Nicole Reads A Lot

so many books, so little time

Lucky Girl by Cate Lord

Title:Lucky Girl
Author:Cate Lord
Publication Date:9/6/11
Publisher's DescriptionJessica Devlin isn’t looking for love. Heartbroken after being dumped by her unfaithful ex-fiancé, she’s determined to have a fabulous time during her vacation in England where she’ll be maid-of-honor at her cousin’s wedding. After working overtime as beauty editor of Orlando’s O Tart magazine, avoiding dating, and putting on ten pounds, Jess is ready to toss her past like an empty lipstick tube and party like a single gal.

But when she steps into the church on her cousin’s wedding day, she sees the one man who could sabotage her plan—James-Bond-gorgeous Nick Mondinello. She’s never forgotten the London marketing exec who held her in his arms after her beloved grandfather’s funeral two years ago. Ambitious, and lusted after by women everywhere, Nick is completely wrong for guarded, Plain Jane Jess.

Could Spy Man Nick ever fall for her? Nope. Not unless Jess is one lucky girl.
My rating:***

Reading this book was the literary equivalent of eating cotton candy. It was sweet and fun to consume, but there was very little of substance in it. Either Jess had the worst self-esteem ever, or she just held some sort of cross-Atlantic appeal for all these English guys, because I never quite got what there was about her that was so amazing. There’s luck, but whatever she was tapping into to set into motion this chain of events had to be something else entirely. Ultraluck? Uberluck? Jess seemed like a nice, normal 29-year-old American woman, but she went over there, drank an astonishing amount of alcohol (which my English friends assure me isn’t necessarily a dealbreaker in the UK), and suddenly she was the hottest thing since sliced bread. Hmmm…hold on, I have to buy a plane ticket.

Still, once I moved past Jess’s inexplicable awesomeness, her story was the type of modern-day fairy tale that any fan of chick lit/romantic comedies would enjoy. Hot English guy totally intent on reconnecting with our plucky heroine? An opportunity to bond with sweet, biddable, and friendly English cousins? An opportunity to read about a character who revels in all is girly? Check check and check.

Jess’s mom and Miranda made for mostly obnoxious tertiary characters. What was her mother’s deal? She seemed too fragile to be as great as Jess made her out to be. What about her dad? Did her British family even wonder about their long-lost member? And for a purported best friend, Miranda didn’t seem to know Jess very well, at least according to her reactions in a couple of scenes. I’m glad that Miranda spent this book making new connections, because the people she already had in her life left something to be desired.

I found Jess’s love of her dorky tv show adorable but inexplicable, although as a diehard Buffy fan who bonded with her boyfriend over this show, I’m in no position to judge. All in all, Lucky Girl (wow, such an apt title!) is a good story to read on a lazy afternoon, but this one falls firmly in the chick lit genre, and probably won’t appeal to those who don’t enjoy these types of books.

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Unclaimed by Courtney Milan

Title:Unclaimed
Author:Courtney Milan
Publication Date:August 27, 2011
Publisher's DescriptionHer only hope for survival…

Handsome, wealthy and respected, Sir Mark Turner is the most sought-after bachelor in all of London—and he’s known far and wide for his irreproachable character. But behind his virtuous reputation lies a passionate nature he keeps carefully in check...until he meets the beautiful Jessica Farleigh, the woman he’s waited for all his life.

Is to ruin the man she loves…

But Jessica is a courtesan, not the genteel lady Sir Mark believes. Desperate to be free of a life she despises, she seizes her chance when Mark’s enemies make her an offer she can’t refuse: seduce Mark and tarnish his good name, and a princely sum will be hers. Yet as she comes to know the man she’s sworn to destroy, Jessica will be forced to choose between the future she needs…and the love she knows is impossible.
My rating:****
I really liked this book. It had a lot to say about living up, or down, to others’ expectations, and how easy it is for others’ perceptions of us to color our own feelings of worthiness. I also liked the lesson about how something written with one intent could easily be perverted into something else entirely. Most of all, I enjoyed how Mark wasn’t perfect. I shudder to think of how saintly and sanctimonious he might have been in the hands of a lesser author, but Courtney Milan was ably up to the challenge of making him relatable to mere mortals such as myself.  Jessica, too, resonated with me. When faced with making a very real choice between her conscience and her next meal, and without any idea of how she’d fare if she failed at her task, she managed to come up with a solution that satisfied both her concerns. This is the second Courtney Milan book that I’ve read and enjoyed this year (after Unlocked), and I eagerly look forward to her next offering.
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Irresistible? by Stephanie Bond

Title:Irresistible?
Author:Stephanie Bond
Publication Date:Reprinting: July 2011
Publisher's DescriptionWanted: Single women of any age to take part in a four-week clinical study.

Ellie Sutherland wasn't exactly desperate... yet. But after fourteen months, five days and two hours of being without a man, she was getting pretty close. So when she had a chance to try out a pill that attracted the opposite sex, Ellie didn't waste any time signing up. After all, she had nowhere to go but up!

