Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Ellen March - Love on the Menu - Review & Giveaway
About the Book
Jago Tanner is a loner. He works up a good hunger at his outdoors pursuits centre in Wales and looks upon each female conquest as just another meal. When he’s sated, he doesn’t go back for dessert. Until Riley shows up. A Londoner hired through an agency to assist him with activities, she isn’t at all what he asked for. For starters, with the name Riley, he expected a man. But Riley is all woman—the sexiest woman Jago has ever laid eyes on. Unfortunately she dresses like a trollop and curses like a sailor. Though ignorant about most outdoors pursuits, she’s a skilled horsewoman, able to calm even his nerviest stallion. And her lively and generous nature enchants his housekeeper Emily and his ancient friend, Tom.
In short, Jago’s new employee is a bundle of contradictions. Which is why, when Jago falls for her, he doesn’t trust his feelings. Riley seems unusually accident prone, and when her brother’s shady friends menace her, she plays the innocent. But how can anyone so self-sufficient and mouthy also be so trusting and naïve? And can a man with Jago’s volatile nature endure the jealousy a woman like Riley provokes just by strolling down the street?
My Review
There's something inherently sexy about staging a romance in a remote location.
The brooding loner on the moors who ignites with a little firecracker from the city. A girl who wanders onto his sprawling property caught in a "fine driving rain that seeped into your bones." The environment on Black Mountain is lonely, silent, scary. It's certainly not what she's used to, until she sets eyes on him. Then the barren landscape starts to look pretty darn appealing.
Even though her new boss is drool-worthy, Riley has a hard time adjusting to life in the Welsh countryside. As the new outdoor activities assistant, she has to muck out stalls and lead nature hikes, staggering over the beacons. For a Londoner who's afraid of heights, her new mountain home gives her more than a case of vertigo, especially when the only form of entertainment is having the old men down at the pub spike her drinks.
Jago loves the wilderness. It's where he thrives. He knows every aspect about the rugged terrain surrounding his homestead. He offers horseback riding excursions. He guides canoe trips. He takes groups up the mountain on foot. And none of that ever scares him, until a spiky-haired spitfire comes to live under his roof.
But Riley adjusts, making friends with Jago's untamable stallion, Farley. She has a knack with animals, slipping into a groove as she finds her way in this strange environment. Jago tries to help her, but usually only after she's already gotten in trouble. He treats her bleeding, blistered feet after a torturous trail walk. He looks after her when she's thrown from a horse. He makes sure his cook, Emily, feeds her ravenous appetite. But he always pulls back, when it comes to giving her more of himself.
Riley does everything she can to draw him out. She swims in his pool in her underwear. She drapes her bra across Farley's rump. She flirts with other men to make him jealous. But it's not until they spend some alone time together as a couple, that things start to heat up. They find out more about each other and what makes them tick. Nature brings them together, softening his edges and calming her nerves.
But ultimately, working as a team is what does it. They face everything from snake bites to sheep dips and come out stronger on the other side. He gets her to love nature, and she gets him to love life. Like a sunny day ending in a moonlit night, they learn how to compliment each other while learning to bring out the best in one another. A true romance, indeed.
***
Love on the Menu can be purchased at:
Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Smashwords
Prices/Formats: $4.95 ebook, $13.95 paperback
Pages: 244
Genre: Steamy Cowboy Romance
Release: February 14, 2015
Publisher: Fanny Press
ISBN: 9781603815680
Click to add to your Goodreads list.
About the Author
Ellen March and her husband live on top of a mountain in Wales, which is ideal in the summer but not so much in the winter months or when it rains. She has three grown children, one suicidal cat--it really does have nine lives--and three Alaskan Malamutes. One of her hobbies is showing and working them. Ellen's first love, however, is reading and writing. Since childhood, she has devoured every romance and fantasy she can get her hands on and enjoys acting out her own fantasies in print. Her body of work includes erotic romance, psychological thrillers, and supernatural fantasies. Fanny Press has published three of her erotic romances--Promises, His Girl Friday, and A Ghost of an Affair--and will be publishing more in 2015 and beyond.
Links to connect with Ellen:
Web Site
Goodreads
Blog Tour Site
About the Giveaway
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Sharon St. George - Due for Discard - Review & Giveaway
About the Book
Aimee Machado is thrilled to be starting her first job as a forensic librarian at the medical center in the town of Timbergate, north of Sacramento, California. Her ebullient mood is somewhat dampened by her recent breakup with her former live-in boyfriend, Nick Alexander. And then there's a little matter of murder: on Aimee's first day on the job, a body is found in a nearby Dumpster and soon identified as her supervisor's wife, Bonnie Beardsley.
Aimee's heartbreaker of a brother and best friend, Harry, just happens to be one of the last people to see Bonnie alive, but he is hardly the only suspect. Bonnie was notorious for her wild partying and man-stealing ways, and she has left a trail of broken hearts and bitterness. Aimee is determined to get her brother off the suspect list.
