Categories
Kissing Books

Fighting By Day and…Well.

It’s Thursday. It’s been less than a week. How are you all doing? Hanging in there? Reading at all? I keep starting books and setting them aside, but I will finish the book I’m working on because it’s delightful and I won’t let my own brain keep me down.

Over on Book Riot

Book Riot is maintaining all of the stories coming through related to the bookworld and COVID-19 in a single story stream.

Romance tropes, get your romance tropes here.

Have you put all of these spring romances on your list?

I love a good reality TV romance. Have you read any of these?

And you could win a copy of Red, White & Royal Blue between now and April 30.

Deals

There are no sports right now except roomba curling and marble racing, but sports romances are forever. If you haven’t started reading Rachel Reid’s steamy and delicious hockey series, Game Changer is 1.99 right now. I accidentally skipped over this one and went straight to Heated Rivalry (which is 4.99, still a good deal), but the first Amazon review’s title is “fluffalufagus” so I’m very much down to check it out. I have to include a CW for a closeted protagonist who isn’t ready to bring his new relationship out into the open, though.

New Books!

Man, it’s a good week to be stuck inside. I have been working very hard to make sure I work my full day instead of sneaking in snatches of this week’s new releases.

American Sweethearts
Adriana Herrera

The fourth and final book in the Dreamer series, this is the first one that features a couple of different genders. Juan Pablo, or JuanPa, has loved Pris for a long time. About as long as they’ve been friends. But they’ve tried and failed at being in a relationship, and neither sees it happening for real. But when they end up together in paradise, the passion and potential are both there. There’s just the question of where they can go from there.

An Heiress to Remember
Maya Rodale

In a story older than Macy’s and Gimble’s, two Gilded-Age department store owners butt heads…and other things. Beatrice is doing her best to turn things around for her family’s bankrupt department store, looking to turn it into the Place To Go in Manhattan, but Wes will do anything to make his department store empire the best, including buy Beatrice’s family business in an act of vengeance. But when the two meet again after their possible love was ripped away from them at a young age, they find themselves fighting by day and…well. You know.

Others that should be on your radar:

Keeping Miss Kalila by Tara Frejas
Lord Holt Takes a Bride by Vivienne Lorret
Controlled Chaos by Christina C. Jones
Badger to the Bone by Shelly Laurenston
The Essence of Perfection by Nita Brooks
Bears Behaving Badly by MaryJanice Davidson (whole new series!)
Hostile Pursuit by Juno Rushdan (Her Harlequin debut!)
The Flapper’s Fake Fiance by Lauri Robinson (What?! Roaring twenties fake engagement story?!)
Fire in his Chaos by Ruby Dixon
Dear Enemy by Kristen Callihan
Been There Done That by Hope Ellis
Queen of Barrakesch by Delaney Diamond
Move Your Body by Stephanie Nicole Norris (Part of a new collection by a lot of awesome names called Carnivale Collection)

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!

Categories
Kissing Books

RWA Has A New President

I’ve been trying to come up with some kind of weekly greeting besides “Happy Monday” but I think many of you are probably happy to have the assurance that it is, in fact, Monday. So, yeah. Welcome to a new work week, or just a new week, if you’re doing other things.

News and Useful Links

If you’ve been as attached to your phone as I’ve been these past several days, you might have seen some conversation around book piracy on Twitter. Essentially, the Internet Archive, who does some legitimately good things with out of print and public domain books, has created a “National Emergency Library,” which allows people to borrow any of their 1.4 million copyrighted books without waitlists. This would be fine and dandy if they, like a real library, had purchased licenses for that kind of use, and the publishers had given permission. Also, if they’d offered real ebooks instead of scanned copies of library and/or personal copies of books. To make it worse, the site got a good number of publicity for it, including from NPR, and so people who have no idea how any of this works don’t even realize they’re pirating books. Several romance authors, including Beverly Jenkins, have been working to get their books removed, but it sounds like a long, arduous process. I hope this gets resolved soon and quickly.

On March 23, which was somehow both seven days and ten million years ago, RWA announced the winners of their special election. I haven’t heard much since about how the new president and board members will go about the business of turning the ship, but we’ve all been a little busy.

While it happened over the weekend, you might want to check out the available recordings from the VirtualJaneCon that Drunk Austen put on (lightning fast!). There are some super interesting topics if you’re into that sort of thing.

If your catharsis is through reading what your favorite fictional characters are doing right now, check out Meg Cabot’s Corona Princess Diaries on her blog.

Jen is offering personal book recommendations to people who donate to 57th Street Books. Many of us have bookstores that are special to us, so if we can support someone’s favorite, why not?

I recently got to do a guest rec in Lucy Eden’s newsletter, Notes From Paradise, and I gotta tell you I love what she does every month. I subscribe to a lot of author newsletters, and love how different they all are.

Do you follow WOC in Romance on Twitter? The weekly new release thread is worth it.

