Like I Pictured is the prequel to Novakās Heather Bay series. It introduces the reader to the series setting, a richly detailed and glorious scenic Yorkshire coastal landscape, complete with horseshoe bay, quaint village and hilltop castle.
We meet several of the series regulars including the two main characters here in this romance. Thatās the fantasy author Anders Flynn, whoās from Heather Bay and photographer Bastian Roche, whose home it will become because of Anders.
I liked this story because of the introduction Novak gives us to Heather Bay. We see it in far greater depth and detail than we do in the later stories. From the moment Bastian views it from his car to his walks through the streets exploring shops and looking at the residences, itās an closeup portrait of this village we wonāt see again. And itās one that will resonate with the reader, making Heather Bay come alive in every way.
Like I Pictured also does an amazing job in defining both main characters. Each totally different in from their age and outlook, Novak is able to create fully dimensional personalities with realistic backgrounds and depth of character. Itās easy to believe in them , their professions, and the manner in which they interact with each other.
Alas, itās the last the suffers from the shortness of length here. While Novak has written a splendid location, given the story two fully realized, well defined characters, itās in their relationship development where the romance faltered.
It starts off promising. I love the texts between them as they get closer to each other. But for the majority of the exploratory conversations and important part of the relationship, it happens āoff page ā. So the other aspect is one of a āmeet, one night, move inā sequence. It just doesnāt do justice to the rest of the story and foundation work.
Rushed? Uh yes.
Like I Pictured (Heather Bay, #0.5) by Charlie Novak lays the groundwork for the series and the group of people that will be the found family of friends to find their HEA in this magical world Novak has created.
In truth, itās a lovely romance and I enjoyed it. Itās just I had read the other books and backtracked to this one so I knew the voices and had them as an established couple already.
For me this is Heather Bay light compared to the other stories. But I wouldnāt have readers who are fans of the series or author miss out on it. Itās very lovely and a recommendation for you.
Bastian Roche is lonely and drifting. While he adores his photography job, he still hasnāt found a place to call home. Until he takes a chance photo of the elusive fantasy author Anders Flynn and makes a life changing connection.
Anders is grumpy, reclusive, and convinced he’s better off alone. But that doesnāt stop him from replying to Bastianās emails. When Anders suggests Bastian scouts out his hometown of Heather Bay as a shoot location, Anders realises heās falling fast for the man who brings sunshine into his life.
As Heather Bay pulls them together, both men must make a choice. Can a chance meeting give them the life theyāve always pictured?
Like I Pictured is a contemporary MM novella and is a prequel to the Heather Bay series but can be read as a standalone. Itās got a sweetness, steam, a small, British seaside town, and some grumpy cats.
Itās been 6 months since I read Stitched Under Fire, the 2nd book in this series, so it took me awhile to remember what had happened to the characters and were we were in the various investigations.
Turns out Taken Under Fire itās a very politically and racially charged atmosphere where xenophobia is ramping up, fueled by the revelations that the paranormal body parts could heal humans. Black market for paranormal body parts is off the charts.
Agents Maddox and Tristan have settled into a happy relationship, both personally and professionally. Tristan is still exploring his new, rare shifter identity as a Phoenix paranormal because no one is exactly sure what that means, and the P.I.S. (Paranormal Investigations Service) and the Police Department are coming together to try and figure out why their missing persons cases are overlapping.
The authors have so many storylines threading through their series and the above details donāt even include the personal aspects of Maddoxās and Tristanās lives. Those are woven into the story too and will, obviously, have enormous impact on the main plot and main characters as the investigations and revelations continue.
And yes, thereās some whoppers as far as both shocking revelations and heart wrenching drama collide here at the end.
I love the universe that OāConnor and Lyn have created here that feels so very current and still so unearthly at the same time. Racism, or any ism appears , historically to have no ending time frame. That Xenophobia might be universal is an idea the authors are working with effectively, but also building in a horrific mystery/conspiracy that will continue forward into the next book.
Itās laid alongside the romance relationship of Tristan and Maddox, which takes a traumatic hit.
My issues with the story are that itās so packed with drama and plot lines that the ending just stops. It doesnāt try to tie up anything but sets a path for the characters to move to the next stage in the investigations. Investigations that are getting murkier, higher up, and with greater danger for everyone involved.
So if thatās the sort of finish that leaves a reader a little frustrated, especially with no new book in sight, then perhaps you might want to consider waiting until the series is complete and binge reading it at that time.
This is a jam packed terrific paranormal thriller but itās hard to consider it totally satisfying because of the ending. Love the characters, the shocking twists and emotional scenes. But it wasnāt enough. Close but no.
So Iāll wait for the next one to be released. And ponder my own reading decisions.
I love the series and will recommend it. You decide how to read it.
