Categories
Kissing Books

Living Your Best Romance Reading Life

Hello again! It’s me, PN Hinton coming to you once more with another edition of Kissing Books newsletter. We’re almost a week into 2021 and I hope that it has been finding you well.

Last time, I talked about starting off the new year with some second chance romances. But a lot of people look to the new year as an opportunity for a new them. This could mean a resolution to eat better, exercise more, or read more. The clean slate helps to start off with a fresh view on life. It is also an opportunity develop and keep new good habits in the year to come.

Reading outside your comfort zone may be one your goals this year. If so, check out Cassie’s article about some of this year’s reading challenges. Book Riot’s own Read Harder tops the list. There are a few romance specific prompts there. You can peruse Jessica’s list of some fat-positive romances and Aldalyn’s recommendations for a romance by a trans and/or non-binary author.

Speaking of my fellow Rioters, one thing we all have in common is that we are book enablers. By that I mean we let y’all know about all the exciting upcoming releases. We also give information on all the various ways you can get books on sale or for free. If it’s any consolation we also do it to each other all the time. Fair is fair after all. The way I’m going to enable y’all today is by letting you know two different ways you can get one free book a month.

Up first is the Dirty Boys Book Club newlsetter. If you head over to the site, you will see the upcoming authors. I know I’m already counting the days until October for Miss Talia Hibbert. There is also Girls Night In newsletter. I didn’t find an author roster here, so it will be a pleasant surprise each month.

Please note, that by signing up for the latter, you are also signing up for the feature author’s newsletter. You don’t have to stay subscribed. And I’m not sure if it works that way for the former. But I wanted to give a heads up on the impending email explosion that will initially occur.

Romancelandia News:

You may or may not have marathoned Bridgerton over the holiday break (I did). Naturally, there has been a lot of heated debate over ‘the scene’. This is a discussion we should be having because there’s a lot to unpack there. That said, no one can argue that the show was on everybody’s lips since it premiered on Christmas day. This led others to this EW article, with ideas about what could be adapted next. There was also speculation on Twitter, including this mysterious response tweet from Alyssa Cole. 

Like most of Romancelandia, I would be beyond excited for the possibility of a Reluctant Royals series. But, I will absolutely lose my ‘sugar honey ice tea’ if Ms. Bev’s Indigo gets the TV treatment. This was not just my first book by her. It was also my first historical romance that featured a Black couple. So, it will always have a special place in my heart.

Speaking of Mrs. Bev, if you haven’t already picked up the special 25th anniversary of Vivid, what are you waiting for?! It’s so pretty and this is probably my second favorite novel by her. I love smart heroes and heroines, no matter the time period. Brains are sexy y’all.


And that’s all for now y’all. If you want to follow some of my bookish bullet points, give me a follow over on Twitter @PScribe801. Until next time!

Categories
Kissing Books

Ring in the New Year With Some Second Chance Romances

Hello hello! I’m PN Hinton, your eager, new purveyor of all things romance.  I’m excited to be here. I know I have very big shoes to fill, but I’m ready to take on this challenge. And by challenge, I also mean 2021. I’m sure we are all eager to leave the dumpster fire of 2020 in the rear view mirror of our cars as we speed towards the horizon of the new year.

The start of a new year is also special to me because my anniversary is the day after. So I decided to kick my first newsletter off with some backlist recommendations. There are tons of books that focus on falling in love for the first time. And, while there are many second chance romances regardless of couple status, they don’t always get as much recognition. I’m hoping to rectify that here.

And without further ado, here are some second-chance romances for your consideration!

Destiny’s Surrender by Beverly Jenkins

The second in the Destiny trilogy from the divine Mrs. Bev. Andrew has decided to start a family and begins looking for a candidate for the role. Then Billie shows up at his doorstep with his son, ready to leave the baby with him and a ‘better’ life. Instead the one-time lovers find themselves married and full-time parents to the boy.

The Bromance Book Club by Lyssa Kay Adams

Gavin and Thea are a seemingly happily married couple until one night when Gavin discovers that his wife has never had the Big O with him. Embarrassed and enraged, he loses his temper at this, which prompts Thea to ask for a divorce. With the help of a secret book club made up of alpha men and some genuine self-reflection and work, Gavin works to make sure his marriage has a happy ending.

cover of once upon a marquess by courtney milan

Once Upon a Marquess by Courtney Milan

Judith has vowed never to forgive Christian after he ruined her father and tore her family apart. After years of being shunned by polite society, Christian returns needing assistance on something that only Judith can help with. The bitterness and betrayal runs deep for Judith and, although Christian regrets causing it, he knows that he did the right thing all those years ago. This won’t stop him from trying to convince her that they are made for each other and can move ahead from the past hurts.

The Day of the Duchess by Sarah MacLean

Due to a misunderstanding in their past, compounded by an act of infidelity, Malcolm and Seraphina have lived apart from one another for three years. One day, Seraphina shows up and demands a divorce, which Malcolm promises to give her, provided she can find a new wife for him. What follows is a mixture of hijinks, long-awaited apologies, and forgiveness. On a personal note, I was surprised that I enjoyed this one. Normally, infidelity is a hard pass and complete deal-breaker for me. MacLean handled this difficult topic well and this is arguably my favorite in this specific series of hers, as a result.

cover of hate to want you

Hate to Want You by Alisha Rai

Ever since a betrayal that broke their family’s friendship and their relationship, Livvy and Nicholas have allowed themselves one night of pleasure each year. Just one night to forget past hurts and enjoy the carnal company of one another. Until one year, when Livvy doesn’t show up, and Nicholas decides he wants more than what they have given themselves for the last few years.