Deals

If you’re looking for some grumpy-sunshine neighbor action (and have already read Talia Hibbert’s A Girl Like Her—and if you haven’t, get a move on!) Laura Jardine’s Tempting Her Neighbor is free right now. The second book in the duology, Seducing His True Love, is 3.99, so you could get the whole series for as little as four dollars. This is an Entangled/Macmillan title, and I’ve heard that a lot of their first in series are free right now, but I haven’t been able to figure out the best way of finding them without going painstakingly through each book as a title search. Seriously, if anyone knows a way to search Amazon by publisher, I’d love to see it! The closest I’ve gotten is pricing all romance books low to high, but every single book that’s in KU is in the low end of the bracket so it’s pretty useless.

Recs!

Including a new Danielle Allen book last week reminded me that I hadn’t yet read a book of hers that has been regularly hitting my radar every couple of months since the summer of 2018 when it came out. The cover was definitely the talk of the town around its release, and every so often someone mentions the content. And now, I’ve finally picked it up.

Sweatpants Season
Danielle Allen

Akila is the dictionary model for Competent. She’s a skilled writer with a double degree in creative writing and journalism, and girl can turn a phrase. Her name is out there and she’s set to get her dream job at a magazine run by her idol. But she hasn’t dated in months, and part of it is the misogyny inherent in dating culture as seen in the very popular podcast featuring a group of men who call themselves The Lost Boys. When she meets English teacher Carlos in the photography workshop they’ve both joined in order to take their work to the next level, he’s basically perfect—until she discovers that he’s a member of said Lost Boys. Her life is further upended when she and Carlos end up working on a special project…now if only she can think of something besides what he looks like wearing sweatpants.

I’m going to say explicitly that I’m only partway through this book and while I’m absolutely loving Akila and the writing, I have a feeling I know where this is going (and read a few reviews to confirm). Because of her feelings on how The Lost Boys objectify women and give blanket permission for other men to do the same, she is going to do something regarding “sweatpants season” as a commentary on toxic masculinity and the male gaze. It’s gonna be serious, and probably cause some top-tier conflict between the protagonists. So if that’s not your jam, hold off on this one for a while.

Otherwise, I’ve been reading a lot of what’s called “Fandom YA” because it’s got that level of feel-good familiarity that we all could use right now. There’s something about being surrounded by fake dorks who you’d be following around in awe because they’re so much more comfortable in their fandoms than you were at that age. But I’d love to read more in adult romance that hits the same notes, something like Cathy Yardley’s Fandom Hearts series (One True Pairing is my ultimate fandom/fake relationship/found family romance). So if you have recommendations, send them my way!

You can do that by finding me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or sending me an email at wheninromance@bookriot.com. Feel free to get in touch if you’ve got feedback, bookrecs, or just want to say hi!

Categories
Kissing Books

Harlequin Ebooks Are On Sale

Happy Thursday, folks. Since I’m writing this on Tuesday, I’m hoping we haven’t already fallen into all out revolution by now.

Over on Book Riot

Book Riot is maintaining all of the stories coming through related to the book world and COVID-19 in a single story stream.

Listen to some birds and Trisha and me talking about the Ripped Bodice diversity report, and also the Netflix adaptation of Virgin River.

I didn’t take this quiz multiple times because I couldn’t decide between the great indie romances it offered. Not at all.

Have you checked out Scribd? It’s been a few years since I gave up my membership, but they had hella romances. And you can try it out without all the usual hoops and loopholes of a normal free trial.

And speaking of free things, LibraryThing is now free to use with an unlimited number of books.

Deals

Harlequin is having a 50 percent off sale of their March ebooks, so if you’ve been thinking about getting some books, now’s your chance! Try out a Harlequin Desire like Reese Ryan’s Secret Heir Seduction, or something from a line you might not usually try, like Medical Romances or Love Inspired. Check out everything that’s part of the sale.

New Books!

Thursday also means we talk about new books, and this time I’ve even, well, started? A couple of them.

Grown-Up Pose
Sonya Lalli

Anu is in a time of exploration. She’s almost divorced, has a new boyfriend, and is ready to take the time to try new things and explore what her life can be outside of being married to the first boy she kissed. She’s got her friends and family, who are both supportive and overbearing in their own ways, and is working out what she wants instead of what they want for her. And then there’s her relationship with her husband, Neil.

This book leans a little more into contemporary fiction than romance, but it’s definitely something romance readers might enjoy picking up.

Others that are out this week:

Fool in Love by Danielle Allen

The Honey-Don’t List by Christina Lauren (The complete claustrophobia of this situation will feel like a total alternate reality with everything going on, but it might also be a relief).

Gaming Grace by Piper J. Drake

Beguiling Benjamin by Robin Covington

Tenderness by Xan West

If I Never Met You by Mhairi McFarlane

All The Lines to Cross by Ashish Rastogi

The Sinner by JR Ward (BDB Book eighteen how is that even possible?!)

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!