In a city divided, Agents Maddox and Tristan must protect the paranormal, unearth the truth, and prevent darkness from claiming all.
In the aftermath of the devastating destruction that befell the city six months ago, an ominous shroud now looms over them. Paranormals are vanishing at an alarming rate. As fear and suspicion cloud the minds of the city’s inhabitants, calls for drastic measures grow louder, igniting tensions between supernatural beings and humanity.
Maddox and Tristan receive a mysterious visitor who unveils a hidden truth: the supernatural realm they were told had been obliterated is not only intact but still has people living there. As the agents delve deeper into the enigma, they find themselves being threatened by an unknown opponent.
With the city teetering on the brink of an all-out war, the agents must act swiftly. They form an unprecedented alliance, uniting humans and paranormals in a new task force, breaking barriers that were once thought insurmountable.
Can they untangle the web of deception and find the missing paranormals before it’s too late? Only time will tell if their
courage and resilience will be enough to save the city and prevent a catastrophe that could alter the fate of both realms forever.
Samuel, fourth of the Regency Crofton Earl series, can be seen as a terrific companion story to his fatherās book, Charles, as itās events run simultaneously with those of that story.
Or if you prefer, as a standalone, since Cohen has done a marvelous job filling out the backstory of Charles and Timothy (Captain Thorne), both of whom are major characters here, as well as Aunt Amelia, and the rest of the foundation knowledge started in Charles.
Thereās a topic that should be addressed in all the stories that often bothers some readers but itās a common practice during this time period. Thatās of taking sexual partners outside of the marriage, mostly because the marriages here are arranged by the families for reasons of politics and in their own royal interests . As long as they provide a heir or two, and their actions are discreet, other liaisons are likely and even expected. Some readers donāt want to read a book that has a ācheating ā element but historical fiction has parameters that make this quite difficult to follow. This story doesnāt try and it shouldnāt.
I enjoyed Samuel, not as much as I adore his father , Charles, but Samuel is definitely a man apart from the typical Redbourn in some respects. Heās less flamboyant, less aggressively dramatic, but against Charles, who could be?
Cohen instead builds layers of regret, pain, disappointment, and anger into Samuel. A man whoās had to deal with losses from his life, over and over. And without a support from the people who he needs most.
While I didnāt know Samuel well in his fatherās book, we flip the perspective, and get a new sense of who this damaged man truly is. The drug fog he accepts rather than deal with the reality of the betrayal heās just discovered, thatās believable.
Itās also an element that needs a trigger warning. A section of this story deals with drug addiction and withdrawal. If this is a trigger for you, please be aware.
The entire escapade with Charles working to create a wicked Earl scenario around Samuel? Priceless and very sexy. Loved this whole thread.
The only aspect of Samuelās story I found lacking is Hugo Cavalier, the object of Samuelās obsession and then love. Hugo is sort of there in the narrative for a couple of chapters. Then , heās mentioned throughout as the one man Samuel canāt forget about. Then he reappears about 70 percent of the novel later, and , to my mind, Hugo never becomes a fully realized character.
Everyone else here is an animated, lively, breathing person, fully of personality. Yet Hugo remains sort of a one-note, beige person, one I cannot help but wonder why Samuel is so enthralled with.
That lack of chemistry, or two dimensional characterization keeps their relationship from truly mattering to me and this story from going from good to great.
It doesnāt help that thereās a fantastic couple there as comparison. Charles and Timothy are right there as couples goals, chemistry igniting, showing exactly why Samuel and Hugo come off as lacking.
But those parties! Oh my! Who wouldnāt want to be invited! So decadent, so delicious, so Redbourn!
I adored this!
Yes, Iām recommending Samuel, itās great to see that family again and see how it all plays out. While not a huge fan of Hugo, I am of the rest! Thereās a new modern Crofton on itās way so enjoy the Regency era now!
The Crofton Universe :
š·The Crofton ChroniclesāHistorical (Elizabethan/ Early Stuart):
ā The Actor and the Earl
ā Duty to the Crown
ā Forever Hold His Peace
ā The Love and the Anger Historical (Elizabethan/ Early Stuart)āSebastian/ Anthony 10 years together
š·The Earls of CroftonāHistorical: (Different erasācan be read as individual standalone novels):
ā Anthony, Earl of Crofton (Early Stuart)
ā James, Earl of Crofton (Restoration)
ā Charles, Earl of Crofton (Regency)
ā Samuel, Earl of Crofton (Regency)
š·The Modern CroftonāContemporary:
ā Saving Crofton Hall
ā Making History at Crofton Hall
ā Below Stairs at Crofton Hall
ā Getting Married at Crofton Hall
ā Starting Again at Crofton Hall
⦠Coming Out at Crofton Hall- TBD
š·Standalones in the Crofton Universe
⦠Much Ado About Lady Macbeth Note: Sebastian Hewel is a minor character
Something extra for Crofton! Modern Crofton Short Story:
⦠Ben and the Mistletoe (set the Christmas after Saving Crofton Hall)
Only the selected few get to attend the special evenings hosted by Samuel Redbourn, 9th Earl of Crofton, the Hellcat of the Ton.
