BEA'S BOOK NOOK "I can't imagine a man really enjoying a book and reading it only once." C. S. Lewis “If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.” ― Oscar Wilde

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Excerpt from Identity Crisis & A Guest Post by Author Grace Marshall


Please welcome Grace Marshall to the Nook today. She's touring blogs in celebration of her new contemporary romance, "Identity Crisis".

GUEST POST


Thanks so much for having me over at Bea’s Book Nook to talk about my new novel, Identity Crisis. It’s such a pleasure to be here. I’m sure we’ve all undergone some sort of identity crisis at some point in our lives, and let’s face it, in the world in which we live, we’re always juggling roles. We all wear lots of hats, and some of those hats are drastically different. For those of us who are writers, we can add to that identity crisis the identities of all of our characters, with whom we live twenty-four seven when we’re writing. For us, it sometimes gets a bit confusing as to who’s real and who isn’t. I doubt if I’m the first writer to fall in love with one of her characters. For those of us who are avid readers, who doesn’t want to crawl inside their favourite characters and embrace them and embody them and live out their adventure – especially when there’s hot romance involved and the hero is larger than life, sexy, flawed and in need of a heroine to make it all better? Isn’t that a big part of what makes reading so wonderful? 

Since writers are also readers, that means we’ve got LOTS of possibilities. Our imaginations allow us to be so many different people in so many different situations. With Identity Crisis, which is book two of the Executive Decisions trilogy, I wanted to play around with the idea of all the people who live inside each of us, and I wanted to seriously up the ante. 

Garrett Thorne has a unique identity crisis. Garrett writes very popular romance novels, but he doesn’t write them under his own name. He writes them as Tess Delaney and, because Garrett is very good at keeping his secret life secret, every reader of romance is speculating wildly about the mysterious, reclusive Tess Delaney, who no one has ever seen. Everyone, however, has seen business tycoon, Ellison Thorne’s, bad-boy younger brother, Garrett, and everyone is convinced of what a ne’er do-well he is. 

Garrett okay with that. It covers his romance-writing tracks nicely, and he manages to juggle living as two people very well until Tess Delaney is nominated for the coveted Golden Kiss Award for romance writing, and suddenly there’s a real threat that Tess’s true identity will be discovered. That kind of exposure, Garrett doesn’t want, so against his better judgement, and because he has little choice, he hires PR person extraordinaire, Kendra Davis to play the role of Tess Delaney for the ceremony. But Kendra’s identity crisis is even bigger than Garrett’s. Throw in a stalker and a love-hate relationship sizzling enough to set the whole Northwest Coast on fire, and let the adventure begin!

Here’s a little teaser.

Excerpt:

She cocked her head and looked at him in a way that made him think she was expecting to find something, something he was hiding. But just when he was beginning to feel defensive, she shoved her iPad back into her bag and stood. ‘Alright then. That’s all I need today.’

‘Wait a minute.’ He said following her to the door. ‘Don’t we need to … I don’t know … Practice? I mean I barely know you and you said we need to be comfortable with each other.’

She turned so quickly he nearly ran into her. ‘You don’t have to be comfortable with Kendra Davis, Garret. You have to be comfortable with Tess Delaney, and I promise you will be.’ She looked up at him with a smile that might have been teasing, might have been a smirk. Whichever it was, the small alcove where they now stood suddenly seemed even tighter fitting than it actually was. ‘If it’ll help,’ she said, ‘you can kiss me good-bye.’

‘That’s not very professional,’ he managed, feeling like the breath had been squeezed out of him as he fumbled to help her into her jacket.

Her smile was warm, reassuring. ‘Actually, in our case it’s very professional.’ She rose on her toes and brushed a kiss across his lips. ‘Very professional, indeed.’

And before she could pull away he scooped her into his arms, feeling her little gasp of surprise as he took her mouth. What had only been intended to show her he was up for it, very quickly changed to something else, and suddenly they were clawing at each other, hands grabbing collars and hair and anything else to get closer to each other. Clothing brushed against clothing until friction mounted and body heat radiated through. And God, her mouth was sweeter than anything, full lips so soft one second and so hard and demanding the next, parted to allow him access to her tongue and her hard pallet, to her warm humid breath coming faster and faster as her fist clenched in his hair and her own tongue battled for supremacy. And her body, Jesus, her body was hard pressed and tight and mounded and undulating and he’d never felt so much fire just beneath the surface. 

