Saturday, December 31, 2022

BLOG TOUR: The Lipstick Bureau by Michelle Gable

 


About the Book



Inspired by one of the OSS’s few female operatives, Barbara Lauwers, a WWII novel set at OSS’s Morale Office in Rome, which was responsible for creating black propaganda and distributing it behind enemy lines. From the New York Times bestselling author of The Bookseller's Secret.


Inspired by a real-life female spy, a WWII-set novel about a woman challenging convention and boundaries to help win a war, no matter the cost.


“A gripping, fascinating read.” —Kelly Rimmer, New York Times bestselling author of The Warsaw Orphan


1944, Rome. Newlywed Niki Novotná is recruited by a new American spy agency to establish a secret branch in Italy's capital. One of the OSS's few female operatives abroad and multilingual, she's tasked with crafting fake stories and distributing propaganda to lower the morale of enemy soldiers.


Despite limited resources, Niki and a scrappy team of artists, forgers and others—now nicknamed The Lipstick Bureau—find success, forming a bond amid the cobblestoned streets and storied villas of the newly liberated city. But her work is also a way to escape devastating truths about the family she left behind in Czechoslovakia and a future with her controlling American husband.


As the war drags on and the pressure intensifies, Niki begins to question the rules she's been instructed to follow, and a colleague unexpectedly captures her heart. But one step out of line, one mistake, could mean life or death…

Excerpt

Excerpted from The Lipstick Bureau by Michelle Gable Bilski. Copyright © 2022 by Michelle Gable Bilski. Published by Graydon House Books.


NIKI

May 1989

Washington, DC

Niki’s stomach flip-flops, and there’s a wild fluttering in her chest. You’re fine, she tells herself. In this buzzing, glittering room of some three hundred, she’s unlikely to encounter anyone she knows. Not that she’d recognize them if she did. It’s been almost forty-five years. 

“Jeez, what a turnout,” her daughter, Andrea, says as Niki takes several short inhales, trying to wrangle her breath. “Did you know this many people would show up?” 

“I had no idea what to expect,” Niki answers, and this much is true. When the invitation arrived three months ago, she’d almost pitched it straight into the trash.

You are invited

to a Black-Tie Dinner

Honoring

The Ladies of the O.S.S.

The ladies of the OSS. A deceptively quaint title, like a neighborhood bridge club, or a collection of wives whose given names are not important.

“You should go,” Niki’s husband had said when she showed him the thick, ecru cardstock with its ornate engraving. “Relive your war days.”

“Manfred,” Niki had replied sternly. “Nobody wants to relive those.”

Though he’d convinced Niki to accept the invitation, it hadn’t been the hardest sell. Manfred was ill—dying, in fact, of latestage lung cancer—and Niki figured the tick mark beside “yes” was merely a way to delay a no.

The week before the event, Manfred was weaker than ever, and Niki saw her chance to back out. “I’ll just skip it,” she’d said. “This is for the best. You’d be bored out of your skull, and no one I worked with will even be there!”

Zuska,” Manfred said, using her old pet name. As always, he’d known what his wife was up to. “I want you to go. Take Andrea. She could use a night out. It’d be like a holiday for her.”

“I don’t know…” Niki demurred. Their daughter did hate to cook, and no doubt longed for a break from her two extremely pert teenagers.

“You can’t refuse,” Manfred said. “What if this ends up qualifying as my dying wish?” It was a joke, but what could Niki possibly say to that?

Now she regrets having shown Manfred the invitation and is discomfited by the scene. Niki feels naked, exposed, as though she’s wearing a transparent blouse instead of a black sparkly top with double shoulder pads.

“Do you think you’ll spot anyone you know?” Andrea asks as they wend their way through the tables, scanning for number eighteen. Every Czech native considers eighteen an auspicious number, so maybe this is a positive sign.

“It’s unlikely,” Niki says. “The dinner is honoring women, and I mostly worked with men.” Most of whom are now dead, she does not add.

Soon enough, mother and daughter find their table, and exchange greetings with the two women already seated. Niki squints at their badges and notes they worked in different theaters of operation. Onstage is a podium, behind it a screen emblazoned with O.S.S. Beneath the letters is a gold spade encircled in black.

“What a beautiful outfit!” says one of their tablemates in a tight Texas twang.

“Thank you.” Niki blushes lightly, smoothing her billowy, bright green chiffon skirt.

“You’re the prettiest one in the place,” Andrea whispers as they sit.