Love Her or Lose Her by Tessa Bailey

Rosie and Dominic are a married couple stuck in a rut. With her friend’s encouragement, Rosie demands that Dom join her for ‘marriage boot camp’, which he agrees to, much to Rosie’s surprise. During the course of the camp, the couple begins work on getting their marriage back on track until a secret Dom has been holding onto threatens to break the newly laid foundation of their relationship.

cover of once ghosted twice shy

Once Ghosted, Twice Shy by Alyssa Cole

Likotsi is shocked to find herself face to face with Fabiola when she returns to New York for a vacation. After a week of a whirlwind romance, the latter woman ghosted the former completely. Fabiola convinces Likotsi to meet for tea and food, leading them to explore the city together. Throughout their journey, Fabiola reveals what really happened and why she ended things the way she did and both women wonder if this is their second chance at true love.


That’s all for now! If you want to read some of my own backlist, check out my Book Riot page. You can also follow my bookish bullet points over on Twitter at @Pscribe801. Until next time.

Categories
Kissing Books

Peace, Love, and Romance Novels (In 2021)

This is it, folks! I hope everyone who celebrates is having the kind of Christmas Eve they wanted and those who don’t are having a good Thursday (and that whatever weirdness that’s been happening because of the planets is finally subsiding). Next time you get a Kissing Books email from Book Riot Romance, it’ll be in the hands of the awesome PN Hinton, and I am so looking forward to seeing what she does with the place.

Let’s do this.

Over on Book Riot

You probably already know about the romances that are included in this list, but it’s always nice to see awesome romance included on lists of great historical fiction.

What does your Goodreads say about you

I wrote about fat positivity and offered up some recommendations for that task on next year’s Read Harder Challenge.  

Do you need reading prompts for 2021? Here are some to start with.

Have you read Brigid Kemmerer?

Check out this list of playlists to listen to while reading! I might have to try a few of these.   

Deals

The Worth Saga Box Set 1: In the West by Courtney Milan

If you haven’t yet read The Worth Saga, or just want a digital collection of all of them, you can get two full length books and three amazing novellas (plus a bonus short story!) for 4.99! This set is subtitled “In the West” and includes six stories about the Worth family and their extended family and friends: Once Upon a Marquess and After The Wedding are the full-length novels directly about the Worths, then you get Judith’s friend Daisy in Her Every Wish, Adrian’s ancestor in The Pursuit Of… and the delightful Mrs. Martin from After the Wedding on her own adventures. (And young Theresa Worth gets some page time, too.) Over a thousand pages for less than five bucks. You definitely want this. 

Bonus deal: If you haven’t read Rebekah Weatherspoon’s Wrapped you are definitely in for something wonderful. That holiday novella and the books in the Fit trilogy are all 99 cents through the rest of the year. 

New Books

It’s a quiet week, but we’ve still got some books to talk about, whether they’ve dropped out of nowhere or I missed them the first time around. 

The Longest Night by EE Ottoman

After years of regularly writing to each other, two men find themselves together at Yuletide. But even though they know almost everything about each other, their new situation is awkward at best. Their attraction, however, is pushing them towards each other as their time together continues.

Say Hello, Kiss Goodbye by Jacqueline Middleton

After a messy divorce, Leia leaves New York for London. Ready to dive into a fashion career and avoid love at all costs, she isn’t ready for Tarquin Balfour to show up. A man looking for love and commitment, he just wants someone to see past his money and into his heart. And you know how it goes from there.

Falling For You by Té Russ

Harrison is grieving for the loss of a grandfather he’d only recently gotten to know. When he visits the family orchard to be with the family, Fallon literally falls into his arms. The second-in-command at the orchard, and the man’s protege, Fallon is grieving hard for the man who helped her realize her own path. The pair find some solace in each other, and in the orchard during the beautiful Massachusetts Autumn.

The Christmas Chevalier by Meg Mardell

Alvy Lexington has moved far, far away (at last as far as one can be and live in the same city). As a member of a wealthy London family, he would prefer to be able to live in an area where he wouldn’t be recognized and called a name he’d prefer not to be called. But when he meets an old friend who needs a place to stay and work to do, all of that work and caution go out of the window.

And there are a few more new releases I look forward to checking out, too!

Holiday Wish by Leila E. Hart

The Office Party by Whitney G.

To Marry a Madden by Sherelle Green

All I Want for Christmas: An Anthology by Lucy Eden and friends

Christmas Nibbles: A Steamy Paranormal Romance Christmas Anthology


While I won’t be writing Kissing Books anymore, you can still find me Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, and you can still reach me at wheninromance@bookriot.com! It has been an amazing pleasure writing this little newsletter for romance readers over the past four years, and I look forward to reading it on Mondays and Thursdays alongside the rest of you 😀

May 2021 bring us what we all want: rest and sanity. And romance. Novels.

Categories
Kissing Books

Operation Ride a Raindeer

It’s the last Monday of KB for 2020 (there’s one more coming on Thursday before Book Riot goes on break until the new year). I started watching Chicago Typewriter, which is about a grumpy writer and a haunted typewriter (and so much more) and I’m going to have to find something to read about people’s past lives that wasn’t written by Jude Deveraux. 

Let’s talk about book stuff! Hopefully we won’t get some kind of world-changing explosion on Christmas Eve this year. *fingers crossed* *knocks on wood*

News and Useful Links

If you missed it last week, the full Bridgerton trailer is out! And the Bridgerton Twitter account is amaze, so even if you don’t plan to watch the show, enjoy that bit of joy. 

Preach, Alyssa.

There’s still time to vote for the readRchat best books of the year.

And time to nominate books for the Swoon Awards.