Almost immediately, men started falling at her feet. She even had sexy Mark Blackwell eating out of her hand. And before long, she'd fallen head over heels in love with him, too. Ellie's life was a perfect, at least for a while. But when the pills ran out, would Mark still find her irresistible?
My rating:***.5

This book was a quick, light read. It was definitely a product of its time period, reading like the novelization of a 90s era chick flick, complete with the requesite components:

  • Instant animosity between the hero and heroine
  • An overreliance on coincidence
  • A wacky gay best friend
  • Mixed up shipments
  • Multiple scenes where the heroine publicly embarrasses herself, in a variety of ways

None of these things made me dislike this book, but there never was much here to differentiate Irresistible? from a myriad of similiar books from the 1990s, either. Ellie and Mark had a lot going for them personality-wise, and helped this book to overcome the completely generic set of circumstances in which they found themselves. Plot devices were telegraphed chapters in advance, and while there was no mystery, I didn’t object to sticking around for the end. One thing that worked in Irresistible’s favor is that it was pretty funny; I enjoyed the dialogue more than I thought I might. The language isn’t dated at all, which seems obvious, since this novel isn’t even 20 years old, but other books from this era contain words that definitely date them. If you’re the kind of person who stops channel surfing when you come across a Drew Barrymore movie, this book is for you.

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The Husband She Couldn’t Remember by Maggie Shayne

Title:The Husband She Couldn't Remember
Author:Maggie Shayne
Publication Date:July 2011
Publisher's DescriptionThe Husband She Couldn't Remember by Maggie Shayne

Very slowly, Ben turned around.

Penny stood not two feet from him. She wasn’t looking at him, but past him at that pink-hued granite marker. His wife stood in front of him, staring at her own grave.

Ben’s hands moved slowly, reaching out, touching her shoulders, very nearly jerking away again when he found warm, solid flesh instead of some ghostly mist. She was real. And he closed his hands on her instead. “Penny?” And finally her eyes met his. “Penny, is it really you?”

Her lower lip trembled. “You aren’t going to believe this, but...I don’t know,” she told him in a soft voice. “Is it?”
My rating:***.5

I thought this book was a good, light read. (I say light even though there were some woman-in-jeopardy scenes here, because good conquered evil, and did a fine job of it, too). Penny was effortlessly full of personality in a way that I think many romance heroines are supposed to be but rarely are. She was in full control of her destiny, and even not knowing who she was didn’t get in the way of what she was able to accomplish.

I am usually wary about books that deal with amnesia, but I’ve enjoyed other Maggie Shayne books and so decided to read this one. Even though it was from the 90s, this book didn’t feel dated to me at all. Penny was a complicated character who had been put into a strange situation, but reacted a lot better than I think a lot of people might have. Likewise, I really enjoyed the way the Brands pulled her into their lives and tried to adjust to how she’d changed. I thought it was smart of Ms. Shayne to make Chelsea, a newer Brand, her closest family confidante upon her return to the ranch, rather than a person who Penny had known prior to her disappearance. The lack of baggage in the relationship was an excellent counterpoint to the adjustments that the other Brands had to make to this Penny who was so different from the Penny they’d last seen.

Ben’s recognition of Penny’s self-sufficiency worked well for me. He had to integrate this healthy almost-stranger (from her perspective) into what he knew of his formerly dying wife. I liked how he celebrated exactly what this meant in terms of the help they received from Penny’s clues while he and Garrett were looking for her. Ben had a temper, and I appreciated that he felt bad for it, and recognized what it may have cost him.

There were definitely some things that didn’t work for me. I wanted to know what Kristen’s secret was, because clearly there was a lot more to her story than was in this book. I know that Garrett said there wouldn’t be any legal repercussions for faking Penny’s death, but what about any insurance money that might have been collected upon her faked demise? How does she go about validating that she is who she says she is, two years after somebody else was buried in her name? Also, the a wizard did it, way that Barlow’s cure suddenly seemed to work at the end, when it was repeated time and again that Penny was the only person he’d cured, didn’t make a ton of sense to me.

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Before I Go to Sleep by S. J. Watson

Title:Before I Go to Sleep
Author:S. J. Watson
Publication Date:June 2011
Publisher's Description'As I sleep, my mind will erase everything I did today. I will wake up tomorrow as I did this morning. Thinking I'm still a child. Thinking I have a whole lifetime of choice ahead of me ...' Memories define us. So what if you lost yours every time you went to sleep? Your name, your identity, your past, even the people you love - all forgotten overnight. And the one person you trust may only be telling you half the story. Welcome to Christine's life.
My rating:**.5

Warning, totally spoilerific review.

I suppose I should have known that I wouldn’t love this book, because I’m not a fan of “Trust me, you have amnesia” kinds of stories (50 First Dates, I’m looking at you). Still, I thought that I might like it. In a way, I did, although I think that wanting readers to believe in the amount of coincidences and instances of negligence that had to converge before this novel’s circumstances could exist is asking too much. I believe in the goodness of people, but I possess a healthy amount of skepticism, and everything about the setting of this novel set off my creepometer.

The main thing I wondered about was how could NOBODY think to verify the identity of the man to whom they released an amnesiac? Really? Jokes about the British NHS aside, that’s just unforgivably negligent.

I did like how this book combined both an unreliable narrator and intrigue. Christine’s unreliable narration was due to her amnesia, not dishonesty, which made the effect even more chilling: she simply didn’t remember enough to know whether she was telling the truth or not. The main thing that puzzled me was why her memory suddenly started to come back at this point in her life. Could it only be the help of her new doctor, who hadn’t given her any drugs or special treatments AT ALL, or was being exposed to awful Mike what truly made her remember who she was? This book left me with more questions than answers, and not in a good way. The one clear thought I had was that poor Christine possessed truly awful relatives and friends, and my hope is that reclaiming her memory was just the first step in becoming free of the lot of them.


				
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