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review 2019-11-05 09:52
Los, beklauen wir einen Drachen!
Fool's Gold - Jon Hollins

Jon Hollins heißt in Wahrheit Jonathan Wood. Das Pseudonym wurde ihm vom Verlag Orbit nahegelegt, um Assoziationen mit seiner Urban Fantasy – Reihe „Arthur Wallace“, die unter seinem echten Namen erschien, zu vermeiden. Es ist nicht so einfach, Informationen über ihn zu finden, denn er besitzt keine Website. Stattdessen managt er seine digitale Präsenz über soziale Netzwerke. Auf Reddit erklärte er anlässlich des Erscheinens seines ersten High Fantasy – Romans, dass dieser eine Hommage an seine Auffassung des Genres ist, in dem es ihm zufolge im Prinzip darum geht, dass Freunde zusammen Abenteuer erleben. Erweitert man diesen klassischen Plot um ausgeklügelte Raubüberfälle in der Tradition von „Ocean’s Eleven“, erhält man „Fool’s Gold“, den Auftakt von Hollins‘ Trilogie „The Dragon Lords“.

 

Niemand mag Drachen. Im Kondorra Tal sind sich alle einig, dass Drachen fiese, gierige Tyrannen sind, die viel zu hohe Steuern verlangen und zum Spaß die Bevölkerung terrorisieren. Doch die Leute haben auch Angst vor ihnen. Also halten sie still und unterwerfen sich den kriminellen Gesetzen der Drachen. Will hat sich längst damit abgefunden, dass er als einfacher Bauer nichts gegen das Unrecht in Kondorra unternehmen kann. Bis zum Tag des „bürokratischen Missgeschicks“. Von jetzt auf gleich verliert er alles: seine mageren Finanzen, seine Farm, sogar sein Dach über dem Kopf. Verzweifelt flüchtet er in eine Höhle in den umliegenden Wäldern – nur um festzustellen, dass diese besetzt ist. Unversehens steht er den Söldnern Lette und Balur, der Gelehrten Quirk und dem verrückten alten Firkin gegenüber. Am Lagerfeuer tauschen sie ihre Geschichten aus. Getragen von seiner Stimmung rutscht Will versehentlich ein wahnwitziger Vorschlag heraus. Verflucht sei sein verräterisches Mundwerk! Denn welche Person bei gesundem Verstand würde schon ernsthaft erwägen, einen Drachen zu bestehlen?

 

Spätestens, seit ich als Kind „Der kleine Hobbit“ von J.R.R. Tolkien gelesen habe, habe ich sehr spezifische Ansprüche daran, wie ein Drache in der High Fantasy porträtiert zu sein hat. Smaug prägte mein Bild dieser Spezies nachdrücklich, eine Erfahrung, die ich mit Jon Hollins teile. Ebenso begeisterte mich der Film „Ocean’s Eleven“, als das Remake Anfang der 2000er herauskam. Ein Buch, das meine traditionelle Vorstellung von Drachen mit der Action eines Heist-Plots kombiniert, klang für mich ideal. Leider war „Fool’s Gold“ jedoch nicht exakt das Jubelfest, das ich mir ausgemalt hatte. Obwohl der Auftakt der „The Dragon Lords“-Trilogie viel Gutes enthält, machten sich vor allem im Worldbuilding und im Handlungsverlauf Mängel bemerkbar, die meine Lektüre negativ beeinflussten. Das ist wirklich schade, denn zuerst erlebte ich einen vielversprechenden Start. Ich erfreute mich an Hollins überzeugender Darstellung der Drachen als tyrannische, gierige Dreckssäcke und genoss den glucksenden Humor des Autors, der seinen lockeren Schreibstil wunderbar ergänzt und schnell eine Verbindung zu den Figuren herstellt. Natürlich war es Balur, der grobe Echsenmann, der jedes Problem einfach totprügelt und einen Hang zu verschwurbelter Grammatik hat, der mein Herz im Sturm eroberte, aber auch die Dynamik zwischen Lette und Will faszinierte mich, weil sie ihr Abenteuer als charakterliche Gegensätze beginnen und sich mit Fortschreiten der Geschichte immer weiter aufeinander zu bewegen. Nur Quirk mochte ich nicht, da ich mich ständig über ihre idealistischen Ansichten ärgerte, deretwegen sie jeden Plan, den Will für ihre skurrile Bande ersinnt, kritisiert, ohne Alternativen vorzuschlagen. Meine Schwierigkeiten lagen allerdings nicht an Quirk, sondern enthüllten sich, sobald der Handlungsverlauf Form annahm. „Fool’s Gold“ ist zeitweise ziemlich zäh, weil zwischen den explosiven Vorhaben der Truppe viel zu wenig passiert. Die immer gleichen Unterhaltungen während ihrer Reisen durch Kondorra, dessen austauschbare, spärlich beschriebene Landschaft keinerlei Atmosphäre entstehen ließ, langweilten mich. Hätte Jon Hollins diese Gespräche wenigstens genutzt, um das Kondorra Tal nachvollziehbarer in seine Welt Avarra einzuarbeiten, hätten mich diese Spannungstiefs weniger angeödet, doch bedauerlicherweise verpasste er diese Chance. Daher blieben einige wichtige Fragen ungeklärt, zum Beispiel, wieso Kondorra das einzige Gebiet ist, das von Drachen beherrscht wird und warum es vom Rest von Avarra nahezu isoliert ist, was sich besonders in einem gravierenden Bildungsgefälle äußert. Gefühlt könnte das Tal hinter einer dicken Mauer liegen, so wenig Austausch findet offenbar statt. Angesichts der Gier der Drachen erschien mir das nicht plausibel. Mächtige, geflügelte Wesen, denen Gold das Liebste ist, ignorieren zusätzliche Einnahmequellen und beschränken sich freiwillig auf wenige Handelsbeziehungen? Das kann ich schwer glauben.

