Archive for: March, 2009

A Thousand Kisses Deep

Mar 16 2009 Published by under Uncategorized

Sometimes I blog for 3 people: me, myself and I. You’ve been warned.

For Those Who Greeted Me *)

1. You came to me this morning
And you handled me like meat.
You´d have to live alone to know
How good that feels, how sweet.
My mirror twin, my next of kin,
I´d know you in my sleep.
And who but you would take me in
A thousand kisses deep?

2. I loved you when you opened
Like a lily to the heat.
I´m just another snowman
Standing in the rain and sleet,
Who loved you with his frozen love
His second-hand physique -
With all he is, and all he was
A thousand kisses deep.

3. All soaked in sex, and pressed against
The limits of the sea:
I saw there were no oceans left
For scavengers like me.
We made it to the forward deck
I blessed our remnant fleet -
And then consented to be wrecked
A thousand kisses deep.

4. I know you had to lie to me,
I know you had to cheat.
But the Means no longer guarantee
The Virtue in Deceit.
That truth is bent, that beauty spent,
That style is obsolete -
Ever since the Holy Spirit went
A thousand kisses deep.

5. (So what about this Inner Light
That´s boundless and unique?
I´m slouching through another night
A thousand kisses deep.)

6. I´m turning tricks; I´m getting fixed,
I´m back on Boogie Street.
I tried to quit the business -
Hey, I´m lazy and I´m weak.
But sometimes when the night is slow,
The wretched and the meek,
We gather up our hearts and go
A thousand kisses deep.

7. (And fragrant is the thought of you,
The file on you complete -
Except what we forgot to do
A thousand kisses deep.)

8. The ponies run, the girls are young,
The odds are there to beat.
You win a while, and then it´s done -
Your little winning streak.
And summoned now to deal
With your invincible defeat,
You live your life as if it´s real
A thousand kisses deep.

9. (I jammed with Diz and Dante -
I did not have their sweep -
But once or twice, they let me play
A thousand kisses deep.)

10. And I´m still working with the wine,
Still dancing cheek to cheek.
The band is playing “Auld Lang Syne” -
The heart will not retreat.
And maybe I had miles to drive,
And promises to keep -
You ditch it all to stay alive
A thousand kisses deep.

11. And now you are the Angel Death
And now the Paraclete;
And now you are the Savior’s Breath
And now the Belsen heap.
No turning from the threat of love,
No transcendental leap -
As witnessed here in time and blood
A thousand kisses deep.


6 responses so far

Review: Taking Chase, by Lauren Dane

Mar 15 2009 Published by under Reviews

172

My Take In Brief: A good book which made me wonder why Lisa Kleypas got all the credit for writing about recovery from domestic abuse.

Cover comment: Heroine is good, but hero is supposed to be a huge, imposing cop.

Series?: Yes, this is book 2 of the 4 volume Chase brothers series.

Setting: Contemporary small town Georgia.

Heroine and Hero: Beautiful former vascular surgeon Cassie changes her identity and settles in Petal, Georgia to escape from her abusive ex husband. Petal police officer Shane Chase, of the 4-hot-brothers/pillars-of-the-community Chase family is just the kind of alpha male Cassie wants no part of. But sparks fly, and you know what happens next…

Conflicts: The major internal conflict is Cassie’s recovery from abuse, lack of self-trust, and fear of men, alpha men in particular, of which Shane is one. A more minor conflict involves Shane’s inability to trust women (his ex fiancée cheated on him with his best friend), which makes Cassie’s need for independence and privacy that much harder for him to handle. Of course, Cassie’s deranged ex is on the loose and the specter of their final confrontation hangs over the entire book.

The Racy Romance Review:

This is the third book by Lauren Dane that I have read and enjoyed, after Giving Chase and the novella To Do List. If I had to say what I appreciate the most about Ms. Dane’s books it would be (a) believable, compelling conflicts, and (b) the healthy, positive way that sex is portrayed.

Continue Reading »

9 responses so far

Review: Practice Makes Perfect, Julie James (with discussion about feminists and gender politics in romance)

Mar 12 2009 Published by under Feminist contentions, Reviews

practicemakesperfect

My Take in Brief: I loved it, but you should click to one of the other reviews listed below for a more traditional review. In this post, I mainly explore feminist themes in the book.

Hero and Heroine: Both workaholic, intelligent, great looking, successful junior litigators at a large Chicago law firm, both hoping to make partner any day. J.D.’s the wealthy, conservative, golf enthusiast son of an admired judge. Payton’s the vegetarian feminist daughter of a single mom communist PETA loving hippie (and yes, I thought this an oddly WASPish name choice for this character, too). Thanks to their differences in worldview and the competitive environment of the firm, they’ve been antagonists trying comically to one up each other for 8 years.