Categories
Kissing Books

Pets As Romance Covers Are What We Need Right Now

Well. It’s a Monday, which means Kissing Books. That’s all I can really say about it.

News and Useful Links

It’s been a relatively quiet week, but there are a few things of note to bring us a little joy and/or to make us think about things.

Earlier this month, Corey wrote about their favorite romances with Jewish rep.

If you’ve ever read a romance novel and thought “no real man could ever be that clueless” then have I got news for you. And while I read this whole thing with hearts in my eyes, there are definitely some good conversations that have come out of it:

Romance novel couples as songs from Crazy Ex Girlfriend? Yes, please!

Or if you prefer, pets as romance covers!

If you don’t subscribe to Alyssa Cole’s Girls With Glasses newsletter? Well, you should. Also, Capybaras.

Adriana Herrera’s coming out with some telenovela-style romances and I’m here for it.

And there are going to be more Bromance Book Club books.

Also, to bring some color into your lives, how about some covers? Alexa Martin shared hers for her upcoming fourth book, Snapped, while Reese Ryan shared hers for the fourth book in the Bourbon Brothers series, Reunion of Rivals

Do you subscribe to (one of) the other Kissing Books, Carly Lane’s weekly newsletter? Check out this week’s, and join in on the fun!

Deals

For the next six days (until 3/29) Piper Vaughn has made their self-pub works 99 cents each! If you only know them from the hockey series they’re currently writing with Avon Gale for Carina, you’ve got lots of fun to look forward to. You could try Permanent Ink, which features an age gap and tattoos, or Bookmarked, which has a bookseller protagonist. They’ve written mermaids and musicians, kink and no kink. There’s lots to choose from; try one or two out.

Recs!

This past weekend was a special Social Distancing 24in48 Readathon, and while I did not hit 24 hours because I believe in sleep (and you know, my phone was right there), I made it through quite a few books, even a couple that weren’t romance. (I missed reading comics!) But after starting out with a book from my Kindle Unlimited collection, which I have been strangely curating and probably not using to the best of its abilities since I also buy books, get ARCs, and borrow things from the library, I thought this would be a great time to clean out my KU shelf a bit (since I can only have ten out at a time and have to keep adding things to my wishlist when I see them). Here are the books I finished:

Finders Keepers
NR Walker

I think I’ve mentioned this book as a desired read, and now I’ve actually read it! Set on the Gold Coast of Australia, it features Griffin, a young man who’s new to the area, and a dog he finds at a trailhead. When he finds the owner via the dog’s collar, he agrees to hold onto the dog, Wicket (HIS NAME IS WICKET) until the owner, Dane, gets back from a work conference. The two start exchanging texts, including lots of photos of the Ewok/dog, which turn into phone conversations, which turns into something more.

A Good Luck F*ck
Nicole Falls

Nicole Falls never fails to make me laugh! This brief book, which she wrote sometime in the past couple weeks, starts with Clover, who has inherited the running of the family bar from her grandfather, lamenting a local partner canceling a pub crawl because of the impending pandemic. When she takes advantage of the probable lack of business to do some much needed updates to the bar, she recruits long-time friend Nic—who she has had a bit of a crush on since they were kids—to help out. Nic, who has definitely been into her, even if he hasn’t realized it.

CW for a lighter approach to the COVID-19 situation. If you’d rather read about a universe in which the pandemic isn’t happening and never did, skip this one.

Sleeper
Kayley Loring

Shane can’t sleep. Like, really, can’t sleep. He’s had insomnia forever, which doesn’t really work for him when he’s been left alone with his rambunctious twin kindergarteners for three months. His ex-wife is off shooting a period movie somewhere and his nanny has just quit to get married. After somehow managing to get the buggers off to school, he decides to find a new nanny, even if his ex has told him not to hire anyone new without her say so. In comes Willa, younger sister to his oldest friend who is now in LA looking for work in the perfume industry. But she does have nanny experience. Also, she’s had a crush on him since she was twelve, but works hard to hide it. What could possibly go wrong? Especially when he actually falls asleep when she’s nearby?

(Note, I didn’t actually finish this one because I decided early on that I wasn’t into the “she’s my friend’s younger sister and therefore off limits” rhetoric, but the writing was entertaining and so were the people! Check it out at your leisure.)

How to Talk to Nice English Girls
Gretchen Evans

This is another of those of which I read a few pages when I downloaded it and determined to come back to it. It was still a bit of a slow starter, but once the story really started, I was all in. Set in the early 1920s, it tells the story of Marian, a younger sister who knows she will grow to become the spinster lady managing her parents’ household, and Katherine, the outspoken American daughter of her father’s business partner. Marian is giving the task of “looking after” Katherine while she and her father are visiting England, in the hopes that she will influence her for the better. Obviously…that doesn’t happen.

CN for period thoughts on external perceptions of same-gender relationships, but nothing directed at either protagonist.