What academics can learn from romancelandia

And work from academics who are romancelandia!

Check out this interview with Denise Williams, author of How to Fail at Flirting

Speaking of interviews, here’s one with Talia Hibbert

Nicola Davidson showed us the cover of her next book, Wicked Passions

And here’s the cover of Jasmine Guillory’s upcoming book, While We Were Dating. (And a bonus interview with her, too!)

Roxane Gay is starting a book club, and looksee whose book is on it!

There’s still time to check out some wishlists

And romance adjacent: There’s a new trailer for season two of A Discovery of Witches!

Deals

Ho! Ho! Ho! by Rilzy Adams

If you’re looking for a short, sexy read that is more “set during” the winter holidays than “about” the winter holidays, this book is well worth the 99 cents. A woman on the verge of divorce spills her heart out to a bartender and then never sees him again. At least until the next year, when they run into each other on the sidewalk. He’s the one that got away, but she’s spent her year acting upon her post-divorce goals, in what she titled Operation Ride A Reindeer. He, being perfectly secure in his own amazingness, asks her to tell him about it over dinner. (Note: this book includes detailed sex scenes between the female protagonist and people who are not the male protagonist.)

Recs!

This is our last Monday together which means it’s my last time doing recs! Thanks so much to those of you who reached out with well wishes and to tell me your favorites. I’m so glad to have been able to introduce so many of you to some of my favorite authors and stories. 

cover of syncopation by anna zebu

Syncopation by Anna Zabo

Syncopation brought me (and many others!) into the world of Anna Zabo and the Twisted Wishes trilogy. While it’s not their debut, it was the book that brought them on my radar. And I haven’t turned around since. It was my first romance ever featuring an aromantic romantic lead (and yes, it works), and I love how Anna makes their relationship work for allo/aro couple. 

cover of get a life chloe brown

Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert

Talia’s first traditionally published romance made a heck of a splash with readers, whether they read primarily tradpub or were familiar with her indie work. Get a Life introduces us to the Brown sisters (and is fabulously narrated by Adjoa Andoh if you go that route). Chloe is fat and Black and has fibromyalgia. She has lived her life very sheltered, but realizes that there is more to life than what she currently allows herself to see. I am more partial to Dani, her pink haired, bisexual academic sister, but every book a reader, amirite?

Haven by Rebekah Weatherspoon

There have been a lot of notes about Rebekah Weatherspoon over the last few years, but Haven and the rest of the Beards and Bondage series have made a heck of an impression. (Interestingly, offline, Rafe has been the one my IRL folks have hollered to me most about.)

cover of an extraordinary union by alyssa cole

An Extraordinary Union by Alyssa Cole

My favorite thing to see over the past few years has been “thanks for introducing me to [author]” no matter who the author was. But the number of times Alyssa’s name made it into my inbox particularly delighted me! I have been spreading the good news for what feels like decades but it has actually been less than five years since I first read one of her books. I’m so glad that out of all the authors whose books I’ve been pushing, Alyssa has been able to meet so many different romance needs, whether you’ve been looking for contemporary, spec-fic, or historical.


I’d love to keep hearing from you about your favorite romance books and news! 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

Some Questions About That BRIDGERTON Trailer

It’s Thursday and I haven’t yet started a new K-Drama. I did potentially find another Ultimate LDR story to consume, but I’m not sure if I’m right yet. 

Let’s talk about some books!

Over On Book Riot

Margaret might thank Nora Roberts in the title, but let’s thank Nana as well!

Alison has some questions about that Bridgerton trailer. (Though if the chatter on Twitter is true, the answer to number five is VERY.) 

Laura takes us on a deep dive of a romance series about the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, and I gotta say, while I knew about this series before now, I have never been as interested as I currently am. 

And Trisha and I had our last convo of 2020, where we talked about Romancing the Runoff and The KFC Romance Movie.

Deals

Mangos & Mistletoe by Adriana Herrera

If you haven’t yet checked out Adriana’s queer holiday novella set in the world of a holiday cooking competition, now’s a good time! This year, it’s got a new cover (look at it! Fire!). Oh, and did I mention there’s only one bed? So yeah, 2.99 for all kinds of tropey rivals to lovers goodness! 

(Transparency note: I am working with Adriana on a nonfiction project in the distant future.)

New Books

I can’t tell if publishing is slowing down for the holiday or if I just didn’t add any new romances to my want to read list twelve years ahead of time like I usually do! Perhaps that’s to my benefit, though, because pulling together this week’s list of new books is like digging into a goldmine and discovering diamonds!

The majority of this week’s notable releases are self-published (with a couple exceptions from independent publishers). If you tend to wander more towards tradpub romance, maybe try something from this list!

The Unbroken Rose by Christina C. Jones (HELLO WHERE DID YOU COME FROM)

Nothing But the Wolf In Me by Nikki Clarke

Love and Other Moods by Crystal Z. Lee

The Naughty List by Ellie Mae McGregor (Hot Santa, okay?)

The Christmas Arrangement by AJ Morrow

Sizzle by Aja

Forever Your Duke by Erica Ridley

If You Dare by Sandy Lowe

Her Marine Next Door by Aliyah Burke

Door of Bruises by Sierra Simone (Apparently some of y’all have been waiting for this one with Bated Breath — and I guess now that the series is done I should read the first one, huh?)

The Marquis, the Minx, and the Mistletoe by Ava Devlin

Millennial Struggle by Dhara Shah

Truth, Lies, and Second Dates by MaryJanice Davidson

Cash in Hand by TA Moore

Mine to Keep by Rhenna Morgan

My True Love Gave to Me by Dahlia Rose

Love at the Library by Amanda Kai (Gotta love a library romance!) 