Plot: The book is pretty light on plot, but as the novel opens, Payton and J.D. are in the final stretch of their 8 years bids to becomes partner. Long time rivals and antagonists, their boss asks them to team up to court an important client.  Sparks fly as the two ditch their prejudices and get to know each other as human beings, not just walking political slogans.

Excerpt here.

Word on the Web:

Babbling About Books, Katiebabs, A

Book Smuggler, Ana, 8

Book Binge, Rowena, 4.5 out of 5

Thrifty Reader, Ames, A

Romance Novel TV, Buffie, 4.5

All About romance, Ellen, B

Amazon.com, 4.5 stars after 6 reviews

Fun Factoid: This book feels a lot like a farcical romantic comedy — kind of like the one with George Clooney and Catherine Zeta Jones, or the one with Renee Zellweger and Ewan McGregor. It turns out the author is a former screenwriter, and herself viewed PMP in these terms.

Sad factoid: James’ next book has a suspense subplot. Sigh.

Continue Reading »

24 responses so far

Our (e)Readers, Ourselves: Reflections on My Kindle 2.0

Mar 10 2009 Published by under Navel gazing

julie-ann-long-like-no-other-lover1

I’ve had my Kindle 2.0 — my first ereader –  for less than 2 weeks.

After using the Kindle for about 4 hours a day over the past 10 days (hey — I was on vacation!), I find myself thrilled with ereading, in general, and very pleased with my decision to buy the Kindle.

Here’s what I loved most about my experience (some of these things are Kindle specific, but many would apply to any ereader):

Continue Reading »

9 responses so far

My Beach Vacation with 7 Contemps and 1 Historical

Mar 10 2009 Published by under Reviews

Read on for mini-reviews and lots of Kindle-on-the-beach pictures of these:

  1. Talk Me Down, Victoria Dahl (2009, HQN 352 pages)
  2. Crash Into Me, Jill Sorenson (2009, Bantam Dell, 464 pages)
  3. Flat-Out Sexy, Erin McCarthy (2008, Berkley Sensation, 304 pages)
  4. Anything for You, Sarah Mayberry (2006, Harlequin Blaze, 256 pages)
  5. To Do List, Lauren Dane (2007, Samhain, novella)
  6. Just the Sexiest Man Alive, Julie James (2008, Berkley Sensation, 304 pages)
  7. Practice Makes Perfect, Julie James (2009, Berkley, 320 pages)
  8. Like No Other Lover, Julie Anne Long (2008, Avon Romantic Treasure, 384 pages)

Maybe it was the pina coladas (or sangria, or mojitos, or rum and cokes). Maybe it was the sun, the sand, the surf. Maybe it was my Kindle enthrallment. Or maybe they were just damn good books. But I enjoyed reading all of the above. I hope to write longer reviews of some of them at a later date, but until then…

talk-me-down

1. Talk Me Down: Heroine who secretly writes erotica has returned to small town. She and hero have hots for each other since high school. Hero is gossip-averse, alpha but not domineering, borderline stick in the mud small town cop. First a bone to pick with Dear Author and Smart Bitches: I thought the “Save the Contemporary” campaign was all about — er — the contemporary. Exclusive of both paranormal and suspense. But this was definitely romantic suspense, with the heroine in serious peril most of the book. I enjoyed it, but heroine was slightly immature (at what point in your adult life do you tell your family to accept you or shove it?) and static throughout book. I do love a nonpsychotically jealous hero, especially with bar scenes, and this had them aplenty.

2. Crash Into Me: Latina FBI agent heroine, hero is widower and single dad, former pro surfer, former adulterer and alcoholic. I picked this one for the Cali surf setting, so well developed and so appropriate for my vacation. I think people who like rom suspense will really like it: the question of who was the murderer really had me from the beginning. The romance did not work as well for me, despite hot and unique sex scenes, because heroine is dishonest with hero and hero’s behavior is questionable at many points. Secondary romance with teens was sweet and well done. I think I have to accept that this sub-genre is not for me. There were many truly horrible people in this book — misogynists, lying teen sluts, rapists, murderers, child abusers. It just doesn’t work with romance for me.  That’s my hangup, I realize.