Single AF
Sherelle Green

Meeka is single. Super single. Not just dealing with a dry spell; she hasn’t had any kind of emotional or sexual contact with a man in years. It doesn’t help that she’s started measuring anyone she might even potentially date up against Tone, the colleague and friend-of-a-friend who she’s developed a vaguely antagonistic professional relationship with. When they’re partnered on a project at the online TV network they work for, they start to discover more about each other…and maybe will finally make this attraction something more.

This isn’t so much a content warning as a…well, a content warning? There is a lot of use of “crazy” in the vernacular of contemporary language, and some of Meeka’s past extreme actions in relationships are played for laughs. These include several invasions of privacy on her part and some uh…light gaslighting on someone else’s part. A lot of it leads to more serious conversations about what Meeka has done and what she has and hasn’t deserved.

I’ve been adding a few books as I have finished and returned others, so we’ll see where the wind takes me next!

What are you reading?

(Are you reading? I’ll tell you, before the weekend started, I hadn’t been able to focus much on any book for very long. Even across the weekend, books that should have only taken a couple hours took at least twice as long as my focus wandered. This has been a rough time for all of us, so don’t be hard on yourself if you’ve been having trouble reading while the world is going to shit. Take your time, find something you love, and try to enjoy it. Or just take some time to reset. We all need it every once in a while, especially under deep stress.)

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!

Categories
Kissing Books

Just a Crapton of Books

How’s everyone’s Thursday? I’m still working from work, but am still basically just watching Disney and the CW at home when I have the chance. Let’s talk about some new releases, because goodness knows we need to celebrate something.

Over on Book Riot

With the mass closing of libraries across the country (the world) for the sake of social distancing, you’ll be glad to know that Macmillan has lifted their embargo on the purchase of new ebooks in their publishing stable. Never could get an ebook of The Widow of Rose House from the library? Blame the embargo. But they figured it out, after lots of money lost, and we’ll have a few more books to choose from (and fight over).

Reading all the paper books you’ve got at home? Check out these gorgeous bookmarks before you start dog-earing those pages.

What? Ambience room videos?

You’ve still got the rest of the month to enter to win a 50 dollar Barnes and Noble gift card!

And we’re keeping a story stream of all the COVID-19 related news as it pertains to books, reading, and other bookish things. We’ll continue to update it regularly.

Deals

cover of I Think I Might Love You by Christina C JonesA lot of authors have been making a book or two free in this situation (and some are highlighting books they have free all the time). Some notable ones (as of Tuesday, March 17):

I Think I Might Love You and the other two books in the Love Sisters trilogy by Christina C. Jones
The Wright Collection by Christina C. Jones
Layover by Katrina Jackson
The Ultimate Pi Day Party by Jackie Lau
Beyond Shame by Kit Rocha
Once Upon a Bride by Jenny Holiday

New Releases!

The House in the Cerulean Sea
TJ Klune

I have loved every word of TJ Klune’s that I’ve read, and I’m excited to explore this new universe of his. In this fantasy, Linus is sent to the far reaches to investigate six youths who may or may not bring about the end times? But as he gets to know the youngins and their enigmatic caretaker, Arthur, he has more questions to ask about life, family, and—yes—the end of the world.

Reborn Yesterday
Tessa Bailey

I’m gonna be honest: I didn’t care what the book was about, because the cover was all that mattered. And then I actually read the description and was all in. A paranormal romantic comedy?!? Sign me the eff up. So a vampire wakes up on a funeral director’s embalming table, and they hit it off. Unfortunately, he’s gonna have to wipe her memory of their meeting, because humans aren’t supposed to know about vampires. But he doesn’t, and things go on from there. I have missed vampires, I’m gonna tell you. I look forward to seeing where Tessa Bailey goes with this one!

Three Months To Forever
Hudson Lin

If there was something I discovered a few years ago, it was that Hudson Lin is all about that drama. So when I saw that she’d done some sprucing up of an old title, I knew I had to check it out. When Ben goes on temporary assignment in Hong Kong, he’s down for some adventure, and it comes in the body of Sai, a local who loves the food and city but hates his work. The two become very close very quickly, but each have their own crap to deal with—especially Ben, whose crap is thousands of miles away in Toronto. But it’s a romance, so I’m set on them figuring it out in time.

Others I’m looking forward to checking out:

A Good Luck F*ck by Nicole Falls (OH. EMM. JEE. That title. That COVER.)
Matzah-Ball Surprise by Laura Brown
The Virgin King by John Michael Curlovich
In Bed with the Earl by Christi Caldwell
Love’s Languageby D. Rose
Beef Cake by Jiffy Kate
Hostile Pursuit by Juno Rushdan
Three’s a Crowd by Cynthia Dane and Hildred Billings
Wishes for Tomorrow by Brenda Jackson (Kindle re-release)
Our Desires by Ivy Laika
Hush of Storm & Sorrow by L. Penelope

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!

