Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Tracy's review: The Secret to Dating Your Best Friend's Sister by Meghan Quinn

The Secret to Dating Your Best Friend's Sister


💖💖💖💖

I can always rely on Meghan Quinn to provide a humorous story with terrific characters and some great feels.  

I loved Bram.  He is such an entertaining mix of arrogance and goofiness.  He is unapologetic for his cockiness, and he displayed it with so much humor, I couldn't hate him for it.  And his interactions with his two friends, Rath and Rouke, are so funny.  

Bram has had feelings for his best friends sister, Julia, since college.  He asked her for a date then and was shot down for various reason.  Now is his chance.  He comes up with this crazy scheme to show Julia that he is not the same guy.  His strategy almost goes sideways, but he manages to bring it around by showing Julia his true heart.  

Julia is a bit harder to warm up to.  She is very focused on her career and appears a bit too linear at first.  However, you see that she is not used to leading with her heart as opposed to her head.  Julia doesn't think Bram is seriously interested until he lays a kiss on her.  Then she is convinced they won't work because of their match results. 
(Honestly, the color test sounded pretty cool and I wanted to see where I would be placed).

Bram's determination that Julia is his one, (and his obsession with milkshakes and tube socks) and Julia's willingness to let her walls down and really see Bram (and her tolerance of his shenanigans!) make for another great romance from Meghan Quinn.


















Sunday, January 27, 2019

Tracy"s Review: Sydney (The Dimarco Series, # 2) by Jennifer Hanks

Sydney (The Dimarco Series, #2)

💖💖💖

Again with the mixed feelings.  While I did like Sydney more than I did Lucy, I did have conflicting thoughts.  I totally get why Sydney shies away from relationship.  She has a pretty crappy past.  Especially where Danny is concerned.  But she seemed a bit too meek to me.  Always looking down and whispering.  Have a spine for goodness sake!  Then she gets mad at Cam for lying to her, with reason, but then hypocritically does the same thing.  Cam was probably the only who could help and make sense of the information she was getting.  But she decided to not tell him.  

Cam also caused some mixed feelings.  He was truly interested in Sydney and was caught between wanting to finish his case and pursuing Sydney for real.  i really felt for him in this dilemma.  But i really didn't get why he had to cut off his family.  They didn't even know if he was alive!  And he had to have known that because he was in contact with one brother.  That was pretty crappy.  

Despite what it may seem, I actually did like it.  Jennifer Hanks is pretty good at intrigue.  The story lines a pretty interesting, even though there are some weak plot points.  And boy can she drop a cliffhanger like nobody business!  














Sunday, January 6, 2019

Jennifer's Review: Twelve Slays of Christmas and Twas the Knife Before Christmas by Jacqueline Frost



I meant to be timelier with this, but the holidays got away from me. Around the end of November, I went searching for Christmas themed cozy mysteries and I stumbled upon what I'm hoping to be a new series. They were relatively quick reads so I'm going to review them here together. Both are the Kindle version.


Twelve Slays of Christmas by Jacqueline Frost

💖💖💖💖


Admittedly, this book took me by surprise. It had good reviews, but that happens all the time with books that I end up disliking. That didn't happen here, and I was pleasantly surprised.

Nursing the hurt of a broken engagement – two weeks before the Christmas Eve event, no less – Holly has packed up her life in the big city (Portland, Maine) and moved back to Mistletoe, Maine and her parents' Christmas tree farm. Her efforts to drown her sorrows in her mother's baked goods and the annual Reindeer Games that take place on the tree farm are interrupted by the murder of the Historical Society president – a woman who was seen haranguing several people before her demise, including Holly's dad. To make matters worse, it seems to have happened on the tree farm, putting a dent in the holiday business and creating suspicion in the locals. Of course, much to the chagrin of Evan, former Boston Homicide Detective and the new Sheriff in Mistletoe, Holly takes it upon herself to find whodunnit, to save Christmas and the family tree farm. 

The mystery kept me guessing, which is, on its own, a reason to like this book. There are red herrings aplenty, charming characters and a lot of humor. It's a "clean" read, in that there is no sex or even coarse language, but it's not in an artificially prim or uptight way. Also, with a town name like Mistletoe, and it taking place largely on the Christmas tree farm, you can expect a lot of Christmas. But if you can handle a Christmas-y theme at all, it's an all-around great read that you will enjoy anytime of the year.


Twas the Knife Before Christmas by Jacqueline Frost
💖💖💖


It's Christmastime again in Mistletoe, Maine, and the small, historic town has another murder. The town's Christmas tree lighting is the scene, and the large container meant to be filled with peppermints for a 'guess how many' game has an extra something not so festive in it. This time, Holly's baker friend Caroline is in the frame, as the victim was her handsy blind date, whom she loudly and publicly rebuffed. Luckily for Holly, the victim, despite being handsome and wealthy, was not a great guy, and there are many more suspects for her to check out, even with the threatening notes and ominous peppermints.

This one, too, I didn't know whodunnit until the end. There were many of the same characters and humor, as well. There's a lot to like here, but I do have to say, I enjoyed it slightly less than the first for a few reasons. Holly's love interest, who made a bold gesture in the end of the last book, cooled off almost immediately for a reason later disclosed, but I can't help wondering about an entire year passing that way. I'm not sure the reason was good enough or even really sensical, either, for him to basically ignore Holly for so long. Also, there was a sort of … supernatural element that was unexpected and I think would have been better if left in a way that would allow for non-supernatural explanations, as well. The ambiguity would have been better for the book's genre, though I'm not complaining overmuch as I enjoy a little magic – it just seemed out of place in something that had previously been grounded in a non-magical reality. In any case, it was still another enjoyable read. 

I'm hoping there will be more in the series, but it's hard to tell. The second book ended with a lot of neatly tied Christmas bows, which gave me a sense of finality. For now, though, I guess I'll be glad to have found these two and keep an eye out and my fingers crossed for more.