But she was Kendra Davis. And just when he was ready to scoop her up and carry her off to his bedroom. Just when he was ready to hold her captive there for the next three of four or more hours, she stepped back with a little sigh and caught her breath. She raised a hand to her lips, almost but not quite covering her teasing smile and said. ‘You get an A Plus for practice, Garrett Thorne. You just convinced the hell out of me.’ Still breathing hard, she ran a hand through his hair, brushed a quick kiss across his lips and let herself out, leaving him leaning against the wall barely able to stand. For the very first time, he allowed himself to think that not only might they be able to pull this whole charade off, but he might actually enjoy it. 

*********************************************


Blurb from the author: 

PR rep extraordinaire, Kendra Davis, is elated when she gets the chance to work for her hero, reclusive, romance novelist, Tess Delaney. Her elation is short-lived when she discovers that Tess is none other than Garrett Thorne, the bad-boy brother of business tycoon and eco-warrior, Ellison Thorne, who is engaged to her best friend, Dee Henning. Kendra blames Garrett for the comedy of errors that nearly destroyed their relationship. Garrett doesn’t like Kendra either, but he’s desperate. His alter-ego, Tess has been nominated for the prestigious Golden Kiss Award. No one knows who Tess really is, and he needs Kendra to play Tess for the awards.
When Tess is stalked by a rabid fan, the two unite to protect her identity. With Kendra, the body and Garrett the soul of Tess Delaney, is there room in this strange mĂ©nage for romance? Can a woman who doesn’t exist understand their hearts even better than they do?

Publisher: Xcite Books
Genre: Romance, Contemporary
Series: The Executive Decisions Trilogy #2
Formats: ebook, paperback
Length: 352 pages, 705 KB
Release Date: January 17, 2013
Buying Links:  Amazon  Barnes & Noble  Kobo

About the author ~

Grace Marshall lives in South England with her husband and the growing gang of hooligan birds who frequent their feeders. When Grace isn’t busy writing something sexy and romantic, she’s busy digging in her ever-expanding veg garden or walking across the British countryside. She finds inspiration outdoors in nature, and most of her best story ideas come to her while she’s walking or gardening.

Grace is the author of the fast paced, quirky Executive Decisions Trilogy  published by Xcite Romance. The first and second novels in the trilogy are out now.

Grace Marshall’s alter-ego, K D Grace, writes critically acclaimed, best-selling erotic romance. Whether it’s sexy romance or romantic sex, between The Graces, there’s a story for you.

Find Grace online:

Monday, March 25, 2013

Review of Written in Stone by Ellery Adams

Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime
Series: Books By the Bay Mystery #4
Format Read: Paperback
Release Date: November 6, 2012
Buying Links:  Amazon  Barnes & Noble  The Book Depository

Blurb from goodreads:
When Munin Cooper, known as the Witch of Oyster Bay, warns Olivia Limoges that death is coming, neither of them realize that it is the older woman herself who will soon be found dead. And Olivia’s instincts tell her that something—or someone—more sinister than a mystical force is at play… Olivia has a lot on her plate preparing for the Coastal Carolina Food Festival. When she hears the news of Munin’s untimely death, however, finding the murderer takes priority. The witch left behind a memory jug full of keepsakes that Olivia knows must point to the killer—but she’s got to figure out what they mean. With handsome Police Chief Rawlings by her side, Olivia starts to identify some of the jug’s mysterious contents—and finds its secrets are much darker than she suspected. Now Olivia must enlist the help of the Bayside Book Writers to solve the puzzle behind the piece of pottery and put an end to a vengeful killer before any more damage can be done…

Bea's Thoughts:

Although this was my first book in this series, it's the second book by this author that I've read. I wasn't keen on that book but this was more my speed.

This book has more depth and more complexity than many cozies, and also more explicit sex. The latter wasn't a problem for me but it's unusual in a cozy so you've been warned. :) I hadn't read the previous books but for the most part that wasn't a problem; there were a few times when I was confused but that never lasted long as Adams deftly wove in backstory without too much info dumping. However, there were huge spoilers for previous books, huge spoilers, so consider reading in order.

I had trouble at first getting into the story but that was a mix of the story and me; I've found recently that I have trouble with the beginning of most books I'm reading and I'm not sure why. The book contributed by jumping write into Olivia reflecting on events from a previous book, presumably the last one. Once we moved past that and got into the story, I was engaged. There are actually several mysteries - one concerning Olivia's mother and relationship with the dead woman Munin, the death of Munin, one concerning Olivia's father, and the attacks on a pair of siblings, one of whom works for Olivia at one of her restaurants.

