Showing posts with label xpresso book tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label xpresso book tours. Show all posts

Monday, October 6, 2014

BOOK REVIEW: Charming by Krystal Wade



SYNOPSIS

They say what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, and that's great . . . as long as you don't die. 

Sixteen-year-old Haley Tremaine had it all: top-notch school, fantastic family, and a bright future, but all of that changed when an accident tore her family apart. Now, an alcoholic father, a bitter younger sister, and a cold headstone bearing her mother’s name are all she has left.

Chris Charming has it all: a powerful CEO for a father, a prestigious school, and a fortune at his fingertips, but none of that matters when he lands a reputation as a troublemaker. Struggling to follow in his father’s footsteps, he reaches out to the one person he believes truly sees him, the one person he wants: Haley.

Little do they know someone's determined to bring the two together, even if it means murder.


~~~oOo~~~

REVIEW

I'm ashamed to admit it.  I judged a book by its cover.  With the name of the book being Chris's family name and a woman tied to a chair, I went to a whole other place with what I thought the book would be like.  I wasn't even sure I wanted to read and review the book, because I assumed it would be erotic fiction with a bondage bent, which is not my favorite.  Silly, silly me.

The inability of victims of domestic abuse to pull away from their abusers is well-documented, for adults as well as children.  Haley Tremaine's mother died years ago.  She had taken Haley out of the house, away from her alcoholic spouse (Haley's father) and they were going to pick up Jocelyn, Haley's younger sister, to move to a new house of their own.  On the way there, the car was hit by a hot-rodding kid who was drunk.  Haley's mother knew she was dying and made her promise not to tell her sister about the abuse, as the sister was the one family member the father still liked and she in her turn, adored her.  So Haley became the target of the abuse, because she had the nerve to look a lot like her mother.  Her plans of college evaporated, because she was afraid that with her gone, the father would finally turn on her sister.  So she stayed...she took the abuse.

That would be enough ... if it ended there.  But it doesn't.  Now, I could go in to detail (I'm really too good at that), but that's not the purpose of a review.

Ms. Wade does a superb job with complex characters.  People are complex, so I figure characters should be the same.  Everyone has a public self and a private self.  Haley's public self is a girl who has trouble adjusting after her mother's death; her public self shoulders wa-a-y too much responsibility for one so young.  Chris has a player public self; in private, he's really a caring young man who is loyal to his friends and family.  The 'bad guy' - he's got more than one public self and his private self?  *shudder*  Those commutes must really be boring, because there are so many ways the 'Big Bad' redefines twisted.

Charming draws you into Haley's predicament with many story threads.  Some have cheerful colors and a silken texture - like the growing relationship between Haley and Chris.  Some of the threads are rough, natural fiber - like Haley's relationship with her father and sister - irritating at times but it's part of who you are.  And some of the story threads were rusty barbed wire - like the time she got a pink envelope containing her father's finger (the one with his wedding ring).

Sure, Charming is not about celebrities or ex-military or CIA.  It's about ordinary people - ordinary young people.  But it's as good a thriller as any I've read this year.  If you like thrillers and YA's, Charming should be near the top of your TBR list.  If you like thrillers, this could help you get over any issues you may have with YA.  If you like YA, you will like this book ... and probably want to protect or get help for Haley, her sister and her friends.

~~~oOo~~~

AUTHOR INFORMATION




Krystal Wade is happily married to the love of her life (don’t gag) and raising three beautiful children in the gorgeous state of Virginia. They live just outside Washington, D.C., and every day she wakes up to find herself stuck in traffic trying to get there.

The horrid commute gives Krystal plenty of time to zone out and think about her characters in full, brilliant details (she’s a safe driver; don’t worry). Stories give her a way to forget about the sometimes smelly strangers sitting next to her on the fifty mile trek into town (she picks up hitchhikers every day. True story. Check out www.slug-lines.com if you don’t believe us).