Despite his reputation, Samuel is not the man everyone thinks he is. He has lost a lot in his young life, and after recovering from his addiction to laudanum, itās time to make the Ton take notice. Thereās one thing he wants above all, Hugo, the only man heās ever loved. But Hugo Cavalier was sent away by his father after he was caught in bed with Samuel, and when he returns to England several years later, there is no guarantee they can rekindle what they once had.
Historical gay Regency romance. A standalone novel in the Crofton Universe.
Please note: contains scene of period drug use, addiction, and recovery.
With Uncle Fonzoās return and an eviction notice on Yuriās cabin door, things are getting cramped at the Penn house, when Dixon and Yuri move back in.
The extremely tight quarters are exacerbated by Dixonās sudden arrival and his cousinās new boyfriend. House hunting is a must.
But as with everything, thatās when things start getting interesting and going awry. Magically.
Price has so much fun with the awful flats and descriptions thereof that Yuri and Dixon visit in hopes of finding their own place. Sheās says in her authorās notes they reflect some actual places that she saw or lived in in her life. Oh my!
The hunt for a place bit here got a bit lost in the shuffle of the story. Unusual for the author. It felt a bit muddled instead of a clear picture of magic going wrong.
But it ends well and with the usual path to the next book.
These are such enjoyable books and the couple just continues to grow in their relationship and surrounding family.
Iām recommending this and the series as far as Iāve read. Itās great ride! Binge read for your pleasure!
The ABCās of Spellcraft series:
ā Quill Me Now #1
ā Trouble in Taco Town #2
ā Something Stinks at the Spa #3
ā Dead Manās Quill #4
ā Last But Not Lease #5
⦠Donāt Rock The Boardwalk #6
⦠What The Frack? #7
⦠Present Tense: A Spellcraft Christmas short #8
Yuri knew his idyllic beachfront cabin wouldnāt last foreverābut he wasnāt expecting to come home to an eviction notice. And with Uncle Fonzo back in town, Dixonās attic apartment is getting crowded.
Unfortunately, real estate in Pinyin Bay is surprisingly scarce. Good thing thereās an up-and-coming crowdsourced experience called Hunting Party that really moves the needle on the traditional rental acquisition model.
Okay, it really is as obnoxious as it sounds. But rentals are so few and far between, Dixon and Yuri are willing to give it a shot.
Pitted against a group of apartment hunters, the guys must compete with the other hopefuls to land a new place. Itās clearly all just a cheesy sales ploy, and the apartments they view are real dumps.
And yetā¦theyāre also oddly appealing.
Since all the rentals are in the falling-down neighborhood known as Scrivener Village, it stands to reason Spellcraft is involved. But when exposing the magic could leave Dixon and Yuri without a roof over their heads, can they really afford to be so picky?
The ABCs of Spellcraft is a series filled with bad jokes and good magic, where MM Romance meets Paranormal Cozy. A perky hero, a brooding love interest, and delightfully twisty-turny stories that never end up quite where youād expect. The books are best read in order, so be sure to start at the beginning with Quill Me Now.
āLight Up the Lamp: To score a goal in hockey, and thereby set off the goal lamp behind the netā
ā Light Up the Lamp by Kit Oliver
I love hockey romances so to see this story by Kit Oliver was a welcome surprise. Itās a terrific contemporary sports romance and addition to this genre. Oliver clearly knows the sport of hockey and team dynamics, which are displayed throughout the game and novel by the locker room behavior and behind the scenes maneuvering of management and players.
I was uncertain at first by the choice of Gil Roussin, NHL center, of the hockey family of a famed NHL player, as the only narrator. Primarily because Gil is so focused on his career that his perspective and his personality comes through as both narrow and oblivious that it makes him hard to connect with at first.
The man we start to see reflected back at the readers from his family doesnāt match up with the one in Gilās head. Not the image of the one brother who doesnāt follow the family occupation, or the mother who is reticent about the overbearing idolized hockey fatherās role in his sonās life. Thereās a disconnect between the way Gil is looking at the way heās behaving and treating people and the reality of the situation.
And that matters because most readers wonāt be down on the side of Gil Roussin. Even when his career seems to be tanking, and heās sent to the worst team in the NHL.
I have to admit, the descriptions of the Sea Lionās training facility is everything! From the rust to the puddles and dripping water, I mean , Iād run. Itās a fabulous bit of work by Oliver here, emotionally laying out a team so in financial shambles that its training facilities is an absolute believable nightmare.