Make the Yuletide Gay by Ivy L. James

Wanton by Jaci Burton

Beastly Beauty by Romy Lockhart (I don’t often pick up books labeled reverse harem, but I am v dot curious)


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! And don’t forget to let me know what books you’ve loved most from my Kissing Books tenure!

Categories
Kissing Books

Passing the Baton

Hey hey romance lovers! It’s Monday. The King DOES have an HEA (if anyone was wondering), and after that and Crash Landing On You I am ready to begin the futile search for Ultimate LDR stories, either in print or on the screen. I guess the next level of extreme would be people who live in different time periods. Or something.

Books, let’s talk books!

News and Useful Links

Sil and Beth hosted the #MyRomanceBook2021 chat on Twitter and collected ALL OF THE RESPONSES in a single google doc. Get ready. Your TBR won’t be able to handle it. 

Alyssa Cole and Rebekah Weatherspoon IG Chat!

Read an excerpt of Tasha L. Harrison’s newest, If She Says Yes

And have you seen the cover for Farrah Rochon’s The Dating Playbook? Bonus interview content, too. 

If you don’t subscribe to Talia Hibbert’s newsletter (and you do that kind of thing), I definitely recommend you do so. Her last one included some exciting information about her stable of 2021 releases and I’m sure we’ll hear more in the future. She also shared this Goodreads column, which she put together herself!

Sonali Dev revealed the cover for Incense and Sensibility with a cute video. 

There’s a new romance merch shop in town and my body is ready. I might need that Hand Flex shirt. 

There’s still time to join the Romancelandia Holiday Fairies

Beverly Jenkins = LEGEND

If you have access to Lifetime (or want to rent it on Amazon), I totally recommend watching Christmas Ever After. It’s about a romance novelist who uses a wheelchair and a man who looks just like the one on her covers (which are painted). It’s adorable and fun and Ali Stroker just looks so delighted to be there the whole time. I don’t completely understand how Izzy’s series works, but that’s a minor thing. 

Deals

Weave The Dark, Weave The Light by Anna Zabo

If you’re looking for a weird-ish winter book to enjoy, check out Weave the Dark, Weave The Light by Anna Zabo for 99c (or nothing if you subscribe to Kindle Unlimited). It’s brief, but it’s full of all that Zabo Goodness—a touch of angst, a touch of vulnerability, and a lot of good writing. If you’ve been missing their writing like I have since reading Reverb, this is a good balm to hold you over.

And speaking of holdovers for the next new book, if you haven’t read Alexis Daria’s holiday novella that takes place in the world of Dance Off (starting with Take The Lead ), Dance All Night is also 99 cents. 

Recs!

So I realize this sort of qualifies as burying the lede, but I’m passing the Kissing Books baton for 2021 and onward. I have absolutely loved every word I’ve written, and every connection I’ve made with you all. Have no fear, though; there will still be KB in the coming year, and you, my wonderful readers, will be in good hands going forward!  (And if you’re looking for me, you can still find me on the When In Romance podcast and I’ll try to write as much regular romance content for Book Riot proper as I can.)

With that said, I wanted to talk about some of my favorite books that you all have recommended to me when I’ve asked for your favorites, and I want to know what your favorite books that I’ve recommended have been over the past few years. I want to round those up next week (December 21, Winter Solstice, which will be my last Monday send) for everyone to see, and to keep for myself for fuzzies, of course. 

Thanks for sending me your beloved books, either from one of my lingering questions or because there was something you thought I just needed to read. I’ve had a blast checking them out. A lot of my emails are from publicists (who are all awesome in their own right!) so it’s nice to get something directly from one of you all (or a note on twitter or instagram!). 

Entreat Me by Grace Draven

I cannot for the life of me find the original recommendations for this, but I remember mentioning that I was going down a Beauty and the Beast hole and multiple people told me I had to read this one. My favorite things in a good retelling of this story are a badass beauty character of any gender and a beast you can empathize with, and this had both. The worldbuilding was interesting, there was no “you must be my prisoner” deal, and I’m not gonna say I wasn’t happy for the…sexual intimacy…between Louvaen and Ballard. I’m still on my Quest To Read Them All, but this one still sits very high on the list of my favorites. 

Conventionally Yours by Annabeth Albert

I mentioned that I had found my happy place in Geek YA several months ago and one of you recommended I check this one out to get that same feeling with adults. I’d already had a copy (lol what else is new) so I sat down to read it very shortly after that recommendation. Two gamers who don’t particularly like each other forced to travel cross country together for a convention and learn about each other and themselves along the way? Of course I was going to love it. 

Happiness in Jersey by Jacinta Howard

One of you recommended this series by Jacinta Howard when I was looking to build out my repertoire of Black romance authors who wrote Black Romance. I was totally excited to see a new adult series with black characters, about a group of people in a band of all things! Jacinta’s characters are that blend of fascinating and flawed that make you root for them to find success in whatever they’re going for, even if you kind of can’t stand them, and the way she writes chemistry is :fire-emoji: I sadly haven’t made it through the whole series, but I’m looking forward to more.


Shout out to everyone who has ever written back with a suggestion, recommendation, or to just say hi or thanks. I’ve appreciated each and every word of encouragement over the four years I’ve been doing this thing, and if you recommended a book, I definitely put it on my to-read list…I just might not have gotten to it yet. Story of my life, right?

I’m still around for a couple weeks yet. So. As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at wheninromance@bookriot.com.

Categories
Kissing Books

The 2021 Reading Log is Here!

It’s New Book Day! There are a bunch out this week that I’m pretty excited about! And there are other things to be excited about too, this week!

