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Search tags: tbr-read-down-march-2015
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review 2015-03-26 16:19
What Happened at Midnight - Courtney Milan

Summary:

When John Mason discovers that his fiancée's father has embezzled thousands of pounds from their mutual business, he's furious. When his betrothed, Miss Mary Chartley, flees, taking the money and all the evidence with her, he's outraged. He plans to bring the woman he once loved to account--and he’ll shed no tears when he does.

But when he finds Mary, she's not living a life of luxury. Instead, she's serving as a companion in exchange for a pittance. The more he attempts to untangle the truth, the more he remembers why he first loved Mary...and how much he wishes he could do so again.

What Happened at Midnight was previously published in the anthology Midnight Scandals. It is a novella of about 35,000 words.

 

Review:

This novella (about 250 pages) felt like a fully fleshed out story and I could not put it down. It took me about four hours to knock this one out. The h/H, Marry and John were so wonderful both as individuals and as a couple. And the plot was engrossing without being overly complicated. (virtual) Keeper shelf material. My only issue is that nothing "happened at midnight" - the clandestine meetings between Marry and John happened at 10pm and lasted about 30-45 minutes. 5 stars.

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review 2015-03-25 17:08
The Lady Always Wins - Courtney Milan

Summary:

Railway financier Simon Davenant has waited seven years for a second chance with his childhood sweetheart and best friend. He's not about to let his impending financial ruin destroy the opportunity.

This time, he'll do anything he can to secure her hand in marriage--even if it means losing her heart for good.

The Lady Always Wins is a short story of 18,500 words (about 60 print pages). It was previously published in the anthology "Three Weddings and a Murder."

 

Review:

This was a Courtney Milan book, ergo I had higher than usual standards going into this book. Unfortunately, a douchebag hero brought this book down a star. I really loved Ginny (the heroine), especially as she was a widow so I didn't have to deal with "omg! her purity must be intact no matter what!" motivation. Ginny was also whip-smart and funny. She could do so much better than Simon. But the story and the writing also made me root for them as a couple despite my dislike of the hero. Ms. Milan threw down some tasty, chewy bits about class and poverty that was central to the internal conflict between Ginny and Simon. 3 solid stars, but maybe more hardcore Milan fans would rate it higher.

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review 2015-03-24 22:38
All's Fair in Love and Seduction (The Elusive Lords, #2.5) - Beverley Kendall

Summary:

She hopes to gain his affections

For Miss Elizabeth Smith, sharing her first kiss with the charming Lord Derek Creswell is nothing short of a dream come true...that is, until she is spotted by one of the most influential gossips of the ton. With scandal nipping at her heels, to avoid total social ruin, Elizabeth must present a fiancé by the end of the Season. But when the viscount proves reluctant, Elizabeth is forced to employ a seduction of a different sort...

He is determined to ruin her

Viscount Derek Creswell believes Elizabeth set out to trap him into marriage. After all, her sister attempted the very same thing with his brother six years before. Now the delectable Miss Smith expects a betrothal and a ring, while Derek finds her ruination infinitely more appealing...

But as Derek sets out to seduce only her body, Elizabeth is intent on claiming his jaded heart.

 

Review:

TSTL heroine has held onto a teenage infatuation/obsession with the older brother of the guy who ruined her older sister. Heroine does stupid shit that makes her look conniving in the hopes of trapping said hero into marriage. She isn't conniving, just stupid and a liar. The author thinks that a lot of overly purple prose filled sexy times will somehow equate with a real love and HEA in the readers' minds. I think not. There is so much lying and game playing that when the couple do the "I love you" exchange, I don't buy any of it.

 

This book also has a prologue and three chapter excerpt of the next book. More lies (this time about a secret love child!) and more game playing. Luckily, the hero was smarter than the last hero and saw by looking at the child and the child's age that it was his son. Hero confronted heroine about her lies. I felt that I had read more than enough from this author to avoid her works in the future. 0 stars for everything I read.

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review 2015-03-23 13:04
Harlequin's More Than Words Series 2015 (Part V)
A Wing & A Prayer (Harlequin More Than Words) - Andrea Laurence

Name/Charity: Ann McGee/Miracle Flights for Kids

Website: www.MiracleFlights.org

 

Review:

This is my last More Than Words story for 2015; sadly, the year ends on a bad note. This book is painful to read (and not about the sick kid, Zack), socially awkward, but it is also filled with unlikeable characters, except Zack. Zack shows up as either 1) sick and in pain or 2) seen-but-not-heard background filler so that the MCs Jo (his mom, the "heroine") and Dylan (the "hero") can make out and do some heavy petting. Jo is just a pathetic character - no one around to help her with a sick kid other than the hero (not a friend, colleague, or family in sight even though she has lived on the island since Zack was born and is a teacher at the school), her ex-husband couldn't deal with Zack's cancer so he bailed on both of them and she is still bitter, she has no self-esteem, she needs Dylan to tell her to eat a meal so she can have the energy to take care of Zack, and she is just weak. I am tired of the isolated character device so that the heroine is forced to depend on the hero and the hero only to save the day. And Dylan is the type of guy who wants to fix everything and has a plan in place long before he talks it over with the heroine. Not necessarily an alpha-hole, just demanding. .5 star.

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review 2015-03-20 01:00
The Fat Cat (a Cattitude short story) - Edie Ramer

Cute short story about a witch fighting off a vampire in order to save her friend and six other women. Not much to say since the book was about 34 pages; it was originally published in an anthology to raise money for Breast Cancer charity.

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