Once the story got moving, I enjoyed it and was curious where it was going. I didn't peg the killer nor did I catch onto the other mysteries except for the one involving her father. That one I saw very early on, it was neon-obvious. There are lots of twists and turns, and as I mentioned more depth than I associate with cozy mysteries. It took me a while to warm up to Olivia but eventually I did and I expect I'll read more in the series. 

I borrowed this from my local library.

Cover Reveal: Hard As It Gets by Laura Kaye

Romance author Laura Kaye has a new romance coming out in November called "Hard As It Gets" and today I have the cover for you!

Laura is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of nearly a dozen books in contemporary and paranormal romance. Growing up, Laura’s large extended family believed in the supernatural, and family lore involving angels, ghosts, and evil-eye curses cemented in Laura a life-long fascination with storytelling and all things paranormal. She lives in Maryland with her husband, two daughters, and cute-but-bad dog, and appreciates her view of the Chesapeake Bay every day.

Find Laura online:

Website | Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Newsletter SignUp



Blurb from the author:
Tall, dark, and lethal... Trouble just walked into Nicholas Rixey's tattoo parlor. Becca Merritt is warm, sexy, wholesome-pure catnip to a very jaded Nick. He's left his military life behind to become co-owner of Hard Ink Tattoo, but Becca is his ex-commander's daughter. Loyalty won't let him turn her away. Lust has plenty to do with it too. With her brother presumed kidnapped, Becca needs Nick. She just wasn't expecting to want him so much. As their investigation turns into all-out war with an organized crime ring, only Nick can protect her. And only Becca can heal the scars no one else sees. Desire is the easy part. Love is as hard as it gets. Good thing Nick is always up for a challenge... 


Publisher: Avon
Series: Hard Ink #1
Genre: Suspense, Erotica, Romance
Format: ebook, paperback
Length: 384 pages
Buying Links:
Amazon Kindle Pre-Order

Amazon Paperback Pre-Order 

Nook Pre-Order Coming Soon

Add to Goodreads


Sunday, March 24, 2013

Sunday Book Share #29

I'm participating in Feed My Reader Friday hosted by I Am A Reader, Not A WriterThe Sunday Post, hosted by Kimba the Caffeinated Book Reviewer, and Stacking the Shelves, hosted by Tynga's Reviews. These  memes allow book bloggers the chance to share print and digital books they've received, and different posts and events at their blogs.

More frigging snow. Sigh. At least I got a day off out of it. Although the foot of snow wasn't the best thing for the daffodils that were blooming. :( I like daffodils, they're one of my favorite flowers. Despite the snow I had a busy week at work, with prepping for our annual art show and taking a workshop on play. At home, I've started doing some spring cleaning and organizing, and shared some books with a friend. 

The Week In Review







Take Control of Your TBR Pile Challenge:  Holiday Buzz by Cleo Coyle
Written in Stone by Ellery Adams - review to come

Odd phrase that led to the blog:  "shadow of the damned 3d model" - I think this might refer to a photo I posted of a 3D lung model.
"circus things that make the letter g" - this probably refers to an alphabet book I reviewed several years ago.

Upcoming This Week

Blog Tours - Guest Post by Romance Author Grace Marshall
Giveaway & Spotlight on Alpha Me Not by Jianne Carlo
Spotlight on Ixeos by Jennings Wright
Cover Reveal for As Hard As It Gets by Laura Kaye 

Reviews - Written in Stone by Ellery Adams

BOOKS - a very good week for books :)

Won - Kindle


 I won this at Cozy Mystery Book Reviews as part of their anniversary celebration.

Bought - Kindle


Last week the print version arrived and this week the ebook version arrived :)

Donated


These were donated by the author to my school. They're different age levels but all appropriate for my school. 

Review - Print



I received an ARC and the cover isn't nearly as pretty as the finished book.


This is part of a blog tour next month. The author also donated books to my school.


This is also for a blog tour next month.

Review - Kindle




Also for a blog tour, in May.

Kindle Freebies


Heavy on the review books and light on the freebies, I think I'm achieving some balance. :D

Leave a link so I can stop by and visit!