“What a load of shit,” Niki spits back. In this room, it’s sequins and diamonds and fur for miles. She pats Andrea’s hand. “But thank you for the compliment.” And thank God for Manfred, who’d raised their girl to treat her mother so well.

Manfred. Niki feels a quake somewhere deep. She is losing him. She’s been losing him for a long time, and maybe this is the reason she came tonight. Those three letters on-screen call up—rather, exhume—a swarm of emotions, not all of them good. But they also offer a strange kind of hope, a reminder that Niki’s survived loss before, and this old body of hers has lived more than one life.


Review

The Lipstick BureauThe Lipstick Bureau by Michelle Gable
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This was fantastic!

I was provided an ARC via the publisher and Netgalley, all opinions are my own. Thank you to Graydon House Books for the opportunity to read this fascinating book! This was released on December, 27, 2022. Full disclosure I swapped between the arc and the final published version of the audiobook on hoopla. The audiobook is fabulous, the narrator did a wonderful job voices the different characters.

This historical fiction is inspired by real events and real people during WWII. The author does a nice job in the author's note explaining who was inspired by a real person, and who was fictional and what events she altered for the purposes of the book. I always appreciate when an author takes the time to do thorough research and point out that they took some liberties with the facts to make the plot work.

This follows Niki, a well educated woman originally from Czechoslovakia who has been recruited to a secret government agency. She wants to be a spy, but finds herself in a much different branch of the war machine. She is hoping to use her contacts within the government, namely her husband George, to find out information about her family who stayed behind in Czechoslovakia. While stationed in Rome with a rag-tag group, Niki is assigned to create "fake news" to lower the morale of the enemy. They don't have much in the way of resources, so they are tasked with getting the job done in creative ways. Niki bends and even breaks a few rules to achieve the mission. Her work and her life are full of secrets, some of which may ruin her.

This is told in an interesting style. It alternates between the 1940's during Niki's service with the OSS when she was stationed in Algiers and Rome, then it switches to 1989 during a dinner honoring the women of the OSS which Niki attends with her daughter. We also have another POV which is told from an Italian "working woman" named Paloma whom Niki befriends and employs during her time in Rome. Paloma is being interviewed during her chapters, but the reason is not revealed until much later in the book. Normally I'm not a fan of alternating timelines but it really works here. While at the dinner, Niki has to face secrets she's kept from her daughter for many years. Paloma's chapters reveal information that we otherwise wouldn't have known.

This is perfect for fans of Alice Quinn's The Alice Network. I loved it. I loved getting to know Niki and Will and the rest of their gang. Paloma's character was a nice addition to remind us that a war was still going on, and that the Allies did not solve everything instantly by defeating the Germans.

View all my reviews

About the Author





MICHELLE GABLE is the New York Times bestselling author of A Paris Apartment, I'll See You in Paris, The Book of Summer, and The Summer I Met Jack. She attended the College of William & Mary and spent twenty years working in finance before becoming a full-time writer. She grew up in San Diego and lives in Cardiff-by-the-Sea, California. Find her on Instagram, Twitter, or Pinterest, @mgablewriter.


SOCIAL LINKS:

Author website: https://michellegable.com/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/MGableWriter

IG: https://www.instagram.com/mgablewriter/


BUY LINKS:

Bookshop.org: https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-lipstick-bureau-a-novel-inspired-by-true-wwii-events-original-michelle-gable/17917455

Indiebound: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9781525811470 

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-lipstick-bureau-michelle-gable/1142529516 

Indigo: https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/the-lipstick-bureau-a-novel/9781525804977-item.html

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Lipstick-Bureau-Novel-Inspired-Events/dp/1525811479/



Author Q&A


Q: How did you learn about Barbara Lauwers? How did you come to discover this piece of history?


I don’t remember when or how I first heard about Barbara, she was just in my file of “interesting people to eventually write about” when it came time for book #6. Most likely, she was in a listicle along the lines of “fascinating women from history you don’t know about.” Whatever the case, she made my file because of her intriguing role in the OSS (precursor to the CIA) and the misinformation campaigns she participated in. The website https://www.psywarrior.com/ has photographs of many of their campaigns, and that sucked me right in. 


Q: Why do you believe there continues to be a fascination for writers exploring and writing WWII novels for readers? Why are readers so interested?