 

„Fool’s Gold“ war für mich eine merkwürdige Grauzonen-Lektüre: die einzelnen Elemente des Trilogieauftakts gefielen mir, mit ihrer Kombination konnte ich mich hingegen nicht recht anfreunden. Ich denke, dass Jon Hollins die Transitionsphasen seiner Geschichte beim Schreiben ebenso Probleme bereiteten wie mir beim Lesen. Es wirkte, als wüsste er nicht, wie er diesen Leerlauf effektiv nutzen sollte. Man spürt, dass Worldbuilding, wie er offen zugibt, für ihn eine neue Herausforderung ist, denn erfahrenen High Fantasy – Autor_innen gelingt es, Spannung unter anderem durch die geschickte Platzierung von Hintergrundinformationen aufrechtzuerhalten – übrigens eine Taktik, die in „Ocean’s Eleven“ ebenfalls angewendet wurde, weshalb „Fool’s Gold“ dem Vergleich mit dem Film meiner Ansicht nach nicht ganz standhält. Trotz dessen erkenne ich Hollins positive Absichten und werde der Fortsetzung „False Idols“ eine Chance geben. Einer Truppe, die nicht davor zurückschreckt, Drachen zu beklauen, steht sicher eine glänzende Zukunft bevor.

Source: wortmagieblog.wordpress.com/2019/11/05/jon-hollins-fools-gold
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review 2018-09-15 13:53
Time is an Invention: “Science of Self-Discipline - The Willpower, Mental Toughness, and Self-Control to Resist Temptation and Achieve Your Goal” by Peter Hollins
The Science of Self-Discipline: The Willpower, Mental Toughness, and Self-Control to Resist Temptation and Achieve Your Goals - Peter Hollins


“Motivation and self-discipline are nice to have. Motivation, however, is often emotional and temporary, while self-discipline can be exhausted. But having solid habits will deliver the same results with far less pain and suffering. Habits have been shown to take around 66 days to form, so all you need to do is commit to small actions (mini habits) for that amount of time.”


In “Science of Self-Discipline - The Willpower, Mental Toughness, and Self-Control to Resist Temptation and Achieve Your Goal” by Peter Hollins


People in this country, Portugal, - and maybe in others too, but I've not really lived elsewhere - work too hard, for too many hours, and retire (in general) too late. Too many of us have accepted the myth, or have had no choice but to accept it, that self-discipline and unremitting effort is good for ourselves, our families, the economy - but as so many of us work in jobs that actually don't matter very much, or at all, that can't be true. If no one worked in PR, or banking, or accountancy, the world would have a problem, but it wouldn't stop spinning on its axis.

