Showing posts with label Mature Adult. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mature Adult. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Book Review: TRUE by: Erin McCarthy

Title: TRUE
Author: Erin McCarthy
ISBN/ISIN:  B00B7NPS60
Reading Level: Adult
Genre: New/Mature Adult, Contemporary Romance
Binding: E-book
Length: 235 pgs. 
Published: 7 May 2013

Buy: amazon.com

Synopsis:  A New Adult novel from USA Today bestselling author Erin McCarthy.
When Rory Macintosh’s roommates find out that their studious and shy friend has never been with a guy, they decide that, as an act of kindness they’ll help her lose her virginity by hiring confident, tattooed bad boy Tyler Mann to do the job…unbeknownst to Rory.


Tyler knows he’s not good enough for Rory. She’s smart, doctor smart, while he’s barely scraping by at his EMT program, hoping to pull his younger brothers out of the hell their druggy mother has left them in. But he can’t resist taking up her roommates on an opportunity to get to know her better. There’s something about her honesty that keeps him coming back when he knows he shouldn’t…

 
Torn between common sense and desire, the two find themselves caught up in a passionate relationship. But when Tyler’s broken family threatens to destroy his future, and hers, Rory will need to decide whether to cut her ties to his risky world or follow her heart, no matter what the cost… 


My Rating:


My Review: I actually wince every time I look at the 2.5 star rating I gave TRUE by Erin McCarthy. I keep asking myself, how could this book have turned out to be a hot mess? It had everything going for it, a hot cover, a premise that almost guaran-damn-teed one hell of a scorching romance, and the most important factor--the book was written by USA Today and NY Times Bestselling romance author Erin McCarthy.  Despite all of these positives and all of the marketing and advertising, TRUE does not live up to its hype.

Rory is a 20 year old college student who is studying to be a coroner. She loves math and science and feels more comfortable studying than going out clubbing. Her two best friends, Kylie and Jessica, on the other hand, like to party, get drunk, and like to "scratch their itch" regularly. Whatever, I'm not judging! This does, however, set the tone for the beginning of the book. And because I want to talk about the positive stuff first, I will come back to the trouble I had with the start of TRUE.

Despite the issues I had with the beginning of the book, the story gains strength as it chugs along, especially as the mystery surrounding Tyler starts to unravel. To be quite honest, I found his story and him as a character way more interesting than Rory. And I am not going to lie and say I wasn't a little disappointed that the book was only in Rory's point of view. I think the book blurb summary is a bit misleading. It made it sound like the story would have alternating POV. I have no issues with a story being told by one person, but I think TRUE would have benefited with Tyler's POV. Despite this, I was sucked into Tyler's world. His home life was absolutely horrific. No wonder the poor boy smoked so many damn cigarettes! I definitely fell a little in love with him AND his big brother Riley (also a hottie) for sacrificing their own childhood and dreams so that they could take care of their younger brothers, Easton and Jayden.

What is so frustrating is the fact that I am having a hard time finding other things about the book that I liked. Everything was just okay. There was hardly any character development. The "love" scenes between Rory and Tyler were just...okay. Not to say that there wasn't at last one that got me a little hot, but nothing that left me or my kindle overheated. And the story itself was just...okay. Nothing really made it stand out, other then Tyler and his family issues, but even that didn't feel fully committed to. Even the culmination of the main plot device which is the deal Rory's roommates make with Tyler to rid her of her virginity just kind of fizzles. I guess what I am trying to say is, I expected more, especially from an author who has some high credentials. Yes, she is known for her adult romance, but come on, New Adult or Mature Adult, whatever you want to call it, is not THAT much of a stretch for her. I've read debut authors in the New Adult/Mature Adult genre that have written WAY better stories than TRUE. This should have been a slam dunk for her. But I think what Erin McCarthy and other authors that may want to venture into this hot genre need to learn is if you are going to stick with a formula, you need to somehow not only make it your own, but give us a fresh way to look at it. I don't have a problem reading a story with the same premise as 10 other books. But MAKE IT STAND OUT. While I was reading TRUE, I couldn't help be reminded of Katie McGarry's Pushing the Limits. Tyler's family situation is very similar to that of Noah's. I even remember shedding a few tears while reading Noah's story, remember feeling that lump in my throat and the pain in my chest. I'm not saying I need to feel those same emotions while reading a similar novel, I just expect to be moved in some way and walk away feeling like the book held its own.