And for the first time, maybe the reader starts to feel something for Gil, even with his awful attitude.
Sebastian Martin who we met earlier In Baltimore has his issues as well. Although both men were close friends and more, now thereās a huge gap between them that needs sorting out.
Sebastian isnāt exactly a stellar character, although Oliver tries hard enough to make it work. Communication isnāt great for either man. Not in the past , and apparently not in the present.
Sebastian makes several poor choices when it comes to dealing with Gil as a new player both as his new manager and as his former friend/lover. His refusal to communicate with Gil is as frustrating to read as Gilās inability to widen his outlook on his team and life.
So Oliver had to work to make this story happen and it does, eventually. Primarily because it starts with Gil finding a new attitude and place with the Sea Lions. Then with Sebastian deciding to invite Gil into his private life and the history of his life after they separated.
Light Up the Lamp by Kit Oliver is a realistic HFN ending, a sweet story that would serve well as the first book in a new series about an upcoming NHL team, the Sea Lions.
As a standalone I feel that the ending is missing another chapter. But as a fan of this genre and hockey, I think Oliver did a good job with giving us a realistic team and characters we come to appreciate. Well worth the read!
Gil missed his first chance with Sebastian. Now, he has one shot to try again.
Gil Roussinās goals for his hockey career donāt involve playing for the worst team in the league, so when heās sent to the San Francisco Sea Lions, Gil will do whatever it takes to get traded.
But the Sea Lionās coaching staff has other ideas for him, and among them is the last person Gil expected to see again: Sebastian Martin. Once Gilās childhood best friend, and his first flame, it’s been a decade since Sebastian drifted out of his life. Now, Gil needs to convince his ex-boyfriend and current coach to help him onāand offāthe ice.
Can Gil and Sebastian work together to get Gil traded? Or will so much time together rekindle the very relationship Gil has spent years trying to forget?
Light up the Lamp is a steamy, m/m romance novel. If you like the hope of second chances and the joy returned passion, then youāll love this exciting hockey romance as Gil and Sebastian banter, bicker, and flirt their way back to each other.
Gateway Catastrophe is the almost finale for Louisa Masters Ghostly Guardians series and it had a lot of ground to cover for a book about the end of the world.
At the end of Conduit Crisis, a higher demon, Marc has arrived from the Otherworld, as they are calling the realm trying to break through to Earth through the portals. Heās here to save his realmās species and world from the mad leader, Cato, thatās coming for Earth.
Marc has a complicated and messy relationship with quite a few of the people at the estate as heās been back and forth between his world and theirs often trying to figure out how to stop the planned invasion.
Masters has brought in all the couples, including the young brothers of Connor and Gabe, Ian and Matt, whoāre studying at Franklin U (Mr Romance). We have the great ghosts, now including Tomās Italian grandmother added into the mix, a few new disposable hunter characters, the odd townspeople, and the cast is about at overflow levels.
Sometimes thatās great here but occasionally itās a bit too much for the storylines to handle for clarity sake. The main povās here are Gabe the demon hunter, and Tom, the part-time cab driver with the ghostly Italian grandmother who rides with him . Tom (a childhood friend of Skye) has been unaware until recently of the existence of the paranormal world that now threatens theirs. Tom had a terrific backstory that we donāt get enough of, a homophobic Italian family, a childhood deep friendship with Skye that includes Skyeās fatherās basically āadoptingā him into their family. A closeted adolescence for Tom that almost destroyed him. Thatās a lot of emotional baggage to unpack.
That itās a end of the world quickly dealt with conversation is understandable but, hmmmm, itās an example of the types of narrative choices Masters had to make here when looking at the huge amounts of information, storylines sheād created (sabotage, mysteries, betrayal, paranormal universes, chemistry problems, wars, good vs bad vs grey, portals etc) , the need to complete college degrees if the world might be ending, and romance!
Sometimes itās successful and other times itās too many people, too many voices , and situations that are overpowering the very huge theme . The baddies are coming, the world is ending. What are we doing?
The suspense and anxiety should be over the top here towards the end, the reader on the edge of their proverbial seats. But, for me , at least, it starts to head the other direction.
By the time Cato, the high demon whoās the bigger bad, itās almost anticlimactic. When the battle is engaged, we see whatās happening from Gabeās perspective , which deals with the portals. The actual battle and fighting? The stuff that makes the adrenaline rush and the heart rate spike? Nope, that a āas told toā afterwards.
Thatās my biggest issue with this story. Itās the popped balloon we were hoping to do ourselves only for someone else to get to it before us. The element of anticipation that is never going to happen.
When we get back to the scene itās over. And the characters fill other characters (and the readers) in on what happened.