I think people are drawn to WWII stories because there are so many different countries and continents involved, and therefore thousands of angles. For Americans in particular, though we were involved in the war, it was not fought on our shores, so I think there’s a yearning to know what it was like to live with war on a more day-to-day basis. 100 million were deployed and there are millions of stories of ordinary people showing heroism when facing the worst. 


Q: Many women were part of the OSS. Did they experience sexism?


The sexism was outrageous! Many of the quotes I included in the book were actually said. Like Niki (the Barbara character) being told to sew her travel documents into her girdle, and the trainers telling the women not to mess this up. 


When I started out in corporate America in the late 90s, sexism was rampant enough that we more or less accepted it as part of our jobs. I can only imagine (and tried to do this in the book!) how much worse it was in the 40s, amidst the stress of war, when men were away from their families. 


Q: Did many women join these groups to escape difficult marriages?


It’s possible! Many husbands were sent to fight, so I think a lot of women wanted to contribute. Stateside, women were being asked to chip in and many unmarried women viewed it as a more interesting way to help versus working in a missile factory or something along those lines. 


Q: What specifically stood out in the time and place of Rome during WWII?


Rome is my favorite city so I was excited to set another book there! I also found it a fascinating time…after the city was liberated from the Nazis, and before the war was over. Also the fact Italy changed alliances partway through the war, and half the country was still under Axis control, heightened the tensions in the city, and people were extremely suspicious, all around. 


Q: What challenged you about writing THE LIPSTICK BUREAU?


I try very hard to keep as close to real facts as possible, building fiction around the truth. This can be very limiting, and so it’s always a challenge for me to remember I’m telling a story, not writing a biography. It’s a big reason I changed Barbara’s name–so I could go a little more “rogue.”


A smaller challenge was finding out what was happening in Niki’s hometown in Czechoslovakia during the war. As in the novel, no news was getting out. Also, I use a lot of first-hand accounts and government records in my research, and many of these were destroyed in the war. Not that I can read Czech, but I’ve definitely had records translated in the past. 


Q: Which character do you most relate to and why?


There was no character I related to outright, but I appreciated Niki’s gumption and how she wanted to prove herself on her own terms. 


Q: What are you hoping readers will come away with after they've read THE LIPSTICK BUREAU?


As always, I want people to get swept up in the story but also learn something new along the way. 

Q: What research did you do to bring the history to life in this fiction?

Anything I could get my hands on. Several OSS women wrote memoirs, and I read these, along with interviews, biographies of the major OSS players, and thousands of internal memos and documents (some of which are included in the novel), including all of Allen Dulles’s wartime intelligence reports (this was pretty boring!) I read the Stars & Stripes newspapers published during this time (fun fact: my dad wrote for Stars & Stripes in Vietnam), among other things. My favorite was a biography of Saul Steinberg (the inspiration for Ezra) by Deirdre Bair.   

Q: How do you think this conversation into the use of misinformation plays in today's politics?

In real life as in the novel, the OSS used Hitler’s own rules for propaganda/misinformation when creating theirs. There were three key strategies: 1) the disinformation must be easy to comprehend (not too highbrow), 2) it must be addressed to the masses (NOT the intellectuals), and 3) it should hit on emotions, not logic or fact. These are very effective strategies, as we’ve seen, and it’s been reported that Trump has also specifically followed Hitler’s rulebook for spreading disinformation. The OSS folks were the “good guys” and would say they were doing this for a greater purpose (e.g. ending the war), and the ends justify the means. And maybe it does, but perhaps Trump believes the same thing? 

Q: What are you working on next?

A book set in the 1960s Jet Set, about a failed San Francisco debutante who becomes assistant to beloved society photographer Slim Aarons as a way to social climb her way to a rich husband, but is instead drawn into the complicated inner circle of young Palm Beach socialites, and to the star at its center, heiress and rising fashion designer Lilly Pulitzer.

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Review: Mayatte's Catharsis : A Feathered Serpent Reborn

Mayatte's Catharsis : A Feathered Serpent Reborn Mayatte's Catharsis : A Feathered Serpent Reborn by Jack E Mohr
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I was provided an ARC of this book via the author, all opinions are my own.

