatuated with him in book 7 when he was trying his hardest to pretend that he wasn't attracted to Kaia and her bloodthirsty ways. The guy cracks me up with his ego checks and his constant pokes at his demon to make sure that he didn't view whatever Strider had just said (or thought) as a challenge. And, oh, he tries so damn hard to deny his feelings for Kaia. He fights them every step of the way. He's determined not to fall for her. And he totally fails.

Kaia, on the other hand, knows she wants Strider but he rejects her at every turn because she made the mistake of sleeping with Paris once. Yet, she still perseveres. She puts herself  into Strider's path time and time again until he has no choice but to see her as more than just one of Paris' numerous women. I kind of love how vicious she could be. She's a warrior and a fighter and she's not afraid to cause a little damage. Or a lot. A youthful mistake has made her practically an outcast among the other Harpies and she constantly feels like she has something to prove.

The Harpy Games are brutal and bloody and the lengths some of the Harpies will go to to try to make Kaia pay for her part in the massacre years earlier kept me on the edge of my seat. I love the secondary story lines for the Lords that weave through the book and I'm DYING for poor Kane and William. Bad things are coming! BAD THINGS! I know that Paris' story is next but I'm almost biting my nails for those two. I want to know what's coming!

Books in this series
0.5. The Darkest Fire
1. The Darkest Night
2. The Darkest Kiss
3. The Darkest Pleasure
4. The Darkest Whisper
4.5. The Darkest Angel
5. The Darkest Passion
6. The Darkest Lie
7. The Darkest Secret
8. The Darkest Surrender - Paperback | Kindle
9. The Darkest Seduction

Author Links
| Website | Twitter | Facebook | Amazon |

Review: The Darkest Secret by Gena Showalter

The Darkest Secret (Lords of the Underworld #7) by Gena Showalter
Synopsis (Goodreads):
Keeper of the demon of Secrets, Amun can manipulate the darkest thoughts of anyone nearby. But when the immortal warrior is chained and isolated to protect those he loves, death is his only hope of release—until he meets Haidee, a fellow prisoner whose beauty and hidden vulnerability draw him into a reckless test of his loyalty.

Haidee is a demon-assassin, raised to despise Amun's kind. Yet how can she hate the man whose touch sets her aflame? But to save him, she must give herself body and soul...and face the wrath of a powerful adversary sworn to destroy her.
My Thoughts: Why do I wait so long between books in this series? WHY? I solemnly swear that I will read the next book very, very soon because I enjoyed this one so damn much.

Now, I wasn't expecting to like this book as much as I did. I think this was mostly because Amun had been sort of this unknown element. Sure, I knew what his demon could do but the fact that he never spoke made him a mystery. A great big hunk of mystery who turned out to be full of awesome. I seriously wasn't expecting that. There was so much going on under his silence that it was riveting. I loved that he embraced his demon side, despite the complications it caused him, and relied on it. I loved that his demon was the reason Haidee was able to regain some of her memories.

And Haidee... oh, Haidee. I had a hard time imagining how a Hunter, the very one who had helped destroy one of the Lords, could be likeable. But she was. The reasons for her hatred worked. The reasons for her connection to Amun worked. Her complete entrancement by Amun and the accompanying sexual tension worked. In a big way. I love it when two characters have chemistry that sizzles (in the words of Haidee) and these two were sizzling left and right AND down the middle. Rawr!

I also might kinda, sorta love Strider at the moment. His whole "I'm so perfect" schtick could have been incredibly annoying and egotistical but it had me grinning like a fool on more than one occasion. I loved the "vacation" he took with William and Paris and the resulting shenanigans. Those three are a bleeding menace when they get together. And it's awesome to read.

While this book didn't advance the overall arc all that much, it surprised me by making me care so much for Amun and Haidee. I wasn't expecting it and that was fabulous! Now, onto the next book!

Books in this series
0.5. The Darkest Fire
1. The Darkest Night
2. The Darkest Kiss
3. The Darkest Pleasure
4. The Darkest Whisper
4.5. The Darkest Angel
5. The Darkest Passion
6. The Darkest Lie
7. The Darkest Secret - Paperback | Kindle
8. The Darkest Surrender
9. The Darkest Seduction

Author Links
| Website | Twitter | Facebook | Amazon |

Reading challenges: Ebook Challenge

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Serial Killers' Featured Review: I Am Half-Sick of Shadows by Alan Bradley


Want to know more about the idea behind Serial Killers? This post is the place to start.

This month's book is I Am Half-Sick of Shadows the 4th book in the Flavia de Luce series by Alan Bradley. Odd's the established reader and I'm new(-ish) to the series...