flat-out-sexy

3. Flat-Out Sexy: A very nice romance with younger hero who is sincere and honorable. Sexy and sweet. Heroine is supposedly an academic but may as well have been window washer for all it mattered to her character. I did not like the stereotyping of her former fellow academic boyfriend, just maybe because I am a professor married to another professor. I don’t think everyone who drives NASCAR is buff and masculine and everyone who teaches anthropology is wimpy and effeminate. That said, I am allergic to NASCAR and yet found myself quite interested in the culture while reading this book.

anything-for-you-sarah-mayberry

4. Anything for You: What a great little book. H/H are best friends and business partners and heroine realizes all her emotional energy is going to him. In order to move on with her romantic life, she severs their ties, setting in motion a very funny and sexy series of events as hero is forced to reevaluate their relationship. Very focused and tight, with wonderful results. I am planning to glom Mayberry ASAP. Loved the Australia setting, the unique terminology peppered throughout.

lauren-dane-to-do-list

5. To Do List: My second Dane book, after Giving Chase. This one was also a friends into lovers book, but less successful than the Mayberry. Opening scene, h/h are kissing for first time, and within 3 days are engaged. I know it’s a novella, but it was just too fast, despite the fact that they knew each other all their lives. I felt like I was missing the first 5 chapters. Taught me a new saying, “Sweet baby Jesus on a skateboard.” Really no conflict to speak of, but on paper it’s that hero is organic farmer, heroine is uptight lawyer determined to make partner. He finds her OCD “sweet” and she finds his organic farming “sexy”.

sangria-and-mojito

6. Just The Sexiest Man Alive: I loved this book. Both Type A, she’s a hot shot lawyer, he’s basically Brad Pitt. He needs to learn how to act like a trial lawyer for a movie. Funny and engaging. And, one of my favorites things — a very sexy book with almost no actual sex!  I know I love a book when the insides of my wrists start tingling. The physiological explanation is that my wrists hurt because I am unable to put it down.  But I like to think of my wrist tingles as my own mystical sign of booky greatness. This is not a perfect book — do we really believe this guy is a changed man? And sort of stalled in last third. But still, I enjoyed it so much I immediately downloaded …

7. Practice Makes Perfect: I loved this one, too. Again, with the Type A hot shot lawyers, both of them this time. Very Tracy and Hepburn. Colleagues have hated each other for 8 years, now both trying to make partner, sparks fly. The stress of their career ascension is so well portrayed — anyone who has tried to make partner, or get tenure, will appreciate it. Heroine is a hippie’s daughter, public school, feminist vegetarian. He’s the silver spoon golfing Harvard educated prepster. Actually deals almost head on with class and gender issues, but veers away when things get interesting  — I want to write a longer review on this one to talk about that issue in particular. Again, NO SEX, but sexy as hell.  I so enjoyed it and am totally enamored of Ms. James.

julie-ann-long-like-no-other-lover

8. Like No Other Lover: What can I say? This is my 4th book by this author, and I have truly enjoyed all of them. In this one, a mild mannered but wealthy scientist type gets spurned by the beautiful popular girl. The tables are turned and they come to reevaluate each other. Has a Pride and Prejudice aspect (as did Practice Makes Perfect), a theme I adore. I loved both characters, and I love how forthright and mature Long’s h/h are. It’s also set at the hero’s home — did I hear house party? Squee!!! I have to admit however, that Long needs to be taken in by the Metaphor and Simile division of the RWA for some serious deprogramming. This woman has never met a person place or thing she could describe directly. Still, what a great read with a drinking game scene in the middle that had me laughing so hard people were staring at me over their mojitos.

I’ll do a separate post on my Kindle, but for now I leave you with this…

beautiful-caribbean-sea

10 responses so far

Vacation – I’m On It

Mar 01 2009 Published by under Uncategorized

It’s Spring Break round these parts, so I’m trading this:

montreal_-_plateau_day_of_snow_-_200312

For this…

800px-mayaro_beach_5_trinidad__tobago

Have these on my Kindle:

Just the Sexiest Man Alive, Julie James

Flat Out Sexy, Erin McCarthy

Talk Me Down, Victoria Dahl

Like No Other Lover, Julie Ann Long

The First 3 are new-to-me authors, the 4 is one I have read and really enjoyed.

Before I had kids, I swore I wasn’t going to be one of those moms who is at their kids’ beck and call, but I totally am (I think it’s a combination of my Italian heritage and working mom’s guilt, but that’s another post), and so I never get more than a page read without someone yelling “mommmmmm!!!”. Under these conditions, vacations are not exactly relaxing for me, although they are fun. I don’t expect to get through more than one or two of these books, but it’s nice to have them!

Back in a week or so!

9 responses so far

« Newer posts