From an authorās standpoint, I can see where writing about this part of the story might have meant that the book went on for several more chapters. But wouldnāt that have been worth the payoff? Emotionally?
Or less portal, more the actual physical fighting?
I donāt know. The climatic scenario and the revelations felt unbalanced. And unsatisfactory. After all that hefty exposition, all that tons of information and huge cast of characters, thatās the way it ends? With a battle off the page? A narrative whimper?
There is a sweet payoff for everyone involved but itās still not grounded enough in the narrative to be an emotional element. To have that kind of reaction you need to have the reader be involved in the actual situations that require a resolution. We werenāt.
A plus here is the romantic relationship between Gabe and Tom, with the āend of the world ā supplying the necessary energy for them to get themselves together and go for the chance of a life together. And Tom, he was a great surprise and success as a character. I wish we could have seen more of him. Supplying Tom with being a Tendo master and then not utilizing this fully in the climax seems like a waste.
Thatās this story. Sometimes too much, and sometimes not enough. Often at the wrong times.
And thereās another book coming because Masters isnāt finished yet with these characters and universe. Itās with Ian and Marc.
So does that make this an almost finale? Or the new book a side story.
Not sure but itās seems about right for the series and Gateway Catastrophe, a story that doesnāt really seem to have an core ending in itself.
So overall, itās a jammed packed paranormal end of the world story, with a lovely romance. Tons of interesting elements, some great characters (as always adore the ghosts and the insufferable higher demon Marc), but I felt that some of the immense complexity of that theme (nothing bigger than ending the world) got lost in the shuffle.
Perhaps it was who got chosen as the final narrator (Gabe versus Tom) or which field of action the author chose to concentrate on, either way, itās my personal opinion it was the less interesting path to go down.
Iām still recommending it for those fans of this series and the author. If you havenāt read the series, then this book will probably not make any sense to you. This series must be read in the order that they were written for the events, relationships, and situations to make sense.
I live a simple, small-town life. Helping with the family restaurant, my side gig as a ride-share driver, hanging with my best friend, making the most of the extra time with my ghost grandma. The only exciting thing to happen to me in the past year was when Gabe moved to townātoo bad Nonna scared him off. Itās hard to impress a guy when your dead grandmother calls him the devil.
The last thing I expect when I pick up a ride-share client and take him to Mannix Estate is that heās a demon. An actual, breathing, can-kill-me-with-a-thought demon. That night blows my simple life apart and changes everything. Turns out, ghosts arenāt the weirdest things out there, my best friend and Gabe are both part of this alternate world, and thereās a big bad demon who wants to end us all. Whatās a small-town boy to do but roll up his sleeves and join the fight to save the world?
Working side by side with Gabe reminds me just how much I liked him when we first met⦠and the feelingās mutual. As the clock counts down and we both struggle with personal issues, itās good to know thereās someone to lean on. But I donāt know if our tenuous connection can survive the hell thatās coming and see us through to the other side.
Black Flagged (A Lights Out Novel) by Emma Jaye is a book that had me waffling over the rating because Black Flagged is actually two different novels, one thatās a tad more successful than the other.
Unfortunately, the better one doesnāt really have much of anything to do with racing but rather with past murders, current murder attempts, and the mercenary brotherhood, the orta, which are the featured elements and characters of Emma Jayeās other series, Lies.
While that series is severely darker than this (and comes from a different perspective), much of this story is about Drenās character, his code , and utter allegiance to the orta, and his brothers in the organization. Who we meet, and interact with, enough to make us understand a tiny bit about what that must entail. Dark, dark, dark.
I was intrigued by Dren Elezi the orta janissary, the orta (mercenary brotherhood ) and the whole fact that the Neumann family had this criminal history to them. That Walter Neumann, CEO of Neumann Industries , owner of Neumann F1 is also one of Europeās top illegal arms dealers. Really, that needed expounding on.
And that Karl Neumann, the nephew, aka Karo, was a thief, homeless, and has a murky history . Thereās so much here and yes, it all went into the plot, making for a lively and often chaotic storyline. I really enjoyed it.
As far as Karl Neumann, the one the readers have come to know. The arrogant, bully of a driver everyone has grown to hate in every book, race by race, through the same repeated āepisodes ā, this is where Jaye does a great job at incorporating her story back into the Lights Out universe.
We get , each scene , word by word, as they have played out , over each other book the same way but now flipped, and with a startling twist.
Thereās a new backstory , a perspective weāre now seeing to Neumannās actionās , often repugnant interactions with the other drivers. And it puts Neumann in a whole new light. Not only his actions, but how they are seen and appreciated by his owner/family. Itās all about the strategy, maneuvering for publicity, and positioning for success. For himself, primarily, and the team.
