Musings on Romance

Category: A reviews (Page 7 of 16)

Uncertain Magic by Laura Kinsale, narrated by Nicholas Boulton

uncertain magicWhy I read it:  This one is from my own audiobook library.  I listened over Christmas as a special gift to myself.

What it’s about: (from Goodreads)  As a lovely heiress, Roderica Delamore should be a prize catch–except for her shameful secret. She has the ability to hear the thoughts of those around her. Even her family and close friends can’t hide from her strange gift. Knowing that she can never marry, for no man could bear it, Roddy still longs hopelessly for a family of her own. Until she meets the man she’s been waiting for–the Earl of Iveragh, a mysterious Irish aristocrat whose thoughts are entirely closed to her.

The impoverished Devil Earl is damned in society by dark rumor and innuendo, and, for all she knows, he could be a liar, a rogue, or much, much worse. But Roddy must dance with him at midnight on All Hallows Eve, and entrust her life–and her heart–to a riveting stranger, called by his torment into the faerie mists to discover what she most fears about herself and her own magic.

What worked for me (and what didn’t):  I read this book ages ago and it was originally published in the 1980s.  I had fond memories of it.  Listening to it, the story didn’t feel dated – or, at least, it felt dated in the time it was set, which is late Georgian England and Ireland.  It’s quite an unusual book and different to Kinsale’s other romances in that it incorporates paranormal aspects.  Roddy Delamore can hear the thoughts of others and for her entire life, this has set her apart.  People see her as a freak and she feels she will have no life of her own as no husband will want her.  When she happens to meet Faelan Savigar, the Earl of Iveragh, he is the only person she’s ever come across who’s mind is closed to her.  It is pretty much that which decides her on him for her husband.  She is wealthy and he needs money to repair his broken down estate.  He is 35 and she is only 19 and very pretty and he can’t quite understand his good fortune to have attracted her but he is not one to look a gift horse in the mouth.
Continue reading

Kaetrin’s favourites of 2014 (part the second)

I read some other wonderful books this year but which were published before (in some cases, well before) 2014 and some which were published on audio for the first time in 2014.  I felt they deserved a mention.  In no particular order:

Mrs. Drew Plays Her Hand by Carla Kelly.  I read this one because my friend Merrian sent it to me and because I was on a plane and needed a non-ebook to read during take-off and landing.  I’ve been in a bit of a historical romance slump but this was a delightful surprise.  I was inspired to then buy a whole pile of other Carla Kelly books (all of which currently languish on my TBR – the vast majority of books I buy do that.  Don’t worry Carla Kelly books, you have some awesome company in there.)

MrsDrew

Continue reading

Kaetrin’s Favourites for 2014 (part the first)

I tweeted out my top 10 (or 12 depending on how you count them) books for the year on 17 December so those who follow me on Twitter will not be surprised by this list.  Here’s the version with pretty pictures.  It’s a list of books I liked. That’s it.

These are my favourite new releases for 2014.  It’s not a best of because I’m sure there are many wonderful books on my TBR of Doom or which haven’t made it that far even.  Besides, personal taste being what it is, what does “best” really mean anyway?

I’m not really ranking the top 10.  They were all wonderful and memorable and enjoyable and I loved them.  That said, perhaps the biggest surprise to me is that when I do a “favourite book of 2014. Go!” gut check, the 1st answer which pops into my head isn’t even a romance.  (Do I need to turn in my romance card?) So, I guess, *if pushed* I’d say the number one read was:

themartian

The Martian by Andy Weir.  It’s a cracker of a book.  If a reader has any interest in sci-fi or space travel books at all, I highly recommend it. The science is sound and the writing is engaging and funny and the tension is dialled right up there all the way to the end of the book.  You don’t have to be a rocket scientist (heh) to read or understand it (trust me on this) and did I mention that it’s funny? Continue reading

Think of England by KJ Charles

Think of EnglandWhy I read it:  I bought this one a while ago and dug it out of the TBR of Doom when Willaful was rhapsodising about how good it was.  (I have chronic FOMO – fear of missing out). Here review is up (I haven’t looked yet, but you can read it here).

What it’s about: (from Goodreads)  England, 1904. Two years ago, Captain Archie Curtis lost his friends, fingers, and future to a terrible military accident. Alone, purposeless and angry, Curtis is determined to discover if he and his comrades were the victims of fate, or of sabotage.

Curtis’s search takes him to an isolated, ultra-modern country house, where he meets and instantly clashes with fellow guest Daniel da Silva. Effete, decadent, foreign, and all-too-obviously queer, the sophisticated poet is everything the straightforward British officer fears and distrusts.

As events unfold, Curtis realizes that Daniel has his own secret intentions. And there’s something else they share—a mounting sexual tension that leaves Curtis reeling.