Over on Book Riot

Read Harder is up! There are multiple romance tasks (and a fanfiction one! Your girl is excited.)

Take this quiz to figure out which holiday romance to read next

These were the most popular bookish things from Book Fetish this year.

Book blankets!

The 2021 Reading Log is here! I have been terrible at maintaining Goodreads but my spreadsheet? On point. (We won’t talk about all those empty “completed date” fields, okay?)

Deals

cover of a solder's scoundrel by Cat Sebastian

The Soldier’s Scoundrel by Cat Sebastian

I’ve talked a lot about Cat’s books over the past few years, but it’s been a while, and now’s the perfect time to do it because her first book is on sale! You can hang out with Jack and Oliver for a whole two bucks! Get to know the Turner clan and then just go ahead and dive into the rest of them (you get more than ten books to read next)!

New Books

I know I’m like, always excited about the new week’s batch of books, but this particular one is pretty great. Some of these are sitting right next to me, waiting for me to offer them my time, while others are waving in the distance, calling for me to come for them. I probably won’t be able to resist…eventually.

Her Pretend Christmas Date by Jackie Lau

Julie’s roommate loves to set her up. Like, is certain she can find Julie The One. Julie is still recovering from Unicycle Adrian (the unicycle wasn’t the problem) from years before, but agrees to go on a date with Tom the pharmacist. He’s exactly the kind of guy her parents would love and they do the opposite of hitting it off. But somehow, when she’s talking to her mom a few days after their date, she tells her that he’s her boyfriend. She can just “break up” with him when the time is right, right? Too bad her whole family keeps asking if he’s coming to their family home for Christmas. What do you do when your family won’t let go of the boyfriend you essentially made up? Call up the real Tom and invite him to visit your hometown, of course.

This is pretty fun in all the best Jackie Lau ways, even if Julie is kind of a baffling human that I don’t always understand. Also, all of Jackie’s promo for the book calls Tom “starchy” and I love him for it. He’s my starchy fave. And that cover. Don’t you just love that face?

I haven’t finished it so don’t have a complete list of CWs, but can say that Julie’s relationship with her parents is fraught because of her life and career choices.

Best Women’s Erotica of the Year Volume 6 Edited By Rachel Kramer Bussel

When I saw the list of names involved in this year’s edition of BWEY, I just knew I had to get my hands on it: Naima Simone; Mia Hopkins; Olivia Waite; Zoey Castile; Elia Winters; Katrina Jackson. That’s like, a third of the stories. You aren’t even ready. Are you ready? The theme this time around is “adventure” and boy, do each of the authors take it some interesting directions. 

I should note that not all of these stories have HEAs, but they’re still great reads. 

Okay, then there’s the rest of what’s out this week:

If She Says Yes by Tasha L. Harrison

Santa’s Helper by Shae Sanders

Trapunzel by Tanzania Glover

Deathly Touch by CC Solomon

Burying the Hatchet by AC Thomas

If We Were Perfect by Ana Huang

Son of Krampus by Ellen Mint (I am TOTALLY judging this by its cover but a Krampus Romance WHAT)

Angels in the City by Garrett Leigh

Alicia: His Troublesome Fate by Chencia C. Higgins (if you haven’t read her shifter books, definitely check them out)

Layla by Colleen Hoover (I was hesitant to call this romance but she says it’s if a suspense novel and a romance had a baby so we’ll see?)

The Queen’s Triumph by Jessie Mihalik (I’ve been wondering if there’d be a third book in that series)

An Unexpected Temptation by Sophie Barnes

Tempt by Ainsley Booth

Best Lesbian Erotica of the Year Volume 5 by Sinclair Sexsmith

#Blocked by Savannah Thomas

A Recipe for Pounding My Butt by Chuck Tingle (Yes, he responded very quickly to the whole Colonel Sanders fiasco)


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

So Much Pining

It’s a Monday in December, and that’s about all I can say about it. We’re back to sportsball as a background, so no fun anecdotes today. At some point I’ll finish The King and be able to tell you if it has a HEA (if you’ve watched it, I’ll take that one single spoiler). Otherwise, it’s been quiet on this side of the world.

Let’s talk book world!

News and Useful Links

NPR’s Book Concierge is live and there are some familiar titles there!

Nora Roberts isn’t on Twitter, but she was trending late last week because someone tried to explain publishing to her…on her own blog. Poor Debra has already been meme’d, so if you’ve been wondering why there are tee shirts with “I have personally explained the process to you, Debra” on them, that’s why. 

I might be overly excited about this book announcement specifically because it features an all female mariachi band. Like, yes, I’m happy for the book, but that is super exciting. 

Maureen rounded up some holiday romances for EW.

If you’ve got a little to spare this year, join the Romancelandia Holiday Fairies, or submit a wishlist if you need a little help on your end.

There’s also The Ripped Bodice’s Tamponukkah.

There’s a new holiday movie featuring a romance author who uses a wheelchair and a man who looks just like one of her cover models! It’s a Lifetime movie, which means I don’t think it’s findable if you don’t have access to cable, but it might show up on Hulu?

Christmas BINGO, anyone?   

Deals

Race to a Christmas Reunion by Brenda Jackson

Get a Brenda Jackson holiday novella for 1.99 right now! Race car driver (get it? Race to a reunion? Eh? Eh?) Myles returns to his hometown for a wedding, only to come face to face with the girl he left behind. The wedding brings them together again and again, and their fire still burns. Will they try again? I love Brenda Jackson’s drama, and I am always on the lookout for romances with racer protagonists, so this one sounds like a winner! 