Categories
Kissing Books

Cloaked in Stars and Sorcery

Hoo man, y’all. I hope everyone reading is safe and at your usual level of health today, and if you’re not, that you’re in a situation where that can change for the better. The world has changed a lot since last week, huh?

Let’s make our social distancing the best it can be with some romance.

News and Useful Links

Unsurprisingly, BookLovers Con and Researching the Romance Conference, two romance-specific gatherings happening this spring, have been cancelled. I haven’t heard anything yet about Avon’s Kiss Con Weekend Affair in Chicago, which is set for mid-April, and from what I’ve heard, Girl Have You Met will still be happening unless St. Louis or Missouri limit gathering numbers. The Ripped Bodice also announced late yesterday that they were closing the store to foot traffic starting today, but would be paying their staff and still taking online orders. If you’re curious about other book news and events surrounding efforts to slow the spread of COVID-19, Publishers Weekly has been keeping a running list.

Chuck Tingle (Bless) has released two books that are available on his website as PDFs, requesting that the $3 you’d usually spend on his books be donated to some recommended health services.

The Lambda Literary Award Finalists were announced last week, and I have only read one of the sixteen titles in the Gay and Lesbian Romance categories. (Surprise, it was Once Ghosted, Twice Shy. Of course.) (Also, there needs to be at least one more romance category covering everything that isn’t those two parts of the spectrum, but that’s another story).

If you follow Alisha Rai on Twitter, you might have been privy to her tweet about Cake Pop Guy. This is what happened afterwards.

Romance Sparks Joy did their thing per usual.

And for those of you who might be grasping for things to focus on during self-isolation or social distancing:

(Also, if you know of other romance authors who are offering free isolation reads, let me know!)

Deals

It’s been a while since I’ve read Victoria Dahl. I was happy to see that Looking For Trouble, the first book in her Girls Night Out series, is available for 2.99 right now. There are three books in the series and they’re loosely connected to the Jackson Hole and Donovan Family series. (And you might recognize some of the library folks if you’ve read Taking the Heat, which is one of my favorites of hers). Looking for Trouble, though, introduces us to the Jackson Hole library and Sophie, who has a run-in with the son of the woman her father left her family for. So yeah, there’s that. Get ready for a lot of sniping and sexytimes, because Dahl is nothing if not known for her sexytimes.

Recs!

I thought it might be a good idea to just…completely escape from what we’re all dealing with right now. So let’s talk about a few books that exist in worlds that are nothing like our own. There’s always Polaris Rising and A Heart of Blood and Ashes, both of which could keep you busy for extensive lengths of time, but what do you do after that? The lovers in these books might be dealing with some of our same real-life shit, but at least it’s cloaked in stars and sorcery.

cover of the fifth gender by gl (gail) carrigerThe 5th Gender
Gail Carriger

Tristol is a lavender, humanoid being whose hair has a mind of its own. He lives on a space station, in exile from his people. When a ship belonging to his race arrives at the space station in search of the human detective Tristol has a monster crush on, he must help bridge the gap in understanding between the two very different types of people. And also, he doesn’t mind helping Detective Hastion at all.

cover of erstwhile by HE trentErstwhile
HE Trent

While many alien romances seem to stem from the concept of being taken captive by an alien race, Erstwhile and the Jekh Saga begins with a young woman in search of answers about an ancestor who meets a pair of lovers who are also fugitives from the ruling race. (Also, it’s Terrans who are the colonists here, and they act just like we know Earth-born colonists to act. So consider that a bit of a content warning.)

a curved dagger with a white hilt and jeweled base, set against a red-tinged backdropEmpire of Sand
Tasha Suri

This is technically not a romance; instead it’s a fantasy with strong romantic elements. But I know the romance was very strong and a bunch of my romance-loving reviewer friends have loved the crap out of it. Inspired by Mughal India, this book features a young woman who has inherited magic from her mother, which has led to some interest from the big bad.

What is your favorite method of escaping the real-life issues that can sometimes crop up in contemporary romance?

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!

Categories
Kissing Books

Diversity, Huh?

Well folks, we had daylight savings, a full moon, tomorrow’s Friday the 13th, and my book festival was cancelled. I can take solace in the fact that there are new books out.

Over on Book Riot

The Ripped Bodice Report on Racial Diversity in Romance released on Tuesday, and I had some things to say.

I honestly don’t remember where the title of this week’s podcast came from in our conversation, but it is actually very helpful.

I wanna read all of these.

Do you bujo? These are some great spreads. I wish I was better at forming habits (and had any amount of patience) so I could try some of these, but I’ll stick to being bad at my planner and pretending I’ll actually use my Book Marks journal.  (My spreadsheet, on the other hand, I maintain religiously. Out of sight and all that.)

Deals

I can’t imagine you can have made it through 2019 without me nagging you into buying Once Ghosted, Twice Shy, but now it’s a Lambda Literary Award Finalist! It’s 2.99 right now, and you can read it as a standalone, so definitely check it out. Also if you’re like me and have been wallowing since the discovery that How to Catch a Queen is coming out in November instead of this spring like originally announced, now’s a great time to do a full read (or reread) of the Reluctant Royals series, of which this is the third book and first novella. Or just read it because it’s awesome, that’s perfectly acceptable 😉

New Books!