As the house party’s elegant facade cracks to reveal treachery, blackmail and murder, Curtis finds himself needing clever, dark-eyed Daniel as he has never needed a man before…

Trigger warning Racial and Anti-Semitic slurs are used by some of the characters in this book. My sense was the narrative wasn’t approving but YMMV. h/t to Willa, Sunita and Janine for reminding me about this.

What worked for me (and what didn’t):  What a delight this book was. I loved the Edwardian setting and the references to the (2nd) Boer War and the wonderful sense of place the story had. I enjoyed watching Archie begin to truly see Daniel and not just the facade he displays.   I liked how Archie, through Daniel, came to question things he’d not before even really thought about.  Archie is a stand up guy but he’s not a deep thinker.  It’s not until the second sexual encounter he has with Daniel that he even questions his sexuality.  He’s had a sort of “what happens at school/during the war, stays at school/on the field” kind of sexuality.

Because the story is told entirely from Archie’s point of view, we see his gradual awareness of Daniel, his sexuality and the people around him.  Daniel is cynical and sly and wears a mask (not a real mask) because it is easier to laugh at people before they laugh at you. It is easier to project an identity for people to laugh at or sneer at that protects the real you underneath the facade.  The barbs can’t damage as much if they are misdirected, yes?  Daniel is a character of wonderful depth and I enjoyed very much his slow reveal of character throughout the story. Continue reading

September Round Up

Monthly Mini Review

BlondeDateBlonde Date by Sarina Bowen – A I developed a little crush on Andy Buschnagel while reading Blonde Date. He’s so adorkable and kind and sweetly charming. I was a little worried Katie would tear him up because he strikes me as someone who’d be so devoted that he could be taken advantage of.  But perhaps I’m doing Andy a disservice there. Fortunately, in the course of their blind date (the story is almost all set in the course of one night), Katie comes to appreciate just what she has in Andy and my feeling is that she’s not planning to treat him badly. Katie is “blonde Katie” from The Year We Hid Away.  Her character isn’t terribly developed in that book, but by the end, there is a hint of there being more to her.  I liked that this novella didn’t try and recreate her character, but rather, it expanded the reader’s knowledge, and in that expansion was the nuance and the depth we didn’t see in the earlier book.

I loved that Katie unashamedly loves sex and I liked the way slut shaming was handled in the book.  It felt very authentic to me – because we all think things from time to time which are unflattering, let’s face it.  What made the difference was that Katie realised and called it.

Peeking through the boughs of the Christmas tree, I snuck a closer look. When the girl shifted her face from one side of him to the other, I recognized her. Debbie Dunn. She wore an unhealthy amount of eye makeup. And was staring up into Dash’s face, and practically rubbing her boobs on his oxford shirt.

My first thought was: Ew. My second was: Have I ever done that? And did it cause someone else to say ‘ew’? My third thought was: Do I care? Am I actually slut-shaming Debbie Dunn because she’s wearing gloppy mascara?

I also loved that Andy came up with creative ways to defend “his girl” without being all he-man and included ways for her to take back some of her own power.  It fit his personality so well but also demonstrated that he will stand up for those he cares for.

Continue reading

The Year We Hid Away by Sarina Bowen

TheYearWeHidAwayWhy I read it:  After I read The Year We Fell Down I had such a good book hangover, I bought this and the sequel/spin-off novella as well, and proceeded to glom.

What it’s about: (from Goodreads)  She’s hiding something big. He’s hiding someone small.

Scarlet Crowley’s life was torn apart the day father was arrested for unspeakable crimes. Now the shock has worn off, but not the horror.

It’s a safe bet that Scarlet is the only first year at Harkness College who had to sneak past TV news trucks parked on her front lawn just to leave town. But college will be Scarlet’s fresh start. Clutching a shiny new student ID — with a newly minted name on it — she leaves it all behind. Even if it means lying to the boy she’s falling for.

Bridger McCaulley is a varsity hockey star known for being a player both on and off the ice. But a sobering family crisis takes that all away. Protecting his sister means a precarious living arrangement and constant deception. The only bright spot in his week is the few stolen hours he spends with Scarlet.

The two form a tentative relationship based on the understanding that some things must always be held back. But when grim developments threaten them both, going it alone just won’t work anymore. And if they can’t learn to trust one another now, the families who let them down will take everything they’ve struggled to keep.

*Warning: Mild spoilers for The Year We Fell Down*

What worked for me (and what didn’t):  I didn’t think it would happen that I would like the second book better than the first, but it did.  Anecdotally, those who enjoyed the first book definitely enjoyed the second as well, although it seems like a 50/50 split as to which was the favourite.  The point may be moot anyway, because there’s not a huge difference between “really good” and “really really good”.   Both gave me the happy book sigh and both had me glued to the pages. Continue reading

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2025 Kaetrin’s Musings

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑

Verified by MonsterInsights