Aimee's snooping quickly makes her a target. Isolated on her grandparents' llama farm where she fled post-breakup, she realizes exactly how vulnerable she is. Three men have pledged to protect her: her brother Harry, her ex, Nick, and the dashing hospital administrator with a reputation for womanizing, Jared Quinn. But they can't be on the alert every minute, not when Aimee is so bent on cracking the case with or without their help.
Book 1 in a new mystery series featuring amateur sleuth Aimee Machado.
My Review
I love when a book's setting feels as alive as a supporting character.
The foothills of the Cascade Mountains are where this story takes place, and the rusticity of the locale is what charmed me from the get go. Aimee Machado lives in the converted bunkhouse above her grandparents' barn. Their ranch is populated with a pasture full of fuzzy llamas and wooly sheep. There's even a pet snake in a tank, a wise-cracking bird, and a temperamental cat. Aimee admits that she doesn't have many friends, but the animals she takes care of keep her company. They protect her in their own way, and she looks out for them, too. If someone spray paints a warning on the coat of one of the baby llamas, then the cockatiel, Bosco, will hold up a would-be intruder for her "at gunpoint" by mimicking a line from DIRTY HARRY.
It's a nice give and take for a girl looking to take down the bad guys.
But when a police sketch of a suspicious "Camo Man" is circulated by police as a possible murder suspect, Aimee feels a shiver run through her when she spots a similar figure, driving away from the ranch one day when she's coming home from work. The peace and beauty of the isolation surrounding her suddenly turns threatening. Soon thereafter, a dead turkey is left hanging in her apartment with a blood-splattered message warning her to back off.
However, it turns out that Aimee has a curiosity streak a mile wide, and when one of the doctors at the hospital is believed to have killed his wife, she tries to gumshoe her way to the truth. She goes into the more metropolitan section of their rural northern California town of Timbergate, visiting a museum and attending the ballet in order to get close to one of her suspects. She even flies to San Francisco in order to get a fingerprint analysis done on an acrylic toenail she thinks came from the victim, hoping to ID the killer.
The August heat is another potent player in this drama. The stifling temperatures leave Aimee vulnerable to attack. She's afraid to leave her windows open at night when she finds a rattlesnake on her porch. She remarks on the rancid odor coming from a nearby Dumpster, only to be chewed out by the security guard at the hospital where she works, until later it's revealed that that's where the dead body was stashed. Since it's summer, she gives in to the inclinations of her boss, Quinn, to have lunch with him at the park, despite one of the gossipy hospital volunteers already warning her that that's where he likes to get cozy with his female co-workers. Aimee even dresses a tad more provocatively in a miniskirt and high heels to go undercover, but only ends up feeling uncomfortable when the man she's targeting ends up invading her personal space.
The local economy is driven by outdoor recreation and medicine, Aimee's two great passions. She's not afraid to stay alone at the ranch when her grandparents go on a trip. She pitches right in and mucks out stalls and feeds the animals. She likes the idea of being able to fend for herself. Her days spent as a hospital librarian are marked with monotony and routine, yet she enjoys being able to help the doctors and nurses on staff uncover new research on their particular topics of interest as well as discovering how to best meet their needs by subscribing to the most pertinent online periodicals.
There's a nice mixture of down-home country ruggedness and jet-setting affluence. The doctor whose wife was killed is part of the crème de la crème of society full of fancy restaurants and expensive cars while Aimee is left coping with a intermittent swamp cooler that keeps breaking down. She finds herself immersed in a world that she doesn't quite understand when half of her suspects are either high profile television personalities or pampered trophy wives and the other half run the gamut from recovering meth addicts to tacky swindlers looking for their next easy mark.
St. George does a fine job of throwing in enough red herrings to keep the reader guessing. The husband. The best friends. The ex-wife. Some are a little stranger than others, taking a more out of the box approach to peopling the local vicinity with a startling array of deviant behavior of both the private and public variety. The reveal isn't a 'knock your socks off' surprise, but St. George threads the needle admirably, connecting all the dots.
Mystery fans will undoubtedly want to return to Highland Ranch in Coyote Creek for Aimee Machado's next case.
***
Due for Discard can be purchased at:
Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Smashwords
Prices/Formats: $4.95 ebook, $15.95 paperback
Pages: 340
Genre: Detective Murder Mystery
Release: March 1, 2015
Publisher: Camel Press
ISBN: 9781603812238
Click to add to your Goodreads list.
About the Author
Sharon St. George had the good fortune to spend an idyllic childhood in a small northern California town, riding horseback and camping with her family in the nearby mountains. One of her favorite pastimes was reading fiction, and a trip to the library was always an occasion of great joy. She’s traded horses for llamas, but she still treks to the high mountain lakes near her home—always with a mystery novel in her backpack. Sharon’s writing credits include three plays, several years writing advertising copy, a book on NASA’s space food project, and feature stories too numerous to count. She holds dual degrees in English and Theatre Arts, and occasionally acts in, or directs, one of her local community theater productions. Sharon is a member of Sisters in Crime and Mystery Writers of America, and she serves as program director for Writers Forum, a nonprofit organization for writers in northern California.
Links to connect with Sharon:
Web Site
Goodreads
Blog Tour Site
About the Giveaway
a Rafflecopter giveaway
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