This is a short fantasy novella that takes place on a mystical island that is hidden from the present day world by the will of Mayatte. Mayatte is a an entity that the inhabitants of the island worship and in turn she protects those under her care. Our main character Naña is young and training to be a full fledged member of society in her village and has not gone through all of the trials of her people but she has full faith in Mayatte. This comes into play when 3 outsiders show up on the island, which is normally hidden from the sight of those not in service to Mayatte. Naña quickly notices that they are in need of help and trusts that Mayatte has a plan for all of them. This leads to a very interesting adventure that almost feels like it might be a dream. As she tries to save the men, she must also save her home from those that would destroy it for profit. She must trust in Mayette to guide her to do what is right to save her home and her people.

Because this is only around 90 pages we don't get the full background and mythology that we would have gotten in a full length novel, and because I'm a huge fan of that type of stuff I would have liked more of that. Given that this is a shorter story, we get great world building and only a glimpse of the culture and belief system of Naña and her people. That left me with some questions and confusing moments but it wasn't enough to take me out of the story. The author does a wonderful job describing the islands and the creatures we encounter along Naña's journey.

If you are looking for a unique, fast paced fantasy that you can read in a sitting or two go check this out. I enjoyed the almost poetic writing style and the journey we go on with Zeke and Naña to explore both the good and bad of humanity.

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Blog Tour: Drama King by Penny Reid

 


She’s his bodyguard. Nothing more. 

Until it starts to snow.

Drama King, an all-new swoony, hilarious, opposites attract standalone holiday romp from New York Times bestselling author Penny Reid, is now available!

Stuck with her off-limits, taciturn, hunky movie star client during a sudden snowstorm on Christmas Eve, an extremely capable and highly professional bodyguard must keep him alive and warm without letting the tension building between them get too hot.

Bathsheba (Beth) Ryan can’t thank her best friend enough for helping her land the job of her dreams. After being relegated to second-string security for politicians in DC, being hired as an undercover personal security specialist by a giant Hollywood studio is exactly the kind of action she’s always wanted.

Until she meets her first assignment.

Cyrus Malcom can’t thank his agent enough for arranging a blind date with seemingly the woman of his dreams. After spending the past several years playing all the parts and climbing all the ladders, the lonely mega movie star finds himself actually enjoying a night on the town for the first time in ages when he meets the gorgeous, funny, and genuine Ryaine O’Rourke.

Until she shows up at his studio meeting the next day with a completely different name.

A world-wide press tour and too many late-night parties later, Beth simply needs to get through a short, one-day visit during the Christmas holiday, and then she’ll be free of Cyrus Malcom’s confusing hot looks and cold shoulders for good.

But just as they leave the airport, it starts to snow . . .

‘Drama King’ is the second book in the Three Kings Series, is a full-length, contemporary romantic comedy, and can be read as a complete standalone.

Grab your copy today!

Amazon: http://bit.ly/3EawFw1
Amazon Worldwide: https://mybook.to/dramaking
Apple Books: http://bit.ly/3TIhWy5
Nook: http://bit.ly/3EgK2uD
Kobo: http://bit.ly/3AkdRJz
Google Play: http://bit.ly/3tyUybt
Smashwords: http://bit.ly/3GiKkDX

Keep reading for a look inside Drama King!

 

“Do you want to listen to music?” I asked softly. “Or talk radio?”

“No, thank you,” he said shortly, shifting in his seat again while he kept on staring and frowning out the window. “You’ll need to take a right when you get to Old Whiskey Road.”

“You don’t want to go through downtown Alenbach?”

“No. I’ve seen it before.” His response was uncharacteristically irritable.

Fighting a bout of nerves, I considered my next question, or whether I should ask a question.

One popped in my head and I wondered if it was too personal. But you know what? I decided, to heck with it. I wouldn’t see Cyrus again after today, not in any meaningful way. If he clammed up, so be it. I had nothing to lose.

I waited another mile or so, then asked, “Do you miss it?”

—at the exact same time he demanded, “Why did you pick me up?”

Stiffening at the hostility in his tone, I redoubled my efforts to focus on the road and responded calmly, “I was already here and the studio asked.”

I got the sense he was waiting for me to continue. When I didn’t, he asked, “That’s it? There’s no other reason?”

Chewing on my bottom lip, my thoughts drifted to the watch in my pocket. “What other reason would there be?” I hedged, testing the wiper controls to see if it had a higher setting. It didn’t. I felt like we were creeping along at this point and we’d be lucky to make it before nightfall.

His eyes still on me, he grumbled something I missed, then asked, “Do I miss what?”

I considered saying, Nothing, forget it, but my reasoning for asking the question was still sound.