Now to what I truly disliked about TRUE. Let's go back to the beginning of the story. I'm not going to sugarcoat the scene. Rory's two best friends, Jessica and Kylie, want to get some, so they ask her to come with them to Nathan's apartment. Nathan is basically Tyler's best friend and Tyler hangs out and crashes over there often. So while Kylie and Jess are getting it on with Nathan and Tyler (YES, Tyler and Jessica are f-buddies), Rory is out in the living room with Grant. Grant tries to RAPE Rory and instead of screaming for help, she has this whole inner monologue about what she should do, or maybe she should just play along in order to throw him off when he least expects it, etc., etc., etc.. WTF!?! Her best friends AND 2 guys are in the apartment. It's not like there is a party going on or there is loud music that would muffle her screams. Why she just didn't scream for help is so absurd.

Once the almost rape is interrupted (you can guess who comes to her rescue), Rory obviously wants to go back to the dorms. Cool, totally understand. I at first thought her best friends were pretty sympathetic and outraged at what Grant tried and almost did to Rory. Great. But then I read this: "'I'm staying here,'" Jessica stated. "'It's too cold outside to go home. See you tomorrow, Rory.' Kylie was already curled up on the couch, in a praying position, half-asleep as she gave a weak wave. 'Bye, sweetie.'"  WTF!!!!!!!!!! Are you SERIOUS??? Her BEST FRIENDS won't go back to the dorm with her???? She almost got raped for goodness sakes!!! This made me insanely angry. I'm going to stop while I'm ahead or else I will keep on ranting about that!

There were other minor things that annoyed me, lines that didn't quite make sense such as this one: "Oh my God. It was Tyler, just propped up casually, legs sprawled out, his feet dangling over the side in nothing but socks." Obviously he wasn't naked, but the way she wrote that sentence made it seem like he was. I know I had an ARC copy of TRUE, so it could just be a proof reading error, so I won't hold it against her.

I really wanted to like TRUE. It had a great set up, everything from the attractive cover art, marketing campaign, catchy book blurb, and a seasoned author. Sadly, the story itself did not live up to its expectations, just a shell of what it could have been. Some of her plot devices were just poorly executed. It's one thing if you are going to use a rape scene to have the hero come to the heroine's rescue (it's happened in books a thousand times) but maybe make it more believable. Maybe have her locked in a room with the creep while a party is going on with really loud music so no one can hear her screams. But to have the girl sitting there in the quiet living room while at least 4 other people are within hear shot and she doesn't even try to cry out for help is just ridiculous. And in my opinion, her "best friends" are no friends at all for staying behind because it's "too cold". Again, a poor plot device to get the hero and heroine alone (Tyler ends up taking Rory back to the dorm.) Erin McCarthy either needs to stick with what she is good at or take her spin in the New/Mature Adult genre more seriously.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

BOOK BLOG TOUR: Brooke's Playlist from REAL by: Katy Evans



I am absolutely thrilled to be a part of the REAL Blog Book Tour. I've been doing a lot of talking about Katy Evan's debut novel and a couple of weeks ago I pushed all other reviews aside and posted one for REAL which you can check out HERE. The book blew me away and I just HAD to get my feelings out then and there! But looking back at my very thorough review, the one thing I completely forgot to mention is how music plays such a significant role in REAL.                                                                                             
Music is something we sort of take for granted. We may turn the radio on at work to break the silence, or late at night on the ride home to keep us awake, or in the gym to pump us up, etc. But for some of
us, music is a way to identify and communicate, especially in the case of Remington. While Remy may appear one way in the ring, he is a completely different person in private. He is a man of a few words, somewhat introverted, and without spoiling anything, has been dealing with...something without any kind of medical intervention (for the most part).

Before Brooke came into his life, music was--other than fighting-- one of the only ways for him to self sooth, a sort of coping mechanism. And then Katy Evans gives us the scene where Remington and Brooke are sitting together and he wants her to listen to his music and he listen to hers. Remy and Brooke pick songs for each other to listen to many times throughout the book. Why? Because it is Remy's way to communicate, without speaking, how he feels about her, himself, etc.     
                                                                                                            
 Brooke's Playlist

 Today, I get to share with you some of Brooke’s top songs in her playlist that she shares with Remy throughout REAL. Some just pump her up for running, some make her feel lovey dovey, but they all make her think of Remington. If you click on them, it will take you to videos on youtube.



  1. Iris by Goo Goo Dolls, now and forever number one spot
  2. I Love You by Avril Lavigne
  3. Next to Me by Emile Sande
  4. Gold by Britt Nicole
  5. Try by Pink
  6. Naturally by Selena Gomez
  7. Breathless by The Corrs
  8. Kiss Me by Sixpence None The Richer
  9. Stay by Rhianna and Mikkey Ekko
  10. Forever and Always by Parachute 

 Book #1 of The Real, Raw & Ripped Series
Pages: 266
Published: April 8th 2013
Genre: Mature New Adult/Adult Contemporary Romance – recommended for ages 18 and up.
Synopsis: 
A fallen boxer.
A woman with a broken dream.
A competition…

He even makes me forget my name. One night was all it took, and I forgot everything and anything except the sexy fighter in the ring who sets my mind ablaze and my body on fire with wanting…

Remington Tate is the strongest, most confusing man I’ve ever met in my life.