Itās especially true when revisiting the scenes that had Lennox in them. That dynamic was so incredibly tilted towards Lennox as the one being victimized. Having it flipped around and visualized through the lens of Kurt puts an astonishing spin on things. Where it realistically comes down outside of both is probably somewhere in the middle.
Jaye has some strong racing elements here. The racing is well researched. I was fascinated by the information about how the race bays were set up according to team finishes. That the worst place team had a āwalk of shame ā past all the other teams to get to their section of the building on the track. That has to rub it in constantly that fact you and your team suck that year.
And there was that infamous race where one driver goes up in flames. Kurt gets the blame. But this time we see that race from inside the car. Big difference.
However, just as weāve gotten settled in a racing mentality with Kurt, the team, and the strategy, Jaye whisks her storyline around and into the direction of murder and sabotage.
Thatās a great tale in itself. But it becomes a whole different story. Their romance, the orta, the mystery, the sexual nature of their relationship, and even Kurtās background is more tightly coupled together here than it is with the racing aspect.
Eventually, all the threads roll back, not to racing itself but we do get back to business, but not without a few more surprises with Lennox.
With all these many plot lines, well researched facts, and great elements, Iām not sure why it doesnāt work together more smoothly than it does. Black Flagged, as entertaining and as wild a ride as it was, still feels like two separate journeys. A race and then another for the emotional connections and romance factor.
That ending doesnāt quite work either. Thereās a two – year contract to deal with, then a new contract. Itās feels very rushed and inconsistent with the way the rest of the book and series has been handled.
I liked Black Flagged. I would have loved it if the author could have decided what story that wanted to tell exactly, a race story or a new orta themed book. Whatās occurred is a combo of the two, neither successful completely.
Will a Black Flag end love before it leaves the starting line?
Dren is a mercenary, not a babysitter, yet protecting an F1 ābad boyā from his own recklessness is his next contract. The media darling everyone loves to hate is annoying as hell and a target both on and off the track. Staying close is the only way to protect Karl from himself and others, but the forced proximity reveals the man behind the uncaring, flippant mask. In public and private, Karl craves attention, but it’s not Drenās job to provide it. But Dren canāt help falling for Karlās provocative passion, and he shouldnāt because when the contract ends, heāll return to the organization that holds his soul.
Karl avoids people he canāt trick, charm, or buy, and his new bodyguard falls into that irritating category. But before he knows it, Drenās imposing presence becomes his seatbelt in the rocky, perilous world of F1 because thereās genuine concern and interest behind the gruff exterior.
When a fiery crash gets Karl suspended for dangerous driving, can the pair find his mysterious enemy before Karl loses his career and Dren?
This M/M romance from Emma Jaye features an arrogant F1 driver with a hidden past and a bodyguard who is in way too deep. Set in the high-octane world of Formula 1, it features fast cars, spectacular crashes, heated rivalries, and of course, a HEA.
Each book in the Lights Out collection is a standalone story, and the books can be read in any order.
Kudos to Finley for including her trigger warnings at the beginning of the story instead of making her readers hunt for them or discarding them altogether. I always appreciate a author who does this for their readers.
In Atlas, the third of the Mike Bravo Ops series, the warnings apply to a secondary character whoās a victim of domestic assault and abuse.
Thereās an authorās note also on a main characterās pov on sex workers but, honestly, I donāt see that a perspective that changes over time due to character development was necessary, or triggering.
Could be wrong though.
Atlas is a member of the Mike Bravo Ops team sent under cover to discover whoās stealing from an owner of a strip club, said owner being a bit of a criminal himself. The job has a murkiness about it from the beginning that not all the team is happy with. Especially Atlas whoās been assigned the job of bartender, wearing the barest of bottoms, and getting groped by the clientele as well. Accused by the team of being judgmental, this isnāt a job heās comfortable with.
Finleyās characterization conveys all this information well on Atlas but at the same time doesnāt make him feel like heās being condescending. Instead, heās stuck trying to figure out why the people are there , their lives and motivations. You might want to shake him but heās a good person. A really ginormous person. Who quickly becomes fixated on the stripper on the pole dazzling everyone in front of him.
Thatās Lemon, who loves the power he possesses when heās on stage or dancing for clients privately backstage. But thereās more to Lemon, and the life heās living. Secrets heās keeping.
I liked the dynamic between Atlas, who seems powerful in so many ways but unsure in others, and Lemon who has a inner strength and power not easily seen but a outer vulnerability and beauty that draws people to him.
The story has some nice details and twists to it, especially in regards to the main characters and their relationship.
A aspect of the story that didnāt do much for me was that element that this job was supposed to be Atlasās chance to prove himself able to fill a leadership position, second in command to Travis, their boss. Domino, the team member in that role is āretiring ā from their unit to have a family and Atlas is the one being considered to replace him.
