Ah! The ending was killer. You can't just end a book like that. I was going with five stars until it didn't resolve any conflict, it just sort of stopped.
No, just no. I have looked at the review for this book and I am just confused. This doesn't work, not at all. I like me an alpha-male as much as the next girl, but this dude-- Jesse-- isn't an alpha, he's a stalker.
This book has solidly put Samantha Young on my list of authors who can be counted onto tell interesting, well-written, love stories. Even though the billionaire-ingenue trope as been done TO DEATH in the aftermath of 50 Shades of Grey, it's still one that I love. I'm a total sucker and I just keep picking 'em up. 9 times out of 10 I get so annoyed with the stories that I want to throw my kindle across the room by the end of it. I've become more and more picky about the quality of the characters, the writing, and the overall believability of the story, especially in the billionaire romance genre. Young doesn't disappoint. She delivers a solid story here with two very interesting, readable characters.
Ugh! Started so strong and then just fell apart. Op about half way through there is no conflict, just a play-by-play of everything the characters are doing, eating and what they are wearing. Sorry, just couldn't keep going. It was a bummer too because Deklan and Ali were strong leads. Ali had an interesting and believable backstory. The first bit might have worked as a novella that could have ended after they got together.
Just felt like both men in this book were too perfect. Liz's memories of her deceased husband paint him as a saint: the perfect husband, great father, wonderful and supportive. Equally, her new love interest Ben seems to have no flaws. He is the perfect man: handsome, unattached, doting, patient, kind, loves kids. I realize the conflict here was Liz overcoming her grief but it just didn't work for me. There were also pages and pages of sap in between the action where Liz contemplates her grief. As a grief book, this just didn't work for me. As a love story I liked the idea, but the execution didn't work for me either. I appreciated what Higginson was trying to do with this story and I think that she does accurately portray the stages of grief and recovery, but it fell flat for me.
Gah! Best one so far. Can't get enough of Terrible and Chess and the stakes just keep getting higher and higher. I can't BELIEVE that the 6th book is just in the wind right now. I'll have to tide myself over with the little side novellas she's written. This was by far my favorite in the series, which was just brilliant, because now that Chess and Terrible are officially togehter, and Chess continues to be drug addict, as well as continues to improve her badass-witchery skills, it could have gone off the rails. I usually get bored with series if they start to get repetitive. This one had me filling the pages like mad. The mystery worked better for me than in previous books because it was all wrapped up in the drama and darkness that is Downside and Chess and Terrible's world.
Holy goodness! I put off reading this for YEARS. Big mistake. I think because I'm not that into Urban Fantasy anymore. This is a great series though and I'm sorry it took me so long to pick it up. It's reminiscent of Karen Moning's Darkfever series as far as a cool setting and kick-ass heroine. The world building is EXCELLENT as other reviewers have pointed out. I mean, it's really good. There aren't many authors that can hold a candle to the detail and depth that Kane gives us we even in just this first installment of the series. She does a great job of not info dumping, but making Downside feel really realistic. Others noted issues with the fact that Chess is a drug addict, but it didn't bother me. It's all part of the world and the of the whole anti-hero vibe here. Like so many things in the media today, the anti-hero is totally "in." (E.g. the popularity of things like Sons of Anarchy and Breaking Bad.) Chess is much less bad than any of the characters in those stories. She definitely has issues though and that makes her compelling to read about.
While I liked the freshness of this story, I found that it spent too much time on the "suspense" aspect of the story (I'm not a huge fan of the sub-genre). I liked the slow-burn between Kaifeng and Mingyu, but I found the investigation into the murder tedious towards the end, though pretty well done. Ms. Lin's writing style is very eloquent and engaging. I also liked that it was a Chinese historical, because the setting, characters and lifestyle were all very fresh to me. At about 60% I was done with the story. Had the story wrapped up then, I would have given it four stars, but I had lost interest by the very end, so 3.5 stars.
Though it be but little it is fierce, is a good description for this book. It isn't lengthy, it moves at a rapid pace and it doesn't provide flowery detail or tons of verbage. This story is short and to the point. Initially I wondered how much impact such a short book, with such forthright language, could have. I was wrong. The fast pace and the clear, but eloquent language enhances the story rather than detracts from it. This is a beautiful little book. All the more beautiful because it will appeal to readers of almost any age. I'm not usually a fan of non-fiction (though this is an fictionalized account of a true story), I usually struggle to get through any sort of non-fiction. This was great. It made me want to dig wells in Sudan. It made me want to research the Sudanese civil war. In short, it made me care about something that I would otherwise not have been exposed to.
I just did not love this. There was SO much OTHER stuff in this one. I guess this is a romance, but really there was more small-town, contemporary women's fiction. I really don't like women's fiction. There was way too much information about Sugar Beth's background, high school years, life etc. In fact, by the end of the book the reader basically knows everything there is not know about the whole town and everyone in it. That might be some people's cup of tea, but it isn't mine. It was a struggle to get through this one. I wanted to give up.
I really liked this one! The setup: broke woman comes back to a town that hates her and falls for a rich manm was the same idea as the SEP book I read next "Ain't She Sweet." I didn't like "Ain't She Sweet" because it was all about EVERYTHING except the romance. This on the other hand, was just the right mix of information about the town and the other people in it (including past couples from SEP books) and the romance. It probably didn't hurt that I found Gabe and all his tortured pain to be incredibly amazing. And amazingly, Rachel with her little son, didn't bother me. The kid wasn't a plot moppet, which was a great. (I had just finished another book with a complete plot moppet kid and I just don't understand the need for them). Rachel, her kid and the whole plot worked really well and the whole thing was sweet, readable, realistic and of course, had a lovely HEA.
This features the elements that SEP does so well, but it wasn't my favorite of hers. I didn't love the heroine, Annabell. I'm not sure why, she just didn't do it for me. I think it was the constant references to how UN-attractive she was in comparison to all the awful supermodeling-look-alikes she keeps having to set the Python up with. Also, he kind of sucks until the very end when he gets his act together. I mean, in most of SEP's books the hero will kind of suck until the end, when he realizes he's been a fool. I usually like that, but he just didn't work for me. I think the other issue was the this was toward the end of the Chicago series, so of course the other 5 couples that SEP has written about had to make cameos. I hate the cameo's in romances because they are always way too cutesy. Everything is always sunshine and rainbows flying out of people's butts, vomit. When cameo's happen in SEP books it sort of feels like her epilogue's intertwined with the narrative and I HATE her epilogues, just saccharine sweet and lacking in all the wit and humor of the meat of her books. Okay, enough complaining. SEP is my favorite contemporary author and nobody's perfect. This one is worth a read if you don't have anything else to read, but Simply Irresistible or some of the earlier Chicago books are more worth your time.
I feel like I got gyphed here because I thought I was getting a courtesan and a bow street runner story, but it turns out there was ALSO a mistaken identity plot and therefore I was really getting a country miss and a bow street runner. Sadly, that coupling just doesn't do it for me. I would have like the reformed courtesan a lot better.