“Do you miss Texas? Do you miss being close to your momma and all these wide-open spaces? The culture out here?” I went back to chewing my bottom lip, feeling unaccountably nervous. Carefully, I slowed the car and turned onto Old Whiskey Road. This was the bypass road for Alenbach, which was still some thirty miles ahead.

The snow seemed to thicken while I waited for him to answer. We traveled another mile and I glanced at Cyrus, our eyes connecting for the first time since he’d arrived at the Austin airport.

I absorbed the shock of it, breathed through it. Meanwhile, he stared at me, some combination of puzzled and stunned.

Braving another quick look, I asked, “What’s wrong?”

“I believe that’s the first time you’ve asked me a personal question directly.”

Gripping the steering wheel tighter, I struggled with how to respond, and eventually blurted, “That can’t be true.”

“It is. What do you know about me?” The question sounded like an accusation. “We worked together for four months and not once—not once—did you make any effort to know me. Why is that?”

A hot, spiky feeling pressed uncomfortably outward against my skin. The truth was, I knew more than I wanted to admit. “I—I know plenty.”

“Really? How? Are you a mind reader? What am I thinking right now?”

My breath wanted to hitch. I wouldn’t let it. I tried to focus on my irritation, not this strange sense that I’d let him down.

“Go ahead,” he demanded. “Tell me what I’m thinking.”

Glancing at him, I saw a deeply furrowed brow, glinting narrowed eyes, mouth tugged down at the corners, jaw set. Cyrus looked more like his character Asmodeus than himself—a beautiful, surly, smoldering fallen angel instead of a happy-go-lucky sweetheart with too much energy and charisma.

“Well?” Cyrus pushed.

“Well, obviously you’re angry with me.”

“That’s right, I’m angry.”

“Fine. Be angry then!” I yelled.

“I don’t want to be angry with you!” he shouted back. “I want to be the opposite of—oh shit”—he braced his arm against the dash—“Stop!”

I saw the deer right before Cyrus did. It was huge. Despite my frazzled state of mind and his insistence that I do so, I did not stop. I didn’t swerve either, though every instinct screamed at me to yank the wheel to the right.

Did you know deer kill more people than any other animal? Snakes and sharks have nothing on Bambi. Some people think they’re cute, I blame Disney for that. They’re not cute, they’re dumb. If you’re unfortunate enough to see them in the road, stop only if it’s convenient and you spot them from a distance and it’s not a winter hellscape outside.

But since this one appeared like a serial killer in a snowy slasher flick, I didn’t stop. I pressed gently on the brakes, slowed, and braced for impact. It came with a forceful, bone-shaking boom. Airbags deployed, filling my face and vision. The jolt of it caused my foot to press harder on the brake—rookie mistake, I should’ve removed my foot—and that’s when the shit hit the fan.

Add DRAMA KING to Goodreads: http://bit.ly/3GmfERZ

 

 

 

Meet Penny Reid

Penny Reid is the New York TimesWall Street Journal, and USA Today bestselling author of the Winston Brothers and Knitting in the City series. She used to spend her days writing federal grant proposals as a biomedical researcher, but now she writes kissing books. Penny is an obsessive knitter and manages the #OwnVoices-focused mentorship incubator / publishing imprint, Smartypants Romance. She lives in Seattle Washington with her husband, three kids, and dog named Hazel.

 

Connect with Penny 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PennyReidWriter/

Amazon: http://amzn.to/2lakzsD

Twitter: @ReidRomance

Mailing List: http://pennyreid.ninja/newsletter/

Website: www.pennyreid.ninja

 

Friday, December 16, 2022

Review: Drama King by Penny Reid

Drama King Drama King by Penny Reid
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I received an ARC of this book via the author and Social Butteryfly PR, all opinions are my own.

This is the second book in the Three Kings series, however it reads as a complete standalone. This follows Cyrus, a movie star from a small town in Texas. He is set up on a blind date that sort of goes awry, but ends up sort of OK in the end. The blind date is supposed to be with another movie star, but it is actually with our leading lady, Beth who happens to be besties with said movie star and is also her doppelganger. Beth is in the personal security business and she fills in as a body double for her friend Ryaine, especially on blind dates. When she meets Cyrus things do no go according to plan, especially when she begins her new job as one of his security team the next day. They work through their misunderstanding, but they don't work through their undeniable attraction to one another and things get interesting.