There are a lot of books out this week that I’m looking forward to reading, and in true Jess fashion, I have read none of them (to be fair, all of my library holds came in last week, including Fall, the third book in the VIP series by Kristen Callihan).

Love Hard 
Nalini Singh

I’ve only read one Nalini Singh book (GASP! I KNOW! But there are so many!)  and all I remember is that it was a train. Wreck. (In a good way.) There was drama, there was passion, and I couldn’t look away. I can’t imagine this one is any less comestible. AND, this one has a single father (Read Harder, anyone?) who is a rugby player. His childhood sweetheart and the mother of his child died several years ago, and the last thing he expects is to run into the old high school friend who is nothing like him.

Undercover Bromance
Lyssa Kay Adams

I didn’t intend to give this one more than a mention, but I wanted to draw attention to the fact that this is very much a split decision book across my trusted review set. There were some who adored it and others who were uncomfortable with the premise. Much like in the first one, the male protagonist takes the lead from friends and romance novels while trying to right a wrong (this one external). However, there are a few reviewers who don’t believe that the core conflict—and the conversation around sexual assault and harassment connected with it—works for the tone of the book. I really like Lyssa’s writing; it’s fun and engaging. But I’ll definitely include a content warning for multiple secondary characters’ sexual harassment and/or assault (both on and off the page). If that’s not a hard limit for you, I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Others out this week include:

Femme Tales by Anne Shade
Perfect Timing by Dena Blake
The Mail Order Bride by R. Kent
Snowed In by Lexi Blake
Head Over Wheels by Irene Davis
To the Moon and Back by Melissa Brayden

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!

Categories
Kissing Books

Romance for Literacy is Halfway There (Oh-oh, Livin’ On a Prayer)

Howdy, folks! I hope all you folks who were affected by Daylight Savings Time have survived. I mostly have to remember that I’m three hours behind my mom (and the beginning of Primetime) instead of two.

Right. Books!

News and Useful Links

Do you follow #readRchat? They had a great discussion about podcasts last week. Be prepared for a lot of adds to your podcatcher and your TBR.

Jen DeLuca showed us the cover of Well Played and I’m just waiting. Waaaaiiiiting.

As I am for Denise Williams’ debut, How to Fail at Flirtingwhich looks fantastic. (Also, if you haven’t been following along with her class, you should definitely subscribe and then check out the backlog of Twitter discussions.)

And Jane Igharo’s, too.

Oh, also Renee Dahlia’s.

Kevin Kwan has announced a new book…and it’s coming out way sooner than you’d expect for an announcement in March. (I know he doesn’t technically write *romance* but I know some of y’all liked the Crazy Rich Asians books.)

As a heads up, OverDrive has changed how their ebook and audiobook checkout works re: holds. I know a lot of us use OverDrive through our libraries if they have it, so just know those auto-checkouts aren’t happening anymore.

Honestly the best route to see the cover of the new Sedgwicks book is via this tweet by Cat Sebastian. And she has put a name to my new favorite genre of romance 😀

OOOOOOOOHHHH WE’RE HALFWAY THERE, OOOH-OH…Romance…for literacy…on a…prayer? Okay, that didn’t work but keep it moving!

If you have instagram and want to play, The Ripped Bodice has made something fun for you.

And you just…needed to know this.

Deal

cover of heartbeat bravesHave you read Pamela Sanderson’s Heartbeat Braves? There is a small number of romance written by Indigenous US authors, especially set around Indigenous communities, but this and the subsequent book in the series are great contemporary romances featuring a group of people we are rarely offered happy stories about. The others in the series are all less than five dollars, the fourth having released in May of last year. I’m not sure if it’s still ongoing, but you’ve got plenty to keep you busy for the time.

Recs!

Yesterday was International Women’s Day, and I thought it would be a good time to talk about some romances set outside the US, featuring some awesome women. Every woman is awesome in her own way, whether it’s her ability to empathize with a teenager who is trying to find themselves or write steamy romances without punching the man who can’t help but regularly insult her writing.

Emilia Cruz — A Summer for Scandal by Lydia San Andres

Emilia is a badass. Living in a (nonexistent) Caribbean city in the early twentieth century, she writes super scandalous, telenovela-level serials under a pseudonym. Not only does she love what she writes, but she continues to do it even when it is being flayed alive by an anonymous critic (who happens to also be the gentleman falling in love with her…but that’s another story). She’s a suffragist and a women’s rights advocate, which is a lot for the people around her. But she stands her ground and fights for all the things she wants.

cover of The Chai Factor by Farah HeronAmira Khan — The Chai Factor by Farah Heron

Amira can stand her ground in any situation. Almost. But what can manage to throw her is getting home from Uni only to have a barbershop quartet living in her apartment…well, the apartment her grandmother keeps for her. She hadn’t expected Amira to randomly come home while working on her Master’s essay, but Amira need’s a change of scenery to get through the damn thing. So she and the quartet come to an agreement about sharing the space, and she gets the damn thing done.