Synopsis (Goodreads)
It’s Christmastime, and the precocious Flavia de Luce—an eleven-year-old sleuth with a passion for chemistry and a penchant for crime-solving—is tucked away in her laboratory, whipping up a concoction to ensnare Saint Nick. But she is soon distracted when a film crew arrives at Buckshaw, the de Luces’ decaying English estate, to shoot a movie starring the famed Phyllis Wyvern. Amid a raging blizzard, the entire village of Bishop’s Lacey gathers at Buckshaw to watch Wyvern perform, yet nobody is prepared for the evening’s shocking conclusion: a body found, past midnight, strangled to death with a length of film. But who among the assembled guests would stage such a chilling scene? As the storm worsens and the list of suspects grows, Flavia must use every ounce of sly wit at her disposal to ferret out a killer hidden in plain sight.

My Thoughts: Well. That was surprisingly fun. I've read the first two Flavia de Luce books previously (although I skipped #3) so I'm not entirely new to the series. I love that Flavia is so wonderfully obsessed with poisons and that stumbling over dead bodies doesn't faze her. I like that Buckshaw, the ancestral home that has fallen into disrepair, has such a presence in Flavia's life. From the freezing bedrooms to her mother's boudoir, they all have such character.

Much of Flavia's charm lies in her interactions with the people of their small village. Her understanding of Digger's fragile mental state and her willingness to protect him when he's consumed by the demons from his past, her determination to help the police solve the crimes she stumbles over, her ability to deconstruct the clues she finds to figure out why something happened as it did are all offset by her eleven-year-old belief that she can catch Father Christmas in a glue trap to finally have the proof her scientific mind requires that he is real. Alan Bradley makes Flavia work. She's hot tempered and she often rhapsodizes about poisons and how to best make her sisters' lives miserable (when she's not solving terrible crimes) but she's consistent and she worked for me as a character.

The mystery was full of mysterious goings on, the setting was bleak and icy and Flavia was her usual irrepressible self. I liked it.

Odd's Thoughts: It's hard for me to admit this, even now, but I don't think I really liked this book. And that's hard because I feel like I *should* like this book: morbid, amoral preteen heroine; tortured yet capable vet; snarky maiden aunt; giant ancestral home filled with drafts and sadness; small village. And this installment, too, had snow and rooftop shenanigans.

Shenanigans, people. I am a sucker for shenanigans.

But overall, I just wasn't moved by it. The writing style's fluid and lambent, and Flavia is annoying, yes, but she's interesting about being annoying. My lack of enthusiasm for the book stems from the trope of movie stars invade unlikely setting x, a trope that has never moved me one iota, and the thawing of the relationship between Flavia and her sisters. I loved in previous books how mean they were to each other because, as Kelly can attest, my sister and I at that age tried to kill each other on a regular basis, and it's refreshing to see an honest portrayal of dysfunctional siblings in a book.

That and I realized that this series relies waaaaaay too heavily on gathering the village together for a theatre performance, and for me to keep reading the author needs to level up on the plotting.

I did like how there was more maiden aunt ("Impertinent children ought to be given six coats of shellac and set up in public places as a warning to others." hee.) but as a reader, I was being asked to invest too much in the back-story and personal lives of these walk-on film people rather than the deLuce family, when they're the whole reason I keep reading.

And that said, keep reading I will: I'll definitely read the next one in the series.

Kelly: I have some questions...

Toward the end of the book (in the 230 to 240 page range), Flavia finds Feely in her lab and they have a little back and forth. Flavia asks Feely why she hates her. Feely replies: "Hate you, Flavia?" she said, her voice trembling. "Do you really believe I hate you? Oh, how I wish I did! It would make things so much easier."

Did I miss something vital or is she just being dramatic?

And the ending? Once again, I feel like I've missed something here. Why was Flavia so melancholy once her sisters left? I feel like there's this whole subtext to the sisters' relationship that I'm seeing but not seeing.

I'm making a frowny face.

Odd: As for the lab scene, I've read all three books and I have to tell you I'm as confused as you are. The only thing I can think is that Flavia is so much like Harriet that her sisters both hate her as a reminder of their dead mother and love her for being that same reminder? But then again, as you mentioned, Feely has a tendency to be dramatic.

Kelly: Okay. The idea that they both love her and hate her makes sense. I guess. I mean, it makes sense I just wish the author had made things a little clearer.

Do you think Flavia is going to remain 11 forever? Wasn't she 11 in the first book? Did all of these books take place within a year?

Odd: I wonder if she really is going to stay 11 (going on 30 -- oy, separate discussion) for the duration of the series, and I'm unsure of the timespan of all the books. From Flavia's conversation with Nualla, we know that the 2nd book took place nearly a year ago.

What did you think of Digger? And the maiden aunt?