I loved the character development between Cyrus and Beth. They are so opposite of one another yet so perfect together. She is super serious, always prepared, and professional, while he is carefree and spontaneous. They balance each other nicely. They have both been shaped by traumatic experiences in their childhoods, and their needs as adults are very much driven by those events. Beth has a very strict code that she follows to earn her keep, while Cyrus surrounds himself with fun and vibrant people to fill a void in his life. They both struggle to form real relationships with people, but now that they have found each other they are all tangled up in their feelings and stumble around each other.

This book is slow burn, but it is well worth the wait. We are rewarded with humorous moments throughout as well as thoughtful, caring moments where both characters do their best to be respectful of each others needs. I loved this and highly recommend it! I can't wait for the next book in the series!

View all my reviews

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Release Blitz: Drama King by Penny Reid

 

Snowed in with her off-limits celebrity client. What could go wrong?

Drama King, an all-new forced proximity, mistaken identity, romantic comedy from New York Times bestselling author Penny Reid, is now available!

Stuck with her off-limits, taciturn, hunky movie star client during a sudden snowstorm on Christmas Eve, an extremely capable and highly professional bodyguard must keep him alive and warm without letting the tension building between them get too hot.

Bathsheba (Beth) Ryan can’t thank her best friend enough for helping her land the job of her dreams. After being relegated to second-string security for politicians in DC, being hired as an undercover personal security specialist by a giant Hollywood studio is exactly the kind of action she’s always wanted.

Until she meets her first assignment.

Cyrus Malcom can’t thank his agent enough for arranging a blind date with seemingly the woman of his dreams. After spending the past several years playing all the parts and climbing all the ladders, the lonely mega movie star finds himself actually enjoying a night on the town for the first time in ages when he meets the gorgeous, funny, and genuine Ryaine O’Rourke.

Until she shows up at his studio meeting the next day with a completely different name.

A world-wide press tour and too many late-night parties later, Beth simply needs to get through a short, one-day visit during the Christmas holiday, and then she’ll be free of Cyrus Malcom’s confusing hot looks and cold shoulders for good.

But just as they leave the airport, it starts to snow . . .

‘Drama King’ is the second book in the Three Kings Series, is a full-length, contemporary romantic comedy, and can be read as a complete standalone.


Download some holiday cheer today!

Amazon Worldwide: https://mybook.to/dramaking

Add to Goodreads: http://bit.ly/3GmfERZ


Meet Penny Reid

Penny Reid is the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and USA Today bestselling author of the Winston Brothers and Knitting in the City series. She used to spend her days writing federal grant proposals as a biomedical researcher, but now she writes kissing books. Penny is an obsessive knitter and manages the #OwnVoices-focused mentorship incubator / publishing imprint, Smartypants Romance. She lives in Seattle Washington with her husband, three kids, and dog named Hazel.

Connect with Penny

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PennyReidWriter/

Amazon: http://amzn.to/2lakzsD

Twitter: @ReidRomance

Mailing List: http://pennyreid.ninja/newsletter/

Website: www.pennyreid.ninja

Sunday, December 11, 2022

Review: Kiss to Salvage by Anna B. Doe

Kiss to Salvage Kiss to Salvage by Anna B. Doe
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I was provided an ARC of this book via the author, all opinions are my own.

This is the second book in the two part duet featuring Jade and Prescott. You need to start with Kiss To Shatter as this picks up where that leaves off. You can read the duet without having read the other books in the series though. Though it isn't necessary, I would recommend reading Nixon and Yasmin's story in Kiss To Forget as Nixon is a big part of this story and the events of that book shapes Jade in many ways for the events in her own books.

This was pretty emotional and dealt with alot of the topics that I had issues with in the first book. We get all of the answers to those loose ends that were left open at the end of the first book and so much more. Jade suspects she has breast cancer, but she's been ignoring it because after watching her mother go through it she knows what it means for her life. She finally gets herself to the doctor and starts talking treatment options. Her road to recovery isn't easy or pretty, but I think the author did a good job humanizing how brutal treatment is for a cancer patient. Every single day is a fight, and we go through it with Jade on her good days and on her really bad ones. Prescott has his own demons to deal with as he has unresolved family trauma and a nagging knee injury as the football season comes to a close. He not only puts immense pressure on himself to perform on the field and in school and his parents put pressure on him to fill the shoes of someone he can never be. He and Jade try to make things work as the season comes to a close and Jade begins treatment, but they continually hurt each other as a protection mechanism. Fortunately for both of them they have a wonderful group of friends to support them through their darkest hours and challenge them when they are being unreasonable.