Nya Jerami — A Prince on Paper by Alyssa Cole

Is it cheating if the international nation the protagonist is from doesn’t actually exist? Thesolo is basically Wakanda, so. But Nya is an awesome woman no matter what nation’s royal family she’s a member of, and she doesn’t have to fight any aliens to prove it. Instead, she has to take on the personal guilt of having been part of a plot to take out the leaders of the nation, even though she wasn’t involved in any of the plotting itself. She also has to figure out where she belongs in this new world order, in which her father is no longer there to both plan and run her life. She’s kind, thoughtful, and observant, and sees no problem faking an engagement with a European prince to get both their ways.

cover of butterfly swords by jeannie linAi Li — Butterfly Swords by Jeannie Lin

A literal badass armed with literal sharp objects that can kill you, Ai Li plots her own kidnapping to escape an arranged marriage with a warlord. Except the kidnapping doesn’t work quite as she’d have liked and she ends up on a road trip (is it still a road trip if it’s on foot?) with the pale warrior who helped her and then lost to her in a fight. She’s got goals for her family and for the kingdom, and will stop at nothing to make sure her family and its legacy is set to rights.

Who are your favorite international romance badasses, and your favorite unsung moment of awesomeness?

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!

Categories
What's Up in YA

Romantic Retellings Are The Best Retellings

Hey there! Jess here, subbing in for Kelly while she’s off having fun without us. In my other life, I write Kissing Books, Book Riot’s romance newsletter, and generally talk about romance novels for a lot of time. But I love a good love story about people of any age, so in honor of the release of Only Mostly Devastated, a brand new Grease reimagining, I thought I’d talk about some romantic YA retellings that I’ve loved and some others I’m super looking forward to reading this year (now that I don’t have a gig that requires me to read All Romance, All The Time).

Retellings are my favorite kind of story, in part because they are a familiar story (even if I haven’t actually read the original version) and in part because they have to make something new and interesting out of that familiar story. I spent half of high school and all of college reading the same story over and over again (thanks, Pride and Prejudice, for setting me down the path of fandom and giving me the many worlds of fanfiction), and I am all about seeing what an author will do with something that already exists. Sometimes, it’s hardly recognizable, while other times you are living within the story that already exists and you can’t wait to see how a particular plot point will reveal itself. I still don’t know which one I like more.

Heart of Iron and Soul of Stars by Ashley Poston

Did someone say a Dreamworks’ Anastasia In Space? With a heist plot and an AI army? Ana and her best friend, the android D09 (who she calls Di), are on a mission to steal a very important artifact. When a Space Aristocrat beats her to it, they both end up on the run and have people from all walks of life after them. But there’s another secret that Ana doesn’t understand her connection to, and it might change everything. It’s less romantic than the others on the list, but there is a super slow love story happening throughout. And then, there’s a cliffhanger. So it’s a good thing Soul of Stars is out, because I had to suffer. A lot.

The Only Thing Worse than Me is You by Lily Anderson

There aren’t many retellings of Much Ado About Nothing, but this one is delightfully fun and nerdy. Trixie and Ben are at war, but their friends like each other. They snark at each other on school grounds, but develop a sort of rapport over comic books and other things geeky, to the point they aren’t sure they hate each other as much as they’d like. Lily Anderson’s second book, Not Now, Not Ever, which is related to this one but not technically a sequel, is based loosely on The Importance of Being Earnest. But at camp, not a summer house.

Pride by Ibi Zoboi

This retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in contemporary Brooklyn is a great look at how the concept of class that is central to the original story translates to a pair of teens living in the city. Zuri Benitez is very proud of her Afro-Latino heritage and the place it has in her Brooklyn neighborhood. But when wealthy Darius Darcy and his family move in across the street, he questions everything around them. The two clash immediately, but if you know the story, you know what happens.

The number of retellings of both classic literature and fairy tales with a twist is a constantly-growing space in YA, and there are a bunch that either came out recently or will be coming out this year that I can’t wait to check out!

The Princess and the Fangirl and Bookish and the Beast (June 16) by Ashley Poston

These follow-up novels to Poston’s Geekerella, which was probably my favorite book the year it came out, continue the story that started with a fan and the charming actor that she meets (and runs away from) at a Con ball with retellings of The Prince and the Pauper (but with lesbians) and Beauty and the Beast (but with a jerk Hollywood royal). Each can really be read on its own, but why not take advantage of all three?

