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Kissing Books

Choose Your Player: Fluff or Fight

It’s Monday. It’s June. Black lives fail to matter. Again. Stonewall was a riot, started by QTPOC.

The show goes on.

News and Useful Links

RWA has announced their virtual conference, which will take place August 28-30. So far they’ve only announced their featured speakers but I look forward to seeing what else they pull together.

If you’ve never had the chance to attend a Shipwreck in person, now’s your chance to do it virtually. This time around? Dracula.

Have you read The Cactus? Reese Witherspoon has signed a deal to produce a film version with Netflix.

And Alisha Rai wrote a captivating article for OprahMag about writing romance as a single person.

Recs

In situations like the one in which we’re currently living, I find myself going in one of two directions. Either I want to read the gooiest of fluff, in which there is hardly any conflict, lots of communication, and several swoonworthy interactions; or I want to read about people with grand ideals and loud voices speaking for the unheard, and also falling in love and landing their happy ever after, whatever that may look like. So I thought I’d toss out some old favorites for those kinds of read. They are mostly books I’ve mentioned before, both here and on When In Romance.

Cover of Rafe by Rebekah WeatherspoonRafe: A Buff Male Nanny by Rebekah Weatherspoon (Fluffometer: 5)

Surgeon Sloan needs a new childcare professional, and she needs one now. Her precocious young twins are skilled at intimidating nannies, and she doesn’t have time to look after them. Rafe is an amazing nanny, and gets along well with the kids. And even better with Sloan. They decide to pursue a sexual relationship thanks to their sizzling chemistry, and things…go from there. There is a minor external conflict featuring Sloan’s ex, but it’s really just like a mug of tea in romance form.

If you like that one I would definitely recommend picking up Xeni: A Marriage of Inconvenience, but I will note that the fluffometer is lower thanks to a strong grief plot. Or TreasureI’ll always tell you to pick up Treasure in a moment of need.

Love By the Books by Té Russ (Fluffometer 4)

Featuring a love story between a literary agent and a bookseller, this was my first Té Russ experience. Their slow, easy romance develops naturally, and it’s a fun journey to go with them on. There is some conflict, but it resolves pretty easily.

cover of let it shine by alyssa coleLet it Shine by Alyssa Cole (Fluffometer 3)

For a book set around the Freedom Riders and the Civil Rights Movement, this book is surprisingly fluffy. Alyssa Cole knows how to establish characters and setting in a way that you are rooting for Soph immediately, and you understand her need to make her voice heard. And the support she receives from Ivan, who has his own reasons for joining the fight for justice, feels right as the novella progresses. There’s a lot of serious stuff, but there’s a great counterbalance of sweetness, too.

And if you like this one, definitely check out Let Us Dream, which is set during the suffragist movement. That one is more a 2 on the floffometer.

Dreamers by Adriana Herrera (Fluffometer -6)

I have a shelf on Goodreads called “Goddammit America.” All four of the Dreamer books are on that shelf. I actually haven’t been able to bring myself to finish the third one, American Love Story, which centers a relationship between a vocal Black activist and the District Attorney that he has the hots for. There is police-related activity that hits harder than the racism in the other two books, so read with care.

The Truth Duet by Tasha L. Harrison (Fluffometer -12)

If you can handle reading a cop hero, Tasha L. Harrison does an amazing job crafting the nature of such a relationship between two Black people in today’s society. It is a story told across two books, rather than a standalone first novel and its sequel. The relationship between Ava, a photographer, and Levi, a police officer, is very strongly developed, but there is heavy depiction of both racism and police violence. So as I’ve said before, read with care.

The Loyal League by Alyssa Cole (Fluffometer -15)

I know, I’ve already talked about Alyssa Cole, but if you really want to read some angsty, violent stuff featuring amazing romances and people who will tear your heart out, these aren’t books to miss. Spies for the Union using their best skills to take out the Confederacy might be the thing to pick up as we support those who do their best to take out their counterparts in the present day.

The majority of these books are relatively inexpensive in ebook format, so I would consider these my deal recommendations for Monday as well.


I’ve landed in the space where I don’t want to read anything about people of Earth at all, so I’ve started reading Conquest by Celeste Hart. There are elements of the worldbuilding that are reminiscent of modern technology, but there are also dragons. So yeah, I’m all about dragons right now.

Have you been able to read? If you can, what are you reading this week?

As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at wheninromance@bookriot.com if you’ve got feedback, bookrecs, or just want to say hi!