I thought the author did a really good job wrapping up the loose threads by the time we got to the end of this book. Jade and Prescott are not the same two people they were when we started this journey at the beginning of Kiss to Shatter. Their characters have come so far and grown so much. We got to see them both hit rock bottom before they were able to ask for the help they needed. We also got to see them achieve great things. There were quite a few angsty moments throughout, but they were necessary to move the character development along and I think that was done nicely to get Jade and Prescott to first fight their own needs then fight for each other.

As with the first book in the duet, I would definitely check trigger warnings for this one. You can find them on the author's page here. This book/duet has a lot going on, so I'd steer clear if you are triggered by these things.

Overall I really enjoyed this duet. It is on the longer side and it deals with some heavy subjects, but it is very engaging and doesn't feel long and has good pacing. I'm very much looking forward to Penny's book and what Anna has instore for the Blairwood crew in the future.

View all my reviews

Friday, December 9, 2022

2023 Netgalley and Edelweiss Reading Challenge

I recently found this challenge and it is perfect for me.  It is being hosted by Socrates Book Reviews.  I do most of my reviewing on Netgalley and occasionally get a few books on Edelweiss.  I have a decent backlog of books I'd like to get off my shelf in 2023.

I have about 50 books on my TBR right now, 20 or so of those are 2023 releases and another 10 of those are things I meant to get to in 2022.  I really need to chip away at the older books on my list that have been sitting there unread.

I'm going to shoot for the Gold Level and try to hit 50 books read and reviewed.  I did 65 in 2022 so I don't think that is out of reach.   

I'll link my reviews below as I post.  To keep myself accountable, I've posted my tentative TBR based on ARCs I've been approved for based on current release date.


January - Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed

  1. Unseelie by Ivelisse Houseman (1/3/23)
  2. The Stranded by Sarah Daniels (1/3/23)
  3. The Nightmare Man by J.H. Markert (1/10/23)
  4. Phaedra by Laura Shepperson (1/10/23)
  5. Swift the Storm, Fierce the Flame by Meg Long (1/17/23)
  6. Begin Again by Emma Lord (1/24/23)
  7. Hex You by PC and Kristin Cast (1/31/23)
  8. The Angel Maker by Alex North (2/28/23)
  9. Immortality: A Love Story by Dana Schwartz (2/28/23)
Completed this Month: 9    Completed this Year: 9        


February Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Wildblood by Lauren Blackwood (2/7/23)
  2. The Black Guy Dies First: Black Horror Cinema from Fodder to Oscar by Robin R. Means Coleman and Mark H. Harris  (2/7/23)
  3. The Cradle of Ice by James Rollins (2/7/23)
  4. Where Darkness Blooms by Andrea Hannah (2/21/23)
  5. The Writing Retreat (2/21/23)
  6. Weyward by Emelia Hart (3/7/23)
  7. The Black Queen  by Jumata Emill (1/31/23)
  8. Pandora by Susan Stokes-Chapman (1/17/23)
  9. Missing Clarissa by Ripley Jones (3/7/23)
Completed this Month:  9    Completed this Year: 18    


March Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Spells for Forgetting by Adrienne Young (9/27/22)
  2. The Revenge by Tijan (9/13/22)
  3. Clytemnestra by Constanza Casati (5/2/23)
  4. Silver Under Nightfall by Rin Chupeco (9/13/22)
  5. The Genius of Women by Janice Kaplan (2/18/20)
  6. The Familiar Dark by Amy Engel (3/31/20)
  7. Last Night by Karen Ellis (2/26/19)
  8. Please Join Us by Catherine McKenzie (8/23/22)
  9. Intruders by Ashley & Leslie Saunders (3/21/23)
  10. The Witch and the Vampire by Francesca Flores (3/21/23)
  11. God Themselves by Jae Nichelle
  12. You Wouldn't Dare by Samantha Markum (3/28/23)
  13. All the White Spaces by Ally Wilkes (3/22/22)
  14. Divine Rivals by Rebecca Ross (4/4/23)
  15. Blood Debts by Terry J. Benton-Walker (4/4/23)
Completed this Month: 15    Completed this Year: 33


April Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Delicious Monsters by Liselle Sambury (2/28/23)
  2. Wings Once Cursed and Bound by Piper J. Drake (4/11/23)
  3. Pieces of Me by Kate McLaughlin (4/18/23)
  4. Silver in the Bone by Alexandra Bracken (4/4/23)
Completed this Month:  4   Completed this Year:  37


May Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. A Crown of Ivy and Glass by Claire Legrand (5/9/23n delayed to 6/13/23)
  2. Fractal Noise by Christopher Paolini (5/16/23)
  3. Witch King by Martha Wells (5/30/23)
  4. Dragon Springs and Other Things by Raven Oak (6/1/23)
Completed this Month: 4    Completed this Year:     41


June Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Joy by Mike Bond (11/3/22)
  2. The Sweetheart List by Jill Shavis (6/13/23)
  3. The Helm of Midnight by Marina Lostetter (4/13/21)
  4. Identity by Nora Roberts (5/23/23)
  5. The Quiet Tennant by Clemence Michallon (6/20/23)
  6. What the Neighbors Saw by Melissa Adelman (6/20/23)
Completed this Month:  6   Completed this Year:     47


July Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Space Ships & Other Trips by Raven Oak  (7/1/23)
  2. The Prince and the Apocalypse by Kara McDowell (7/11/23)
  3. The Archive Undying by Emma Mieko Candon  (6/27/23)
  4. I Will Make You Pay by Teresa Driscoll (10/10/19)
  5. Boys in the Valley by Philip Fracassi (7/11/23)
  6. Ghosted by Amanda Quian (7/25/23)
  7. Abeni's Song by P. Djeli Clark (7/25/23)
Completed this Month: 7     Completed this Year:     54


August Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Bring Me Your Midnight by Rachel Griffin (8/1/23)
  2. Gone Tonight by Sara Pekkanen (8/1/23)
  3. Dark Corners by Megan Goldin (8/8/23)
  4. Whalefall by Daniel Kraus (8/8/23)
  5. The Education of Kendrick Perkins by Kendrick Perkins and Seth Rogoff (2/21/23)
  6. Looking Glass Sound by Catriona Ward
  7. The Love Plot by Samantha Young (8/29/23)
  8. On The Plus Side by Jenny L. Howe (12/26/23)
  9. Guardians of Dawn: Zhara by S. Jae-Jones (8/1/23)
Completed this Month: 9     Completed this Year:     63


September Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Fly with Me by Andie Burke (9/5/23)
  2. Someone Somewhere Maybe: Poems by Sophie Diener (9/26/23)
  3. Gender is Really Strange by Teddy G. Goetz (10/19/23)
  4. Perilous Times by Thomas D. Lee (5/23/23)
  5. The Forest Grimm by Kathryn Purdie (9/19/23)
  6. The Cage of Dark Hours by Marina Lostetter (2/14/23)
  7. Thank You for Sharing by Rachel Runya Katz (9/12/23)
  8. A Traitor in Whitehall by Julie Kelly (10/3/23)
Completed this Month:  8   Completed this Year:     71


October Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Best Laid Plans by Karla Sorensen (10/3/23)
  2. Bookshops & Bonedust by Travis Baldree (11/7/23)
  3. The Takedown by Carlie Walker (10/3/23)
  4. Night of the Witch by Sara Raasch and Beth Revis (10/3/23)
Completed this Month:    4    Completed this Year:    75


November Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Flower and Thorn by Rati Mehrotra (10/17/23)
  2. The Hunting Moon by Susan Dennard (11/7/23)
  3. Next-Door Nemesis by Alexa Martin (11/14/23)
  4. An Ordinary Violence by Adriana Chartrand (10/31/23)
  5. The Scarlet Alchemist by Kylie Lee Baker (10/3/23)
  6. Blood Sisters by Vanessa Lillie (10/31/23)
  7. Mister Lullaby by J.H. Markert (11/21/23)
  8. We are the Crisis by Cadwell Turnbull (11/7/23)
  9. Gwen & Art are Not in Love by Lex Croucher (11/28/23)
Completed this Month:    9     Completed this Year:     84


December  Link up to see what everyone else read and reviewed
  1. Yours for the Taking by Gabrielle Korn (12/5/23)
  2. Guy's Girl by Emma Noyes (10/24/23)
  3. My Darling Bride by Ilsa Madden-Mills (12/5/23)
  4. Starling House by Alix E. Harrow (10/3/23)
  5. Raiders of the Lost Heart by Jo Segura (12/5/23)
  6. Housebroke by Jaci Burton (12/12/23)
  7. All Hallows by Christopher Golden (1/24/23)
Completed this Month:    7     Completed this Year:   91