Book Recs

I was making a list of holiday romances for the day job and asked the internet for recommendations for Winter Solstice romances, that were actually about the Solstice and not a Christmas story with random references to the Solstice. I got a few recommendations and was able to start reading them!

Wanting a Witch by Lauren Connolly

Keta is a vampire. She was turned in part thanks to Roe, a nurse who is also a witch. In years past, when Keta was near to death thanks to a vampire attack, Roe called the only vampire she knew to come save the woman, and now Keta is back in town, standing on Roe’s doorstep. Her intention had only been to thank her for saving her life and move on, but there is an immediate connection between the two that neither is willing to move on, even as Roe invites Keta to stay in her home as long as she needs to. And as the Solstice nears and Keta still hasn’t left, both women are afraid their feelings are one sided. 

This is a sweet story about two pretty lonely people who blossom from their exposure to each other. The way they start to fit into each other’s life grows almost organically, and it’s fun to watch them pine. So much pining. I love it. It’s a pretty short read, too, so you can just have a seat and enjoy the quick slow burn (I know that phrase doesn’t make sense but it’s slow for them, okay?). 

CW: Estranged parents; neglectful parents; blood drinking; safe self-injury; on-page sexual activity; hospital-related references; discussion of suicide

Another reader recommended Holly and Oak by R. Cooper, which involves a coven’s darling golden boy and the vaguely outcast rebel who are keepers of the town’s strongest magic and totally in love with each other (but think they can never be together). Or at least that’s how I understand it. I’ll be picking it up soon. I expect more pining in this one, too 😀


PS – Alexis Daria wrote a cute short story called Solstice Miracle but I can’t find a working link to it anymore! Let me know if you’ve read it recently…


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

Behold, The Power of Romancelandia (And Friends)

Happy December, lovely love lovers! It’s officially time for White Christmas (what am I kidding, I’ve watched that movie at least five times this year) and the Hallmark App (which I still need to figure out…), and maybe I’ll see if that ghost romcom with Aisha Dee is still on Hulu…and I guess I should watch Jingle Jangle so I can add it to the “pay half attention” holiday movie rotation. 

Anyway, whatever media you use to keep you company (if you do that kind of thing), I hope you’ve got something worthwhile. Or if you prefer to sit in silence while you work or read, I hope you have a place to do that, too!

Books! We’ve got a lot to cover, including the news from the past week. 

News and Useful Links

I know it’s been almost two weeks, but have you seen this cover for Lucy Parker’s next book, Battle Royal

I’m writing this on Tuesday, so I haven’t seen the final number yet, but after the big Romancing the Runoff auction and the epilogue RTR auction, they were set to donate over $460K to voting rights organizations in Georgia. Behold, the power of Romancelandia (And Friends)!

(Check out the coverage from EW. And Newsweek. And Bustle. And Kirkus. And The Guardian. And Jezebel.)   

If you’re the type who reads winter holiday romances but won’t read a holiday romance before the month starts with a D, here’s a rundown of some new ones to check out.  

And here’s another great list of recs from Nick.

And some more, broken down by various winter holidays.

It’s time to nominate your faves for #readRchat!

Rebekah reminded us of this thread of Indigenous romance authors.

Oh, and Season 2 of Virgin River is ready for your perusal. 

Over on Book Riot

Can you guess what romances are on our favorite books of 2020?

Oh hey, more recs

Have you been reading late at night? Book lights to a rescue!

Deals

The Remaking of Corbin Wale by Roan Parrish

I don’t know how long it will be, but this book is 99 cents, and that dollar is more than worth the comfort and joy you will get from reading this book. It’s got its own bit of pain and angst, because all good Roan Parrish books do, but it’s just so…warm. You’ll settle in with your favorite warm beverage and blink several hours later wondering what time it is and what world you’re living in. 

And this isn’t a deal so much as a heads up: if you subscribe to Kindle Unlimited, An Extraordinary Union is there for the moment! I’m not sure how long it’s been there or how long it will remain, but if you’ve been waiting for a sign to read it, there it is. 

Recs and New Books!

Since we skipped last week’s KB, the New Books list is going to be a bit overwhelming. Just so you know. But first, definite recommendations from last week’s releases.

Just Like This by Cole McCade

In the second book in the Albin Academy series, we return to the school where the Summer Hemlock and Fox Iseya met. While the pair appears, we are mostly in the world of Rian Falwell, the fae-faced art teacher, and his nemesis Damon Louis—the chiseled football coach. They clash about a student, only to discover the kid has been keeping a secret that they need to get to the bottom of. Along the way, each one opens up in ways neither expected. The writing (and the angst) is classic McCade, and his author note about writing Damon, an adopted man of Indigenous heritage, from some of his own experience is so touching. 

CW: passing out (side character); bruises (side character); exhaustion (side character); unprotected sex; children

The Recovery by Nicole Falls

This is the third book in the New Beginnings book, which among other amazing things features women in less common sports—this one is golf! Parker works as an in-house nanny (an au pair? What’s the diff?) while training to make it to the LPGA Tour, and her BFFs have been making fun of her having a crush on her employer since the first book (The Changeup). At the opening of this book, Parker and her boss Kelly have begun a no-strings sexual relationship…or at least. She says it’s no-strings. What the two of them are actually thinking is obvious to everyone except Parker. 

One thing that I like about this book is the fact that we actually get to see Parker working on her golf career. She really loves the game and works hard to bust her way up through the ranks. 

CW: pregnancy (side character); surprise pregnancy; unprotected sex; vomit; children

Those are the only books I’ve finished (though I’m about a third of the way through the audiobook of Alyssa Cole’s newest book), but hoo man do we have a list!

