Showing posts with label angst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label angst. Show all posts

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Just One Thing Includes Much More

From my review for Just One Thing by Holly Jacobs that was posted today at All About Romance:

A widow is wooed out of her melancholy by a war veteran bartender who only asks that she tell him "just one thing" when she stops by his bar every Monday.

Artist Lexie McCain's children are worried about her uncharacteristic funk after their father dies in an accident. Lexie has holed up in her studio away from town and friends which is very unusual. After they’ve harassed her sufficiently, Lexie agrees to walk into the nearby small town of Lapp Mill, Pennsylvania, at least once a week. She decides to go on non-busy Monday and makes her destination The Corner Bar, a low-key pub-like establishment where she has one beer and then walks home.

What she doesn't count on is proprietor Sam Corner who challenges her to tell him "just one thing" in exchange for her beer. Lexie agrees to play Sam's game and starts by telling him her name. What unfolds are memories based on the "one thing" Lexie and then Sam let escape from their lips including the painful deaths of Lexie's father, daughter, and finally husband and Sam's traumatic time in the service.

Lexie, who's been a good wife, mother, and art instructor, is floundering, but not morose to the point of being suicidal. In fact, she knows she's got to climb out of her current depression and as therapy starts weaving a tapestry depicting scenes from her life in it.

She's a strong, likable character, a woman without pretensions and with a solid sense of self. Like most of us when a life-changing event happens, she realizes she needs to pick herself up, dust herself off, and forge on with life. But her husband's death has hit her harder then those of her beloved father and daughter.

Read the rest of the review at All About Romance.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Beautiful Disaster

One of the joys of reviewing for AAR is finding others who enjoy the same books as I do.  A case in point is Louise VanderVliet (aka Aimee) whose review of a book that I too loved runs today.

Even better than sharing a reaction to a book is finding a reviewer who puts what I feel about the book into exactly the right words.  Aimee does that in the review of Beautiful Disaster by Jamie McGuire.  This book was so controversial on the in-house message board that I decided to read it even though at first glance it didn't seem like something I'd enjoy.

What I found, however, was a contemporary romance like Sarah Mayberry's She's Got It Bad, another book that I read on the recommendation of an AAR reviewer, Katie Mack.  Both show a grittier side of life than is usually explored by romance writers, yet both highlight why romance and the promise of love are so pervasive and enduring.

(NOTE: Word has it that McGuire's next book will be the Beautiful Disaster story as seen from the guy's point of view.  Considering that so much is left out of Disaster because the woman isn't involved, this should also be a terrific book.  Can't wait to read it!)

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Just in Time for Valentine's Day

My review of Emma Cane's A Town Called Valentine was posted on the AAR site yesterday, and is there today as well.

Shortly after my husband I got married in Texas, we moved to Ft. Collins, Colorado, near the town of Loveland, which is where the Valentines cancellation stamp originates each year.  Cane's fictional Valentine, Colorado, sounds like it could partly be Loveland, but moved into the mountains close to Aspen instead of on the Front Range like Loveland is.

This is a light, happy romance with a minimal amount of angst.  I didn't appreciate that fully at the time I read it, but I do now that I've just finished reading Sasha Campbell's Scandals and Jamie McGuire's Beautiful Disaster, both of which are so angst-ridden.  I'll definitely be more appreciative of light romances in the future.