Year: 2008

  • Holding out for a hero …

    So, Nalini Singh is running a pretty cool contest over at her blog to celebrate her February release, Mine to Possess. Basically, she wants folks to talk about their favorite romance heroes.

    My favorite hero? The Beast in Beauty by Robin McKinley. Technically, it’s a young adult novel, but who cares about technicalities? At its heart, the book is a beautiful love story. Why do I like the Beast so much? Because he’s kind and gentle and recognizes Beauty’s, well, beauty long before she does. And he’s willing to die so she can go back to her family and be happy. You can’t get much more romantic than that.

    Second runner up: James Bond. Yeah, I’m a Bond girl. Go figure. 😉

    What about you? Who’s your favorite romance hero?

  • ·

    An interview with yours truly …

    Karen Healey over at Girls Read Comics was nice enough to take the time to interview me about Hot Mama and various other things. Go check it out.

    While you’re there, be sure to leave a comment in the forum or ask me a question. I’m going to give away two autographed copies of Hot Mama and one of Karma Girl to three random commentators. Along with bookmarks, of course. Because you can never have enough of those.

    BTW, Karen recently acquired an agent for her young adult urban fantasy novel. Way to go Karen! :ww:

  • 854 and counting …

    Finished Now and Then by Robert B. Parker.

    This is the latest book in his long-running Spenser series, about a Boston private investigator. In this one, an FBI agent hires Spenser to find out if his wife is cheating on him. She is, but that’s not the worst part — she’s also letting classified information slip to her lover, who’s the subject of a federal investigation. When people start dying, Spenser steps in to make sure justice is served.

    I’ve read every Spenser novel out there. The stories are simple and don’t really vary much from book to book. Spenser gets wind of something shady. He stirs things up, and engages in witty banter with his lover, Susan, and best friend, Hawk. And he always gets the bad guy in the end. But I always read the next book, mainly because I like Parker’s style so much. His books are about ninety percent dialogue and extremely easy to read. You wouldn’t think someone could tell a great story using so much dialogue, but Parker always pulls it off. One day, I want to write a book like that.

    So, thumbs up.

    Up next: Not sure. I really need to buckle down this weekend and make a good dent in my Assassin revisions. 🙄

  • They’re back …

    Anybody else watch Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles last night on Fox? I thought it was pretty good. Interesting characters. Lots of action. Lots of explosions. Even a dream sequence.

    I’ve seen all the Terminator movies, and I think it’s a pretty cool concept. But it also makes my brain hurt, the way most time travel stories do. Especially the first movie. My question is this — if the love interest from the future hadn’t come to save Sarah, would John have ever been concieved/born? How can the future John send someone back to save him if the guy is also from the future and he’s also John’s father?

    Augh! Stop the brain pain!

    But I’ll keep watching the show. Also got to get my Prison Break fix tonight, too. 😉

    What about you? What shows are you watching right now?

  • 853 and counting …

    Finished Ice Blue by Anne Stuart. This is the third book in her Ice romantic suspense series.

    This one is about Summer Hawthorne, a museum curator determined to keep a valuable Japanese ceramic bowl out of the hands of a cult leader named Shirosama. What Summer doesn’t realize is that Shirosama wants the bowl as part of a ceremony where he will unleash nerve toxins and other nasty things on the world. Also on the trail of the bowl and Summer is Takashi O’Brien, an agent for the Committee, a group which prevents doomsday events from happening. Takashi saves Summer from Shirosama’s goons, even though he has orders to kill her. And it goes on from there.

    I like a lot of things Stuart does in this one, including the absolute, over-the-top evilness of the villain and Summer’s trickery (she has a bowl forged rather than let Shirosama get his hands on the real one). Stuart is also really good at bringing back characters from previous books in the series and weaving them into the action. Peter and Madame Lambert are always a treat to see again.

    But I really, really didn’t like the hero in this one. Takashi comes off as cold and hard and completely unyielding. I know he’s supposed to be a tortured agent of the Committee who’s forced to make hard choices that eat away at his soul. But Taka starts to kill Summer half a dozen times, and he’s not terribly remorseful about it. His treatment of Summer is also rough and rather callous. There’s a scene in an airplane bathroom that really made me want to shoot him. 👿

    I liked Summer’s character a lot better. Her backstory was interesting, and she has her own inner demons to deal with. But I didn’t really connect with Summer, mainly because she stays in a self-imposed, calm fog through most of the book. It’s hard to really get into a character who’s always five seconds away from hysteria. Although, given what she goes through, Summer has plenty of reasons to be hysterical.

    Another thing that bothers me about Stuart’s books in general (but especially this one) is the abruptness of her endings. It’s action, action, action. Then, the bad guy is defeated, and the hero and heroine go their respective ways. So far, so good. But then, at the very end, the hero comes back in for usually just a page or two. The heroine sees him, falls weeping into his arms, and that’s where the book ends. There aren’t any grand declarations of love between the two — Summer and Taka in this case – or any sense of them having overcome their inner problems or being better people. It just … ends.

    So, thumbs down on this one.

    Up next: Probably nothing for a while. Must do my own Assassin revisions!