Of Curses and Kisses by Sandhya Menon

This one is yet another Beauty and the Beast retelling, this one set in boarding school. There’s a curse involved, but since I haven’t read it yet, I’m not certain if there’s an actual curse or if the cursed character just thinks there’s a curse. Hopefully, there’s a real curse. I like curses. And the two characters, Jaya and Grey, are already members of feuding families before they start attending boarding school together, but Jaya determines that the best way to get back at the Emersons is to make Grey fall in love with her and then break his heart. We all know how that kind of thing goes.

Verona Comics by Jennifer Dugan (April 21)

When I heard “Romeo and Juliet meets comics shop” I came running. Jubilee works at her mom’s indie comics shop, and Ridley’s family owns a giant comics chain. There is yet another comic con ball involved (I’m loving how many con galas there are in novels; I’ve never actually gone to one!) and the two try to keep their relationship secret from their families. This one definitely needs a CW for anxiety, discussion of suicide, and possibly parental abuse (I’m taking the word of other readers on that last one). But I don’t think it ends like Romeo and Juliet so that is important to note.

So This is Love by Elizabeth Lim (April 7)

This is more of a bonus, because while I guess it’s a retelling, it’s not a retelling like the others are. It’s one of Disney’s Twisted Tales, this time (if you can’t guess from the title) about Cinderella. What if Cinderella never got the chance to try on the glass slipper at the end, and set off on her own? No longer under the visage of Lady Tremayne, she goes to work at the palace, and gets wind of some intrigue that must be solved. I love the twists and turns these stories take, in order to explore some question we might have had as we watched the classic Disney stories and had more “What If?” questions.

Oh, and speaking of retellings, there’s a giveaway on the site to win a copy of Anna K, a contemporary revisit of Anna Karenina. You’ve also got the rest of the month to enter to win a gift card to Barnes and Noble.


Do you like retellings? What do you like most or least about them? I’d love to hear your thoughts. Find me on Twitter @jessisreading to tell me your favorite romantic YA retellings!

Categories
Kissing Books

Get ALL of the ROGUE Anthologies for 99 Cents This Week

Happy Thursday! There are so many new books out this week, I don’t know what to do with myself. Also, there have been so many book announcements for the summer and fall and next year and…

*Deep breath* Let’s talk books.

Over on Book Riot

Have you seen our new site design? We’ve got a new logo and the layouts and stuff have changed a bit.

Do you like those long romances that you can just settle into for a while? Here’s a list full of them.

Mark your calendar for these (mostly) upcoming LGBTQ+ romances! It’s going to be an awesome year.

What do you know about Danielle Steel? I read a good five or ten of her books as a tween/teen and have no idea what any of them were about anymore. But she’s still writing, and if you want to know where to start, look no further.

And this is a really great, thorough, and thoughtful list pulled together by Carole, one of our newer contributors. She has been writing some great stuff and you’ll want to keep an eye out for her across the web.

You’ve got a whole new chance to win a Barnes and Noble gift card! Enter between now and March 31.

Deals

Rogue Desire and all of the other Rogue Anthologies are on sale this week for 99 cents. If you haven’t picked one of them up, each is a collection of five to eight novellas about fighting the good fight. There are activists, politicians, and people just figuring out how to do the right thing in times of turmoil and unrest. There are seven collections! That’s thousands of pages of reading and always feeling like there’s some kind of hope in the world. Because even though I’m writing this on Tuesday night, I would imagine this is the day we’ve reached “rather read hopeful scenarios than punch something” stage. *Heavy sigh*

New Books!

There are enough books out this week that I haven’t read (some of which I hadn’t even heard of), that I’m sure there are more that I haven’t found. This was one of the biggest release weeks of the year so far across the board, so of course there would be plenty to pick up in romance.

Love’s Sweet Kiss by Sheryl Lister

This is the first book in a series called Sassy Seasoned Sisters and I’m super excited by the series name alone. It tells me everything I need to know: badass Black women who have some life experience under their belts. In this one, Nzinga and Byron, her high school crush, are brought together at a reunion, but Nzinga is newly divorced and unsure where she wants to go with a relationship. Sheryl Lister wrote for Kimani press for a long time before Harlequin ended the line, and I’m glad to see she’s still writing plenty.

Silent Sin by EJ Russell

I have a lot of books by EJ Russell on my list, but haven’t picked up any just as of yet. This one, though, might be the one that changes things. Set during the silent film era, it tells the clandestine love story of a tailor-turned-actor and a chauffeur. I’m sure there’s plenty description of the period with an interesting look at the people and their lifestyles. I also imagine there’s some what they call, ah… “period-appropriate homophobia” but maybe I’m wrong. We’ll find out together.

There are a bunch of other books I’d love to pick up, including a new shifter book, marriages of convenience, some more society intrigue, and (something I absolutely can’t wait to read) queer cheerleaders!

Bring Her On by Chelsea M. Cameron

Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing by Charlie Adhara

Secret Heir Seduction by Reese Ryan

Crowne of Lies by CD Reiss

From Alaska With Love by Ally James

On the Corner of Hope and Main by Beverly Jenkins (Blessings Book 10!)

What new release are you excited for?

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!