And do you share my suspicion that Harriet, whose body, we are told over and over again, WAS NEVER FOUND, will come back from the dead in a future book? Possibly the last one in the series?

Kelly: I really like Digger and his issues. He's a high functioning wreck. I don't know how I feel about the aunt. Her revelation about what she had done during the war seemed very convenient. I don't know. I just don't know.

YES! YES YES YES! With the weirdness surrounding the sisters' relationship, I kept thinking that maybe Harriet hadn't died at all and it was all a story the family had made up. I can totally see her popping up in a later book.

Since you're more a mystery buff than I am, what did you think about the mystery this time around?

Odd: I love Digger. He's always my favorite part of the books. And the aunt's growing on me -- honestly, her revelation of the wartime connection was one of my favorite parts of the book.

The mystery was kind of meh for me. I didn't really care who killed the crazy lady and during the whole setup of the ending, Flavia finding the Who's Who book, I skimmed. I was much more into what was going to happen to the hall and to the de Luce family, and given all the set-up, I was SO looking forward to the rooftop shenanigans, and to be fair, they did not disappoint in the least. Neither did the bit where the inspector recalls having to coax the superintendent down off the ceiling.

There's really something to be said for Flavia's agentive powers in these books. She's very much the protagonist of her own story, which I find refreshing, and she's not extremely nice or super-beautiful or can heal people with the power of angel farts  just by -- yeah, I've been reading too much YA for review. Does it show?

Kelly: Lol! Little bit. 

Split Decision

Books in this series
1. The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie
2. The Weed that Strings the Hangman's Bag
3. A Red Herring Without Mustard
4. I Am Half-Sick of Shadows - Hardcover | Kindle
5. Seeds of Antiquity
6. The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches

Author Links
| Website | Amazon |

Monday, July 2, 2012

Review: Archer's Lady by Moira Rogers

Archer's Lady (Bloodhounds #3) by Moira Rogers
Synopsis (Goodreads):
She's looking for redemption. He doesn't believe in it.

Accused of betraying the Bloodhound Guild, Archer's only chance to regain the trust of his fellow hounds is to earn it--one dangerous job at a time. Crystal Springs may be the worst yet. The town has been deserted by all but the poor and the desperate, yet the vampires stalking the edges of the settlement haven't closed in for the kill. Question is, why?

Grace Linwood, professional liar, has been hiding under the guise of a border schoolteacher for so long, she's almost fallen for her own con. The frontier was supposed to be her chance at a respectable life, but now the cowardly part of her wants to flee. When Archer catches her considering a run for safety, she knows it's only a matter of time before he sees through her charade.

They become reluctant allies in the quest to uncover the mysteries of Crystal Springs, but every unraveled knot ties them closer together. They both know their pasts are too shattered to hope for a future--until their investigation uncovers a secret. One that could make betraying the Guild their only path to redemption.

Warning: Contains a partly reformed con-artist heroine with a bruised heart and a mostly retired bank-robbing hero with a weary soul. Also included: vampire schemes, mad scientist plots, an alarming amount of dirty talk and some borderline-criminal bedroom antics in an alternate Wild West.
My Thoughts: Standard disclaimer: I love these Bloodhounds. I think they're sexy and violent and I wouldn't have them any other way. There is a high probability of fangirl flailing and there will undoubtedly be an excessive use of exclamation points ahead. Just so you know.

I'm so happy that we get to see Archer's story! Introduced in Wilder's book, he was the Bloodhound who was forced to create Hunter and he's a bit of a wild card. Heh. To say the least. Sent to Crystal Springs to help the town against a very nasty vampire infestation, Archer is hard and resigned. He's seen a lot in his life and being accused of betraying the Guild is just wearing him down even further. Grace is ... pretty awesome. She has her secrets and she guards those secrets zealously. She's managed to reinvent herself in Crystal Springs and build a different life for herself but she's still wary of revealing too much of herself. And then Archer rolls into town. Those two just freaking WORKED! *fans self* Their dirty talk is fun, their new moon antics were fantastic and... they just worked!

One thing I love about this series is that we're getting these bits and pieces that allow us to see what the Guild is capable of and what they've allowed to happen and the picture just keeps getting darker and darker. I love the introduction of Diana and I'm intensely curious to see how she's going to fit into everything in the long run.

Dark, dirty and feral, these Bloodhounds do it for me. They can kick ass and take names with the best of them.

Books in this series
1. Wilder's Mate
1.5 Merrick's Destiny
2. Hunter's Prey
3. Archer's Lady - Kindle

Author Links
| Website | Twitter (Donna) | Twitter (Bree) | Facebook | Amazon |

Reading challenges: Ebook Challenge

Archer's Lady was provided by the author in exchange for an honest review.