He’s the star of the dangerous underground fighting circuit, and I’m drawn to him as I’ve never been drawn to anything in my life. I forget who I am, what I want, with just one look from him. When he’s near, I need to remind myself that I am strong–but he is stronger. And now it’s my job to keep his body working like a perfect machine, his taut muscles primed and ready to break the bones of his next opponents . . .

But the one he’s most threatening to, now, is me.

I want him. I want him without fear. Without reservations.

If only I knew for sure what it is that he wants from me?






 Katy Evans grew up with book-boyfriends until she found a real sexy boyfriend to love, married him, and now they are hard at work on their own happily ever after. Katy loves her family and friends, and she also loves reading, walking, baking, and being consumed by her characters until she reaches “The End.” Which, is hopefully, only the beginning…To find more about her, look her up on her website, Twitter, or Facebook, she’d also love to hear from you!




Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Book Review: REAL (Real, Raw & Ripped, #1) by: Katy Evans

Title: Real (Real, Raw & Ripped, #1)
Author: Katy Evans
ISBN: 9781301347940
Reading Level: Adult
Genre: New Adult/Mature Adult
Theme(s): Boxing, Underground fighting, mental illness
Binding: Paperback/E-book
Length: 266
Published: 9 April 2013
Buy: amazon.com

Synopsis:  A fallen boxer.
A woman with a broken dream.
A competition…

IS HE FOR REAL?

He even makes me forget my name. One night was all it took, and I forgot everything and anything except the sexy fighter in the ring who sets my mind ablaze and my body on fire with wanting…

Remington Tate is the strongest, most confusing man I’ve ever met in my life.

He’s the star of the dangerous underground fighting circuit, and I’m drawn to him as I’ve never been drawn to anything in my life. I forget who I am, what I want, with just one look from him. When he’s near, I need to remind myself that I am strong–but he is stronger. And now it’s my job to keep his body working like a perfect machine, his taut muscles primed and ready to break the bones of his next opponents...

But the one he’s most threatening to, now, is me.

I want him. I want him without fear. Without reservations.

If only I knew for sure what it is that he wants from me?


My Rating: 


My Review: I stumbled upon REAL by accident and I must say it is the best damn "accident" to fall into my hands in quite some time. The book is so good, that I pushed other reviews to the back burner so that I could purge myself of these overwhelming emotions that bombarded me during my fast and furious reading session (finished REAL in less than 6 hours and that was with me forcing myself to slow down). Let me put it into perspective as to how good this book is if I still haven't convinced you yet. I had just finished reading the highly anticipated Walking Disaster by Jamie McGuire which left me feeling a bit unsatisfied and right after that flew through Gina L. Maxwell's Fighting For Love series (Seducing Cinderella and Rules of Entanglement). Can you guess what these books are about? Yup, hot, hunky cage fighters. I was starting to get  burned out with the genre and theme but I figured one more couldn't hurt.  I wasn't prepared to fall in love with REAL. I wasn't prepared to love it more than Beautiful Disaster-- after all, Beautiful Disaster was a first of its kind and that book set the bar for others that came out after it, and trust me, these cage fighter romances are starting to pop up everywhere. So if I now have your attention, you are probably wondering why REAL is so good? How can it be better than Beautiful Disaster?

First, let's talk about characters. The book opens quite similarly to that of Beautiful Disaster. Brooke is dragged reluctantly to an Underground boxing fight by her best friend Melanie. She finds Remington "Riptide" Tate and all of his animal magnetism absolutely irresistible and overwhelming. But it's when their eyes meet that a connection is forged between the two. Thanks to her mischievous bff giving Remington her phone number, she is contacted a few days later by his people and is offered the job of a lifetime-- to travel with him as his personal PT for the next 3 months. So it sounds like your typical, fluffy romance, right? But Katy Evans is a clever author. Why? Because she makes her characters believable, relatable.

Brooke is not just some one dimensional character with no flaws, or a perfect body, or a skinny body, or a body with killer curves. What I am trying to get at is Brooke was an athlete with dreams of achieving gold. But at her first Olympic tryouts she suffers from an earth shattering injury that ruins all of her years of hard work and dedication. But instead of letting it completely destroy her, she reevaluates her life and decides to go to college and study sports rehabilitation, something that she feels may have helped her during such a tragic time of her life.