Krystal has been a part of organized hitchhiking for nearly fifteen years, but that’s just one small aspect of her oh-so-large life. When she’s not working, commuting, or chasing after her three children (four if you count the man), you can usually find Krystal outside talking to her chickens like they’re the cutest things in the world (they are), or training her amazing dogs how to herd said chickens (which they love), or curled up on the sofa with a good book (why can’t that be 100% of the time?).

~~~oOo~~~

GIVEAWAY!


a Rafflecopter giveaway

(Disclosure:  I received an e-copy of this book from the author and publisher via X-presso Book Tours.)

Monday, September 29, 2014

BOOK REVIEW: The Sweetest Thing You Can Sing by C.K. Kelly Martin


SYNOPSIS

Losing weight over the summer gains Serena some popularity, but it also means discovering first-hand the pains of being a fifteen-year-old girl in a world that both sexualizes and shames young women. After narrowly avoiding exploitation in a shortlived relationship, Serena aligns with a new friend who was the victim of an explicit image that was shared at school. When Serena finds herself in a relationship with a new guy, she is surprised to find a different set of expectations. But have her previous experiences damaged her too much to make it work? As Serena struggles to find who she is as opposed to who she is expected to be, she begins sighting Devin – her older brother who disappeared months earlier.

Friday, September 19, 2014

BOOK REVIEW: Leaving Liberty by Virginia Carmichael



SYNOPSIS

At eighteen, Daisy McConnell left Liberty, Colorado and never looked back. The only bright spot in a childhood of neglect and loneliness was the town librarian, Marie. Now settled as a teacher in sunny Fresno, Daisy does her best to forget everything about Liberty including her drunk father, her MIA mother, and the town she hated with every beat of her heart.

Lane Bennett’s life as a small town cop is pretty close to perfect. He’s got his dog, a pretty date when he needs one, and plenty of time to fish on the weekends. No other place can compare to his hometown and he’s happy to devote his life to keeping the folks of Liberty safe. When Marie passes away, Lane knows one of the best parts about living in Liberty is gone, along with the old Carnegie library. It needs repairs the city can’t afford and the city managers won’t pay the new flood insurance. It’s too bad, but safety comes first.

When Daisy comes home for Marie’s funeral and hears the only safe place she knew as a child is going to close, she refuses to let it happen. She hatches a plan to save the old library, run the summer reading program, and keep Marie’s legacy alive.

She once vowed never to come home and he’s vowed never to leave. Daisy and Lane discover together that true love happens when you least expect it and you should never say never in Liberty.


~~~oOo~~~

REVIEW

I was born at a wide spot in the road in Pennsylvania (ok - they called it a town).  I spent most of the first ten years of my life in a small town in Maryland.  Then my family moved to Salt Lake City.  I had a child, got married (yes, in that order) and we moved to DFW. Eight years, and two children later, we all moved to rural Kentucky (near my husband's father's family).  This was, for me, the best move of my life.  So, I understand Daisy's desire to leave a small town, even though I'm on the opposite side of that fence.

Maybe it's because I'm older and a parent now, but I LOVE a good, clean romance, and Leaving Liberty provides that wonderfully.  I almost feel like a mother (or older female relative) to Daisy or Lane, delighted at seeing them getting to know each other and wanting to give them an affectionate shove once in a while to get past the awkward moments in a growing relationship.

And the other major story component (keeping the library going) is going to get a hearty thumbs up from me.  People in small towns have the same basic needs as do people in the largest cities.  We just don't have the same tax base, which leads to things like not being able to pay the flood insurance on the library.

I don't know if there are plans for a continuation of Daisy and Lane's story together, but I would love to read one!

~~~oOo~~~

AUTHOR INFORMATION



Virginia was born near the Rocky Mountains and although she has traveled around the world, the wilds of Colorado run in her veins. A big fan of the wide open sky and all four seasons, she believes in embracing the small moments of everyday life. A home schooling mom of six young children who rarely wear shoes, those moments usually involve a lot of noise, a lot of mess, or a whole bunch of warm cookies. Virginia holds degrees in Linguistics and Religious Studies from the University of Oregon. She lives with her habanero-eating husband, Crusberto, who is her polar opposite in all things except faith. They’ve learned to speak in short-hand code and look forward to the day they can actually finish a sentence. In the meantime, Virginia thanks God for the laughter and abundance of hugs that fill her day as she plots her next book.

~~~oOo~~~

(Disclosure:  I received an ecopy of "Leaving Liberty" from the author and publisher via Xpresso Book Tours in exchange for my honest and unbiased opinion.)