Thing is nothing about Atlasās actions here point towards him acting like he is ready for such a role. Not that Domino acted in the best interests of the team in accepting this job, but Atlasās had no choice in anything here except go along with the decisions made by others. With the exception of vouching for Lemon when the situation called for it.
So Iām perplexed as to how this element of the story works or doesnāt work, in my opinion. It feels like it was just written in to justify the fact that the author had Domino leaving and needed some additional āframeworkā for him. Just an afterthought sort of aspect of the story.
The rest is strong, but not without its flaws. Thereās two characters left without being accounted for, including one who had a major role here.
Atlas is being referenced as the third book of three but it in no way feels like a finale, especially with those loose ends left dangling at the end of this story.
Also thereās still so many men of Bravo Ops without partners. Like Zeus, Decaf, or Romeo , I think. Even though Domino was written off due to matrimony happiness and a transfer to a linked agency, chances are he will pop up again. So Iāve no idea if this is a finale or not. As a series it doesnāt come across as complete.
Iāve enjoyed all three books with Iris still my strong favorite. Iām recommending this series to date for fans of Eden Finley, those who love conflicted main characters, with a bit of suspense and action thrown in.
Working undercover at a strip club is not my usual kind of job. If it werenāt a great opportunity to show the Mike Bravo team I can run my own op, I wouldnāt have agreed to it.
When my boss asks me to befriend the biggest gossip in the establishment, the person who knows everything, Iām even more reluctant. Because that happens to be one of the dancers. The only dancer to catch my attention in all the wrong ways.
I need to be professional or I will never prove Iām leadership material.
Only problem is, the guy with the stage name Lemon makes me want to be anything but professional.
LEMON
Iām sick of the new bartender throwing dirty looks my way. Heās as judgmental as he is hot, and letās just say heās really judgmental.
I donāt know why heās working here if he looks down on us dancers so much. He could bartend at a regular club.
But when he saves me from a drunken customer getting too handsy, his attitude suddenly flips, and we find ourselves becoming ⦠friends?
Underneath the judgment, it turns out Atlas is a total sweetheart.
Maybe more caring than anyone Iāve ever met.
Iāve never had a relationship before, but something tells me it could be way too easy to fall for the gentle giant.
In this series about Formula 1 racing, each author takes one racing team, a driver or two on that team , the international races in the series , and the dramatic events that occur during that season. Major events, even conversations crossover between novels.
Like the other books, this story begins with a quote from a race driver that hints at theme the tale and romance will carry.
A long time couple is the focus and heart of Charlie Novakās contribution to the Lights Out series about a Formula 1 racing season .
Dean Williams and Mateo Llorente are established Formula 1 drivers and a long time couple, although only their families and a few friends are aware of the later. This season a new element is being introduced to their relationship. For the first time, both men will be racing for the same team- Cadigan Racing. Itās the team where Mateo has been the established driver for several years, where heās the son of a legendary driver and the hopes for a championship win.
Novakās chosen a different format for her storyline that provides a intimate window into the next stage into this coupleās journey, both in terms of their careers and their relationship, as heavily intertwined as they now are. Itās divided by races, almost every race in each country on the way to the grand finale , then a space of nine years as they prepare their retirement announcement.
This narrative formula has positive and negative aspects to it when I look at the way overall book made me feel about the themes and the characters.
I liked it in terms of seeing how each race and the dynamics of that particular race started to change the way in which Dean and Mateoās were thinking about their own races (each has a team for their own car), their personal dynamics , and the teamās leadership. Where they originally thought they could handle the challenges, each race, each new event piled into an ongoing highly publicized , intense team effort, is starting to get to them.
Weāre in as the stress, the constant press, the media attention and wrongful coverage puts such pressure on them thatās it effecting their team as well as them personally.
This feels very realistic.
Another great twist? The team owner, the leadership and support staff? They are aware of the fact that their top drivers are in a long term relationship with each other. And they are supportive. I love that. Terrific characters here in these roles.
On the other side of this format, I found that having the book āchopped ā into so many little sections or narration stages in this journey of Dean and Mateoās meant less time for us in getting some of the more interesting details in more depth. Elements like Deanās toxic relationship with his father who we never get to meet and his mother who seems to have been an equally complex person, not quite protecting her son from his father. But we hear about them. They call , heās nearby.
Another similar aspect is Mateoās parents who we also know about, a legendary Spanish driver and a French supermodel who adore him and Dean. We hear all about their parties, their passion and personalities. But where are they here? They even visit a race but are āabsent ā in the story. Itās people and elements like this that add warmth and a great deal of value to a story and help ground a couple in a realness. Thatās sort of missing from this.
Charlie Novakās style of writing, the choice of story format gives us a sense of how a season of racing for one team impacted the relationship of two drivers racing for the win for the same team. The ambition, the fears, the stress , the excitement and yes the anger and the passion.