 

 

If you're into stuff like this, you can read the full review.

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review 2017-07-20 20:16
ARC Review: Where I Need To Be (McKenna #3) by Jamie Hollins ~ Giveaway/Excerpt
Where I Need To Be (McKenna Series Book 3) - Jamie Hollins

 

Where I Need To Be

McKenna # 3
By: Jamie Hollins
Releasing July 18, 2017
Self-Published

 

Blurb


When heroin stole James Foley’s wife and destroyed his marriage, he poured all his energy into raising his young son and running his auto garage. There’s no room in his life for anything else until Megan McKenna walks into his shop. He finds it impossible to resist the sexy school teacher.

 

After an ugly divorce, Megan lost her home, her job, and a big chunk of her self-respect. With her posh lifestyle now a memory, she starts over by indulging in an unexpected fling with a hard-bodied mechanic.

 

What begins as something casual turns into something meaningful. But how can their relationship survive when it’s built on half-truths?

 

James and Megan soon discover that being honest with themselves is just as important as being honest with each other. Only then will their relationship fire on all cylinders.

 

 

BUY LINKS

 

   

 

 

 

This is my first time diving into the McKenna series and reading author Jamie Hollins. I usually don’t go for Contemporary reads unless it’s Romantic Suspense, but the blurb peeked my interest. I liked the idea of two adults, both divorced, with pasts and issues to deal with ending up coming together and finding strength, love, and a true partnership.

 

James. I loved him. He’s perfect yet not, has issues to deal with, always has grease on him, overworks himself, and is doing the best he can in raising his son with the help of his father. We see several different sides to him and so you can not help but fall in love with him. His dedication to his work and how he put his kid’s feelings above his own. Perfect. Sweet.

 

Megan. I found her to be smart and sweet, but also a little week and her issue of not confiding in her family about her divorce and dating James really upset me. She was doing great, turning her life around, found a job she loves, and a man who was exactly what she needed, but she disappointed me in making excuses and not ripping that banded off with her family.

 

The story was good and I liked it. I enjoyed the characters and found the romance to be sweet, adorable, and satisfying. I liked that they took their time getting to know each other and that they also communicated, where open, and upfront from the start. It made the romance and relationship seem so real.

 

The epilogue wrapped everything up marvelously and I loved seeing the whole family be together.

 

Where I Need To Be is a charming and heartfelt romance, with a few laugh out loud moments, and some hot sexy scenes. I had a delightful time and will be check out previous books in the series.

 

Rated: 4 Stars

 

*Disclaimer: I received a complimentary copy provided by Jamie Hollins via NetGalley with the sole purpose of an honest review. All thoughts, comments and ratings are my own.

 

Was this review helpful? If so, please consider liking it on Goodreads (Angela)!

 

 

Challenge(s): New To Me (Author/Series) | Pick Your Genre (Con) | New Release (2017)

 

 

 

 

 

Megan nibbled on her lower lip as she looked everywhere but at him. He desperately wanted to ask her what was bothering her, but he stopped himself. She wasn’t his. It was none of his business.

 

He needed to be straight with her.

 

“About Friday night…” He paused before deciding to begin a different way. “I need to be upfront with you and tell you that I’m not interested in a relationship. I’ve got a lot going on in my life with the shop and with my son. And a steady woman just doesn’t fit into my plans at the moment.”

 

She nodded but didn’t say anything. Shit, if she broke into tears in his parking lot, he didn’t know what he would do.

 

“I like you, Megan. I sure as hell liked what happened on Friday, and I’d like to see you again. But beyond that, I can’t give you anything more.”

 

“So are you saying you’d like to date but not exclusively?”

 

Was that what he was saying? That he wanted to date her? 

 

“If by dating you mean periodically getting together and having sex, then sure, let’s go with that.” 

 

As soon as the words were out of his mouth, he wished he could take them back. He was being honest, but it had made him sound like a dick.

 

She looked skyward and smiled. “Thank God. That’s exactly what I was going to say.”

 

He frowned. “You were?”

 

“Yes!” She laughed. “What a relief. I had a lot fun with you. But jumping back into a relationship…I just can’t right now.”

 

“So we agree on this?” he asked incredulously. 

 

“Absolutely.”

 

Huh. Wasn’t that something? 