Turning a negative into a positive is something I myself am quite familiar with. Call it the story of my life. Even though Brooke and I are very different, there are things we have so much in common. Several pages in, Brooke says something that I could completely relate to which is: "When you need to accept the fact that your body sometimes can't do what you want it to, it hurts almost worse than the physical pain of being injured." Can I get an amen? I am only 30 and people automatically assume that 30 year olds are at the prime of their lives. I should be able to go out and run a marathon, go dancing all night long until the sun comes up, you get the point. But it's not until I tell people that the handicap placard outside in my car is not my grandmother's but mine that it sinks in I am not like most 30 year olds. I had major back surgery at the age of14, two leg surgeries by 20, and a few others and some hospitals stays in between then and now. Am I saying this for pity? Hell no. Because despite all of the hardballs that keep coming at me, all it makes me want to do in return is catch them and throw them back that much harder. But as Brooke had to learn, the first step is accepting what happened, knowing your limits-- but these limitations don't have to break or stop you. It's all about being creative and finding the way around them.

I wasn't even 2 chapters into REAL and I was already a fan of Brooke. I also liked how the author describes her physically. Sorry, but I am so tired of reading books where female characters are either bombshells or skinny with no curves at all. It makes sense that Brooke would have an athletic body but now that she is not "training" for competition, she has allowed herself to gain a little weight to fill out her curves. For example, while she was competing, she barely had breasts, but now with muscles going a little softer and not having vigorous training and diet restrictions, she has started to fill out. I love how Katy Evans gives us these details. It doesn't mean that Brooke is plus size or that she doesn't exercise-- on the contrary, she loves to eat healthy and work out. I just think that Evans did an amazing job with making Brooke such a realistic character.

Now to Remington...strong, enigmatic, beautiful, dangerous, yet vulnerable Remy. Again I have to give Katy Evans props for not only keeping the sexual tension going between Brooke and Remington but also the mystery surrounding his character. I went into the story thinking Remy was going to be like so many other dominant, possessive alpha males I've read before, not that that is a bad thing because if you've read any of my other reviews, you already know I love alphas. But Remy was not easy to read. He is a man of few words which I found incredibly sexy because when he does say something it felt all the more important. He doesn't try to get into Brooke's pants as I expected (and to Brooke's disappointment) even though the sexual tension kept stretching like a rubber band ready to snap at any moment. In many romances with alphas, it's usually the male that pursues the woman, chipping away at her defenses until she gives into temptation. But Katy Evans does something different. Somehow she makes Brooke the pursuer while still maintaining Remington's raw, possessive, dominant nature. Now I don't want you to think that Remy doesn't want Brooke because he does. Oh, how he wants her and the things he does to show her that. Like the way he "scents her" and goes about marking her, like the animal instincts in him are brought out because of her. But Brooke thinks the hot make out sessions and his reluctance to take things further in the bedroom is his way of toying with her when really it is his way of...courting her. And of course it's revealed why it is so important to Remy that Brooke gets to know him, to truly know him...which of course is for me to know and you to find out!

I can't talk about Remington without mentioning the true or real reason this book sets itself apart from others. It is revealed pretty early that Remy has a temper. And as I was reading, I kind of shrugged it off, thinking, okay, so he has a short fuse like Travis Maddox from Beautiful Disaster. But as the story progressed and pieces started clicking together, I realized this story has so much more depth than originally believed. Katy Evans is a brave woman to write about a topic that is not only misunderstood but, until recently, hasn't really been talked about. I am being vague on purpose because I don't want to completely give it away since Evans truly does a great job at keeping readers wondering what actually ails Remington. But I will give you a hint-- think Silver Linings Playbook. If you've had the chance to see the movie starring Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, and Robert De Niro, then you will know what I am talking about. If you haven't, I highly recommend everyone see it because it truly is an eye opener about a topic that more people need to be made aware of.

Katy Evan's REAL became real for me during--in my opinion-- the most pivotal part of the story which is when Remington goes into an uncontrollable rage during a party after another victorious win. Again, I don't want to get too detailed here to refrain from spoilers but when you see through Brooke's eyes what they have to do to contain him and he whispers, "Don't let her see," it was at that point that I shed a tear. Because I knew what Remington was dealing with was larger than just having a short fuse. I wasn't prepared for the book to become so serious, but I quickly embraced it because with such a topic comes a sense of realism and with realism sparks a honest, emotional reaction.

I am not under any illusions. I know the book isn't perfect and has a few flaws. Could the editing have been a little better? Yup. Was the beginning a little shaky? Yup. Were there parts that seemed repetitious? For sure. But you know what? All of those things I can overlook for a first time author because Katy Evans not only delivered in every other way, but she far exceeded my expectations. I have every confidence that those little kinks will smooth out as Evans hones her skills over time. But there is no doubt in my mind that she has the "it" factor and I can see REAL becoming a bestseller the more word gets out about it. Hell, I can even see movie potential and I am not just putting that out there lightly. But for now, I look forward to sitting back and watching REAL climb to greatness and anxiously await for its sequel, MINE.