Confessions in B-Flat by Donna Hill (Civil Rights Era romance!)

The Pearl by Tiffany Reisz

Tempted by the Boss by Jules Bennett

Second Chance on Cypress Lane by Reese Ryan

This Time Next Year by Sophie Cousens

Lord Lucifer by Jade Lee

Daddy Crush by A. Anders

Wanting a Witch: A Winter Solstice Romance by Lauren Connolly

A Soldier Under Her Tree by Kathy Douglass

His for Hanukkah by Reese Morrison

The Awakening by Nora Roberts

Being Merry by Meka James

A Warm Heart in Winter by JR Ward (Look, I haven’t picked up a BDB book in years, but Blay and Qhuinn holiday book, what?)

Femme Like Her by Fiona Zedde (WHAAAAAAAAA)

Ten Things I Hate About the Duke by Loretta Chase

How to Catch a Queen by Alyssa Cole

Get It Right by Skye Kilaen

How to Fail at Flirting by Denise Williams

Taking on the Billionaire by Robin Covington (Native hero by Native author!)

Party Favors by Erin McLellan  

Merry Measure by Lily Morton

Stuffed by K Sterling (I was watching Sil read this book on Goodreads and uh…I’m intrigued)

Cowboy Under Fire by Lena Diaz

The Inside Edge by Ashlyn Kane (ex hockey player + ex figure skater = YES)

My Christmas Charade by Melanie Ting

Off Limits Attraction by Jayci Lee

The Way You Hold Me by Elle Wright

A Feast For the Senses by Nicole Falls (your girl has been busy)

All For Show by Courtney Mariah

Operation Fake Relationship by Jay Northcote

That’s…probably enough, right? 

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

Exclusive First Look at THE WISTERIA SOCIETY OF LADY SCOUNDRELS

Happy Monday, folks! I hope you had a good week. If November was any example, we’re just going to fly through the rest of 2020! But first, we’ve got an exclusive first look!

I’m excited to be able to share a bit of one of Berkley’s 2021 romances with with you! In The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels, lady and thief Cecilia leads a charmed double-life…at least until she meets Ned Lightbourne, who has been sent to kill her. The two must pair up in a haring quest to protect the ladies of the Wisteria Society crime sorority, who have gotten on the wrong man’s bad side! This book is not only a historical romance, but it has fantastical elements including flying houses! I haven’t gotten my hands on a copy yet, but it sounds like lots of fun!

Are you ready for a look into India Holton’s debut historical romance?

(Psst! Keep reading for a look at the cover!)

There was no possibility of walking to the library that day. Morning rain had blanched the air, and Miss Darlington feared that if Cecilia ventured out she would develop a cough and be dead within the week. Therefore Cecilia was at home, sitting with her aunt in a room ten degrees colder than the streets of London, and reading aloud The Song of Hiawatha by “that American rogue, Mr. Longfellow,” when the strange gentleman knocked at their door.

As the sound barged through the house, interrupting Cecilia’s recitation mid-rhyme, she looked inquiringly at her aunt. But Miss Darlington’s own gaze went to the mantel clock, which was ticking sedately toward a quarter to one. The old lady frowned.

“It is an abomination the way people these days knock at any wild, unseemly hour,” she said in much the same tone the prime minister had used in Parliament recently to decry the London rioters. “I do declare—!”

Cecilia waited, but Miss Darlington’s only declaration came in the form of sipping her tea pointedly, by which Cecilia understood that the abominable caller was to be ignored. She returned to Hiawatha and had just begun proceeding “toward the land of the Pearl-Feather” when the knocking came again with increased force, silencing her and causing Miss Darlington to set her teacup into its saucer with a clink. Tea splashed, and Cecilia hastily laid down the poetry book before things really got out of hand.

“I shall see who it is,” she said, smoothing her dress as she rose and touching the red-gold hair at her temples, although there was no crease in the muslin nor a single strand out of place in her coiffure.

“Do be careful, dear,” Miss Darlington admonished. “Anyone attempting to visit at this time of day is obviously some kind of hooligan.”

“Fear not, Aunty.” Cecilia took up a bone-handled letter opener from the small table beside her chair. “They will not trouble me.”

Miss Darlington harrumphed. “We are buying no subscriptions today,” she called out as Cecilia left the room.

In fact they had never bought subscriptions, so this was an unnecessary injunction, although typical of Miss Darlington, who persisted in seeing her ward as the reckless tomboy who had entered her care ten years before, prone to climbing trees, fashioning cloaks from tablecloths, and making unauthorized doorstep purchases whenever the fancy took her. But a decade’s proper education had wrought wonders, and now Cecilia walked the hall quite calmly, her French heels tapping against the polished marble floor, her intentions aimed in no way toward the taking of a subscription. She opened the door.

“Yes?” she asked.

“Good afternoon,” said the man on the step. “May I interest you in a brochure on the plight of the endangered North Atlantic auk?”

Cecilia blinked from his pleasant smile to the brochure he was holding out in a black-gloved hand. She noticed at once the scandalous lack of hat upon his blond hair and the embroidery trimming his black frock coat. He wore neither sideburns nor mustache, his boots were tall and buckled, and a silver hoop hung from one ear. She looked again at his smile, which quirked in response.

“No,” she said, and closed the door.

And bolted it.

Ned remained for a moment longer with the brochure extended as his brain waited for his body to catch up with events. He considered what he had seen of the woman who had stood so briefly in the shadows of the doorway, but he could not recall the exact color of the sash that waisted her soft white dress, nor whether it had been pearls or stars in her hair, nor even how deeply winter dreamed in her lovely eyes. He held only a general impression of “beauty so rare and face so fair”—and implacability so terrifying in such a young woman.