 

“Oh, but there is one thing I did want to add,” she said, grimacing slightly.

 

He knew there had to be a catch.

 

“If we’re…” She looked back toward the garage at the guys congregating around the open doors, pretending not to eavesdrop. “If we’re sleeping together, I’m not going to hold you to being exclusive, but I would hope you could extend the courtesy of letting me know if you meet someone else who you’d like to sleep with.”

 

He couldn’t help it, he let his chuckle slip. He wasn’t laughing at what she said. It was perfectly reasonable. He was laughing at the idea of wanting any other woman when he had Megan in his bed.

 

“That’s fair,” he replied. “And I’d expect the same courtesy from you.”

 

Smiling, she extended her hand. “Deal.” 

 

He frowned, taking her outstretched hand. Instead of shaking it, he lightly tugged her toward him. “Sweetheart, I’m not shaking your hand like we’re conducting some business deal.”

 

She blinked, her mouth falling open before she closed it quickly. Pulling her hand from his grasp, Megan clutched the strap of her purse. “Of course, I’m sorry. That was stupid.”

 

He smiled, taking a step closer and leaning in slightly. “Not stupid, and you have nothing to apologize for.” He watched as her eyes fell to his lips and he liked the way this woman thought. “Now tell me…when can I see you again?”

 

She swallowed before nibbling on her lower lip. It took everything he had not to reach up and pull her rose-colored lip down with his thumb. James knew all of his employees were watching. They’d stopped the pretense of being busy the moment he’d pulled her toward him.

 

“How about we do dinner this weekend?” he asked. “It’ll have to be late, after Cade goes to bed.”

 

She nodded slowly. “I’d like that.”

 

“Saturday around nine o’clock?”

 

Her clear blue eyes smiled as she nodded again. “It’s a date.”

 

“It’s a date,” he repeated. 

 

 

Jamie Hollins was born and raised in rural Northeast Ohio.  After graduate school, she embarked on a perilous career in Human Resources where she met plenty of real life characters.  When she’s not writing or chasing after her toddler, she enjoys reading and golfing.  Jamie lives in Pennsylvania with her husband, son, and their dog, Winston.

 

Author Links: WEBSITE | FACEBOOK | TWITTER | GOODREADS

 

 

 

$25 Amazon GC + signed copy of WHERE I NEED TO BE (US Only)

Follow the tour Here

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

 

 

Owner/Review and mind behind Angel’s Guilty Pleasures. However what I am not is a writer. I apologize now for the grammatical and punctuation errors I make, because I know I’m going to make them. I’m a mother, wife, dog owner, animal, and book lover. My favorite animals are horses. As for reading I love all things paranormal & urban fantasy. My favorite shifters are dragons!

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Source: angelsguiltypleasures.com/2017/07/arc-review-where-i-need-to-be-mckenna-3-by-jamie-hollins
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review 2017-06-27 00:00
Where I Need To Be (McKenna Series Book 3)
Where I Need To Be (McKenna Series Book 3) - Jamie Hollins She's more than just a pretty face. He's the strong silent type. In an instant Megan and James' world is rocked by betrayal? Are they strong enough to gather up the pieces and rebuild? To the outside world, Megan had the perfect life. In reality, it was anything but. Infidelity, heartache and hopelessness have sent her life into a tailspin. The last thing she needs is to open her heart to more pain. Will she ever be able to trust her emotions again?

James has endured his share of rain. Drugs broke his heart and stole his wife. Will the woman that seems all wrong for him, end up proving to be just right? Where I Need to Be proves that the bleakest moments can teach the most powerful lessons. Jamie Hollins gives courage to keep on fighting when all hope seems lost.
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text 2017-06-16 15:31
Reading progress update: I've read 85%.
Where I Need To Be (McKenna Series Book 3) - Jamie Hollins

It's good. I'm liking the characters. Like the story. The couple are taking time and if feels real.

 

My only issue is Megan hasn't told her family (parents) about her divorce, which is almost 9mo to a year done with. She also hasn't told them about James whom she has been seeing of and on 4mo and dating 2mo. Even with protection (which doesn't work 100%) they are now going to be parents and she hasn't told her parents about the grandkid either.

 

I'm a little disappointed in her making excuses and not ripping that banded off with her family. She's open and honest with James, but can't seam to update her family on her life. 

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