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Review of Etiquette and Espionage by Gail Carriger

Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Series: Finishing School #1
Format Read: Hardcover
Release Date: February 5, 2013
Buying Links:  Amazon  Barnes & Noble  The Book Depository

Book Blurb from goodreads:
It's one thing to learn to curtsy properly. It's quite another to learn to curtsy and throw a knife at the same time. Welcome to Finishing School.
Fourteen-year-old Sophronia is a great trial to her poor mother. Sophronia is more interested in dismantling clocks and climbing trees than proper manners—and the family can only hope that company never sees her atrocious curtsy. Mrs. Temminick is desperate for her daughter to become a proper lady. So she enrolls Sophronia in Mademoiselle Geraldine's Finishing Academy for Young Ladies of Quality.
 
But Sophronia soon realizes the school is not quite what her mother might have hoped. At Mademoiselle Geraldine's, young ladies learn to finish...everything. Certainly, they learn the fine arts of dance, dress, and etiquette, but they also learn to deal out death, diversion, and espionage—in the politest possible ways, of course. Sophronia and her friends are in for a rousing first year's education.

Set in the same world as the Parasol Protectorate, this YA series debut is filled with all the saucy adventure and droll humor Gail Carriger's legions of fans have come to adore.


Bea's Thoughts:

I very much enjoyed Carriger's Parasol and Protectorate series. I'm not a big YA reader so I wasn't sure if I'd read this series but the book trailer, the cover and the blurb sold me. I knew I had to give it a shot.

While I enjoyed this book, I didn't love it. It had moments of humor in the same vein as the Parasol Protectorate but it was missing something. The world building was adequate, I enjoyed seeing the younger Sidheag and Genevieve, but there were unlikely coincidences and a few too many predictable events. The resolution of the mystery was rushed, humorous, and a little too neat.

I did like the details Carriger used; if you haven't read the Parasol Protectorate series, you're not at a loss. Carriger fills in the details and fleshes out the world nicely. There are even more Steampunk elements (though the scene in the school's records room was over the top and unnecessary. A more typical filing system would have made more sense.) There's a definite British feel to the story and Carriger still has the knack for sending up customs and mores.

I enjoyed the character of Sophronia and seeing the changes in her though her type is nothing new - tomboy, free-spirited girl is thrust into social situation, ie finishing school, that she's not prepared for, makes enemy of popular girl, befriends the underdogs and people in low paces, etc. Still, she's interesting and enjoyable and so is the cast of characters. I liked that Carriger does us show more of what life is like for both the lower upper-class and the actual lower-class which we didn't really get in the Parasol Protectorate except for occasional glimpses of Ivy's life. I was also happy to see the inclusion of a person of color. Right now Soap (it's a nickname) is mostly cardboard but I have hopes he'll develop as the series goes on. I enjoyed this book enough that I'll definitely pick up the next book.

Some fun quotes:
"Mummy and Daddy want him to be an evil genius, but he has his heart set on Latin verse."..."Face it, Pill, you're disappointingly good." "Oh, I like that! And you're so evil? Why, you want to get married and be a lady." (Later we get references to levels of evil geniuses such as discourteous genius and spiteful genius.)
"We had lessons in knife-fighting from a werewolf." "Werewolf? Bully! We don't have any supernaturals here. It's quite a dearth in the deanship if you ask me. Any reputable school ought to have at least one vampire professor. Eton has three. You lot are only girls, you've a vampire and a werewolf. Jolly unfair, that's what I call it." 
"Algebra was far more interesting when it was a matter of proportioning out mutton chops so as to poison only half of one's dinner guests and then determining the relative value of purchasing a more expensive, yet more effective, antidote over a home remedy."

I borrowed this from my local library.

Friday, March 22, 2013

The Werewolf - From Gentleman to Beast, A Guest Post by Laura Lee Nutt & A Giveaway



 
Let me begin by first thanking Bea, Jax, and Liz for having me on your blog today. I appreciate it immensely. And thank you to your readers for stopping by and staying to talk a little of werewolves. (We love werewolves here! It's how the three of us met. ~ Bea)


Contrary to what might seem logical, many of the earliest versions of werewolves in literature were gentlemen. Only over time did prominent werewolves become more grotesque, mindless, and bestial.



Perhaps the most well known of these early tales, one you may have been forced to read in English class, is Marie de France’s 12th century lai, Bisclavret. While Marie de France mentions the existence of savage versions in the first stanza, her story focuses on a noble baron of Brittany who just so happens to be a werewolf married to a conniving wife.