What is missing is the depth of actual racing action and the thrill of each man as they crossed the line to win the podium. Thereās no smell of oil, exhaust, or burning rubber. And there should be in a novel about men racing at the highest speeds at the top of their game.
The relationship and the challenges Dean and Mateo face and overcome in Pole Position is well worth the read. I just didnāt get as emotionally invested as I was prepared to even as I found myself enjoying the ride. On that note, Iām recommending it.
Pole position gives a driver the best chance at winning, but can there be a winner when a long-term relationship is on the line?
Mateo Llorente was born to be Formula 1 World Champion.
Charming, handsome, and incredibly talented, Mateo is everything a champion should be. Dean Williams has fought for his position in Formula 1 with everything he has, and dreams of podium finishes and championship trophies.
For the past three years, Mateo and Dean have kept their long-term relationship under wraps, but when they both find themselves driving for Cadigan Racing, they know things wonāt stay simple for long.
Keeping their relationship a secret is one thing, but dealing with the demands of the season is another.
As both drivers rack up points and the media scrutiny puts them under pressure, cracks start to appear in Mateo and Deanās relationship.
Can their love survive the intensity of Formula 1? Or will winning cost Dean and Mateo everything?
This M/M romance from Charlie Novak features a steamy long-term secret relationship between teammates, and is set in the high octane world of Formula 1 featuring fast cars, driving at the limit, spectacular crashes, heated rivalries, and of course, a HEA.
Each book in the Lights Out collection is a standalone story, and the books can be read in any order
Guarding Axel is the penultimate book in Jacobsā Dark Forest Park series, so the series arc themes, which are plentiful, need to start coming together.
Axel Molhieth, a tormented Fae with full of secrets and a dark past has been a great source of mystery and interest for me and I think most people. Especially when it comes to the complicated relationship he has with the wolf shifter Talis.
Best friends until the enemy captures Axel , Talis, and others with a toxic Fae plant . The fallout from that traumatic event, destroys their close relationship, and sets the pack to guarding Axel against an old betrayer from his past.
I was looking forward to this story because of the hot chemistry between the were Talis and the Fae Axel but something happened and along the way, it dissipated under the weight of Axelās overly complicated āsecret ā and inability to trust within the storyline.
While Talis remains the tormented soul, denied his bond by Axel, by circumstances, hurt by the close proximity of Axel, Talis is the strongest character in the story. The most compelling.
Thatās partly the reason why the story doesnāt work out as well. Both main characters need to balance out each other and, for me at least, they donāt.
Jacobs builds up this enormous amount of narrative suspense and anticipatory anguish around a secret that Axelās been holding onto. Itās the one keeping him from having a relationship with Talis, why heās causing so much drama and damage within the pack structure, so it should be something so earth shattering, so emotionally and physically traumatizing to makeup for all the harm the reader sees him causing for us to make sense of it all.
Itās one his cousin knows about. Btw.
But when itās revealed, I kept waiting for the rest of the reveal. Thinking surely thereās more. There wasnāt.
And when his own cousin and the mate of the Alpha both tell Axel , the equivalent of āsnap out of itā because you know better, this has been going on for too long, then either the secret wasnāt written well enough or this element was executed in a way that made Axel a character I just couldnāt connect with.
Thereās far too many loose ends. Iām sure Jacobs will pick them up in the next book. But this just didnāt have the same feeling as the previous stories, at least as far as the main couple. I didnāt feel like Axel had a great relationship with either the pack or Talis, given his actions and inability to understand how they impacted those around him.
Usually Annabelle Jacobs does a great job explaining the dynamics behind those decisions and how the character comes back into balance. Here I never thought that happened.
Iām looking forward to Loving Jake, the series finale. And to seeing how everything plays out.
A silver-haired fae with a shattered heartāa green-eyed shifter with enough love to heal him.
Axel
Burnt by a past betrayal, Iāve learnt the hard way to keep my heart locked up tight. As tempting as Talis is, all I can offer is friendship, because trusting someone again is a risk I canāt take. Love means sharing the true nature of my magic, and the last time I did that it almost cost me my life.
Talis
I want what every shifter wants.
A mate, a partner. Someone I can call mine.
Axel Molhieth, beautiful and free-spirited, makes it crystal clear that isnāt him. Will never be him.
I know itāll end badly for me, but I want him anyway.
One night is all it takes to ruin their friendship, and avoidance is the easy way out. But when Axelās past catches up with him, putting his life in danger, theyāre forced to finally face the consequences of their night together.
Guarding Axel is an MM paranormal romance featuring a protective shifter desperate for love, and a beautiful fae afraid to trust. Full of magic, suspense, and sizzling UST, with a guaranteed HEA.