And then his body made pace, and he grinned.

Miss Darlington was pouring herself another cup of tea when Cecilia returned to the parlor. “Who was it?” she asked without looking up.

“A pirate, I believe,” Cecilia said as she sat and, taking the little book of poetry, began sliding a finger down a page to relocate the line at which she’d been interrupted.

Miss Darlington set the teapot down. With a delicate pair of tongs fashioned like a sea monster, she began loading sugar cubes into her cup. “What made you think that?”

Cecilia was quiet a moment as she recollected the man. He had been handsome in a rather dangerous way, despite the ridiculous coat. A light in his eyes had suggested he’d known his brochure would not fool her, but he’d entertained himself with the pose anyway. She predicted his hair would fall over his brow if a breeze went through it, and that the slight bulge in his trousers had been in case she was not happy to see him—a dagger, or perhaps a gun.

“Well?” her aunt prompted, and Cecilia blinked herself back into focus.

“He had a tattoo of an anchor on his wrist,” she said. “Part of it was visible from beneath his sleeve. But he did not offer me a secret handshake, nor invite himself in for tea, as anyone of decent piratic society would have done, so I took him for a rogue and shut him out.”

“A rogue pirate! At our door!” Miss Darlington made a small, disapproving noise behind pursed lips. “How reprehensible. Think of the germs he might have had. I wonder what he was after.”

Cecilia shrugged. Had Hiawatha confronted the magician yet? She could not remember. Her finger, three-quarters of the way down the page, moved up again. “The Scope diamond, perhaps,” she said. “Or Lady Askew’s necklace.”

Miss Darlington clanked a teaspoon around her cup in a manner that made Cecilia wince. “Imagine if you had been out as you planned, Cecilia dear. What would I have done, had he broken in?”

“Shot him?” Cecilia suggested.

Miss Darlington arched two vehemently plucked eyebrows toward the ringlets on her brow. “Good heavens, child, what do you take me for, a maniac? Think of the damage a ricocheting bullet would do in this room.”

“Stabbed him, then?”

“And get blood all over the rug? It’s a sixteenth-century Persian antique, you know, part of the royal collection. It took a great deal of effort to acquire.”

“Steal,” Cecilia murmured.

“Obtain by private means.”

“Well,” Cecilia said, abandoning a losing battle in favor of the original topic of conversation. “It was indeed fortunate I was here. ‘The level moon stared at him—’”

“The moon? Is it up already?” Miss Darlington glared at the wall as if she might see through its swarm of framed pictures, its wallpaper and wood, to the celestial orb beyond, and therefore convey her disgust at its diurnal shenanigans.

“No, it stared at Hiawatha,” Cecilia explained. “In the poem.”

“Oh. Carry on, then.”

“‘In his face stared pale and haggard—’”

“Repetitive fellow, isn’t he?”

“Poets do tend to—”

Miss Darlington waved a hand irritably. “I don’t mean the poet, girl. The pirate. Look, he’s now trying to climb in the window.”

Cecilia glanced up to see the man from the doorstep tugging on the wooden frame of the parlor window. Although his face was obscured by the lace curtain, she fancied she could see him muttering with exasperation. Sighing, she laid down the book once more, rose gracefully, and made her way through a clutter of furniture, statuettes, vases bearing long-stemmed roses from the garden (the neighbor’s garden, to be precise), and various priceless (which is to say purloined) goods, to part the curtain, unlatch the window, and slide it up.

“Yes?” she asked in the same tone she had used at the doorstep.

The man seemed rather startled by her appearance. His hair had fallen exactly as she had supposed it would, and his shadowed eyes held a more sober mood than before.

“If you ask again for my interest in the great North Atlantic auk,” Cecilia said, “I will be obliged to tell you the bird has in fact been extinct for almost fifty years.”

“I could have sworn this window opened to a bedroom,” he said, brushing his hair back to reveal a mild frown.

“We are not common rabble, to sleep on the ground floor. I don’t know your name, for you have not done us the courtesy of leaving a calling card, but I assume it would in any case be a nom de pirata. I am all too aware of your kind.”

“No doubt,” he replied, “since you are also my kind.”

Cecilia gasped. “How dare you, sir!”

“Do you deny that you and your aunt belong to the Wisteria Society and so are among the most notorious pirates in England?”

“I don’t deny it, but that is my exact point. We are far superior to your kind. Furthermore, these are not appropriate business hours. We are ten minutes away from taking luncheon, and you have inconvenienced us twice now. Please remove yourself from the premises.”

“But—”

“I am prepared to use a greater force of persuasion if required.” She held up the bone-handled letter opener, and he laughed.

“Oh no, please don’t prick me,” he said mockingly.

Cecilia flicked a minuscule latch on the letter opener’s handle. In an instant, with a hiss of steel, the letter opener extended to the extremely effective length of a rapier.

The man stepped back. “I say, there’s no need for such violence. I only wanted to warn you that Lady Armitage has taken out a contract on your life.”

From across the room came Miss Darlington’s dry, brusque laugh. Cecilia herself merely smiled, and even then with only one side of her mouth.

“That is hardly cause for breaking and entering. Lady Armitage has been trying to kill my aunt for years now.”

“Not your aunt,” he said. “You.”

Well I’m ready! And nothing has me more ready than this cover, designed by Katie Anderson with art by Dawn Cooper!

Isn’t it delightful! So much purple; so many weapons! Read more about The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels on Berkley, and follow India Holton on twitter, instagram, and facebook.

(Transparency note: I am publishing a book with Berkley in 2022. (!!!))


See you for an extra-long Kissing Books on Thursday!

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!