The werewolf in Bisclavret must shed his clothes to become the wolf, and he resumes his man’s form by donning them again. When his wife learns of his secret, she steals his clothes so he is forced to remain a wolf and takes off with a knight who has long been in love with her.



The king later discovered Bisclavret as a wolf and is so impressed with his gentleness and nobility that he takes him home. Later, when Bisclavret sees the knight his wife ran off with, he attacks the man. Then, when Bisclavret sees his wife, he rips off her nose. After, the wife confesses, and Bisclavret is returned his clothes, lands, and normal life.



Interestingly, though I never once learned this in a literature class, amputation of the nose was a common practice for adultery. So rather than exhibiting primal brutality, Bisclavret punishes his wife in the manner common in his time.



Similar versions to Bisclavret appear throughout the period, and while there seems to be some acknowledgement of the more bestial werewolf, they rarely take center stage. Yet over time, the werewolves featured in literature became more and more evil and monstrous. I could go into much more depth on this, but it would make this post far too long. What we think of more as the traditional werewolf really developed in the early modern centuries and into the twentieth century.



Yet at the end of the twentieth century and into our current time, the werewolf took another shift. Rather than continue to allow the impulses of the moon to blind him with demonic rage, he has reacquired some of his gentlemanly manner. In truth, the werewolf of our time often straddles the divide between gentleman and beast in a compelling balance. Stories like Weathering Rock by Mae Clair or Beauty and the Werewolf by Mercedes Lackey, both of which feature a werewolf trapped in a mindless, destructive state, are the exception.



In my book, Red and the Wolf, I embraced a concept of lycanthropy where the instincts of the beast reign. However, in homage to Marie de France’s concept of the werewolf, which I also find compelling, the human can dominate the wolf and compel it to docility. . . at least to a certain extent. In fact, it is that struggle between instinct and culture, that battle between the wild and the civilized that I imbued in my shifters. To me, the conflict is one of the major reasons werewolves are so fascinating. Let them be a bit of a gentleman and a bit of the beast.



GIVEAWAY DETAILS: Commenters on today’s post, March 22, will be entered in a drawing to win an e-copy of my new release, Red and the Wolf, in either epub, mobi, or pdf, whichever they choose. I will announce the winner in the comments on this post on Saturday, March 23.



In addition, check out my March Giveaway on my blog (running March 11-31) for a variety of prizes including a lovely copy of Andersen and Grimms’ fairy tales and Little Red Riding Hood’s basket complete with an assortment of goodies to brighten anyone’s day, even a grandmother whose house has just been burgled by a werewolf. For more details and how to earn points, visit my website. To earn your first point, comment on today’s post. (Comments will count in both giveaways if made on March 22. If made after, comments will only be added for a chance to win in the March giveaway.)



Do you prefer your werewolves be more gentlemanly or beastly? Who is your favorite werewolf in literature? I like my werewolves a little bit of both but leaning slightly more toward the beastly. My favorite werewolf is Adam Hauptman from Patricia Briggs’s Mercedes Thompson series. (One of my favorite UF series! ~ Bea)


    *******************************************************************




Thank you Laura! I learned some new things about werewolf history; learning new information is fun. :)


In elementary school, Laura Lee Nutt checked out every fairy tale in the library so often, if she picked something else, it was cause for curiosity. Even into adulthood, she nurtured her imagination with stories of fairies, true love, monsters, especially werewolves, and the fantastic, but she wondered what happened after “happily ever after.” 

This curiosity and catching an illness one chill winter day brought her before a blank computer screen, desperately desiring to write something new. Heinrich, Blanchette, and Karl swiftly spun the tale you just read. Laura feverishly typed, barely fast enough to keep up. 

Once Red and the Wolf was born, other stories coalesced in Laura’s mind, Beauty and the Beast, Sleeping Beauty, Hansel and Gretel, all asking the same questions: What might happen if the end of these tales wasn’t really the end? What were these characters’  lives really like after the harrowing events of the fairy tale? What if achieving true love and happiness required something extra? Thus came the idea for this series, Embracing Ever After, where achieving true love requires something special and happily ever after isn’t really the end.

Find Laura online:

Website
Blog
Twitter
Facebook
Goodreads

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Publisher: Lyrical Press
Genre: Urban Fantasy, Romance
Format: ebook
Length: 318 KB, 160 pages
Release Date: March 4, 2013
Buying Links: Lyrical Press Barnes and Noble  iTunes  Amazon




So, how do YOU like your werewolves?