Review: Someone Like Her, by Janice Kay Johnson

Jan 22 2010 Published by under Reviews

Someone Like Her

2010-TBR-Challenge-Icon-180x135

This is my first review for my first challenge: Avidbookreader’s TBR Challenge, and already I am one day late. Sorry Keishon!

This month’s challenge theme is categories, and I chose a book by a SuperRomance author I really enjoy. Johnson takes on pretty heavy personal topics — PTSD from the Iraq war, surrogate motherhood, and, in this one, serious mental illness and homelessness — which makes her categories much less fantasy driven than most, and also less focused on just the romance. She tends to write very realistically. Her romantic couples tend to be about pretty average, pretty flawed people. Perhaps because of her serious subject matter, there isn’t much humor beyond a few wry comments in her books, so I have to be in the mood for them. This is just not the author to turn to for a sexy, escapist read. But when I am in the mood for a dramatic, emotional, story about two people who find love while dealing with very challenging personal crises, I find her books extremely satisfying, and Someone Like Her is no exception.

Lucy Peterson owns a cafe in the small Washington town of Middleton, a few hours and a ferry ride away from Seattle. Lucy has always lived there with her large family, and while she yearns to travel, and sometimes wonders if she has made the right choices in her life, she is pretty content. When the book opens, we are introduced to “the hat lady”, an elderly homeless woman whom Lucy, and the other townspeople, have grown attached to. The hat lady is mentally ill, and appears on any given day as a different “Elizabeth” in literature. No one knows her real identity, and she refuses more than casual assistance. Together, the people of Middleton who sympathize with the hat lady (there are others who fear and mistrust her, the kind of realistic touch I appreciate in Johnson) manage to keep her safe and fed, until the day she gets hit by a car and ends up in a coma in the hospital.

Lucy takes it upon herself to find “the hat lady’s” family. Because I am reading a Harlequin, I am not surprised that Elizabeth’s son is a good looking, successful partner in a large Seattle law firm. He’s a workaholic, known for being ruthless in court and tyrannical in the office. When he comes to Middleton, Lucy doesn’t know what to make of him: he doesn’t seem all that sympathetic to his mother, and his low opinion of small town life is grating.

But Adrian’s perceptions of the town are not just easy stereotypical snap judgments. He’s a thoughtful guy. Here’s an example:

There was another thing, Adrian realized, making this town feel so backward: there were definite gender roles here that had mostly been abandoned by his friends and contemporaries.

This book is as much about Adrian coming to terms with how he lost his mother as it is about his relationship with Lucy. Adrian’s loss of his mother at age 10, his memories of what life was like with a mentally ill, loving, creative, unusual, parent, her departure from his life, and the long term emotional ramifications form the core of this book. And if you think Adrian’s mother suddenly wakes up and is miraculously cured of her mental illness, reconciling with perfect harmony with the son she hasn’t seen in decades, you haven’t read this author. The ending is bittersweet but very satisfying.

As Adrian falls in love with Lucy, and with Middleton, and begins to come to terms with his mother’s reappearance in his life, the conflict emerges over how to reconcile his Seattle lifestyle with his new relationships. In so many romances, we see a heroine giving up her city career for a simple life with the hero. in this one, the dynamic is the opposite. I loved the fact that Lucy, while she had the occasional reasonable doubt about her attractiveness to the Armani wearing Adrian, never apologized for Middleton or her life there. She was pretty clear on who she was and what she wanted. The significant character arc here is Adrian’s.

Like the previous Johnson books I have read, there isn’t much focus on the sexual relationship, and there are only a few intimate scenes, with a lot of euphemisms (Lucy can’t even form a definite noun, using the word “there” for Adrian’s genitals). But I did find them unusually intense and a bit more frequent in number for this author. I wonder if that has to do with the fact that this book was published in 2009, and the others I have read by her were older.

If I had one gripe about this book, it would be that I did not quite understand why Adrian never sought his mother out as an adult.

I really enjoy Johnson, and I think Someone Like Her may be my favorite of hers.

8 responses so far

New biotechnology and old fashioned conflict: Her Sister’s Baby by Janice Kay Johnson

Nov 08 2009 Published by under Reviews

n98751

Her Sister’s Baby is a 1995 Harlequin SuperRomance by Janice Kay Johnson. It is about Colleen, a recently divorced mom of two, who has just moved to a small town in eastern Washington, and Michael, a newly widowed banker. Colleen, a warm, loving woman, is dealing with the divorce, which was amicable enough, but has been very hard on her children, ages 8 and 11, and she is struggling financially with her new quilting shop. Michael is a classic old school contemporary hero: tall, dark, handsome, inscrutable, aloof, awkward, and hurting inside, not only by his wife’s recent death, but by childhood neglect that has turned him into a man afraid of emotions and human connection.

Sounds like your typical contemporary conflict so far, doesn’t it?

Except … Michael’s dead wife? The one who dies in chapter 2? Is Colleen’s sister, Sheila.

Not enough conflict yet? How about this:

Colleen is carrying Michael baby, thanks to her agreement to act as full surrogate for her infertile sister. She wants to keep it, but Michael wants to hold her to her oral agreement to hand the baby over once it’s born.

This is the second book by Johnson I have read, and although she has written about 40 books, I feel confident in stating that I have found a pattern: her books are depressing. Ok, not depressing exactly, but so true to real life in its messiness, that they are not escape reads at all. The depiction of the hardship of divorce on Colleen’s children, including the fact that their father is not working very hard to stay in their lives, was very well done, which is to say, painful to read.

I can read paranormals or romantic suspense in which there is enough mayhem and carnage to reduce the world’s population by a third without batting an eye. But give me an 11 year old girl who can’t make a single friend in her new school, or an 8 year old boy who can’t get his father to return his phone calls, and I am a puddle of tears.

And little relief is given by the courtship of Michael and Colleen, who are not only wary, mistrustful, and outright hostile towards each other, but wracked with guilt over their growing attraction, having both loved Sheila very much. OTOH, this makes for some terrific sexual tension.

It made me wonder, though … does this cross over into women’s fiction? Do we need not just an HEA but some romance to call it a romance?

In order to make room for the growing relationship between Colleen and Michael, his marriage to Sheila must be cleared away in some fashion. This is very delicate for any writer. While other authors, like Susan Elizabeth Phillips in Dream a Little Dream, keep the dead wife perfect but have the hero love his new woman “in a different way”, and others demonize the dead spouse, Johnson has walked a more complicated road. Michael reassesses his marriage, and discovers truths about himself and his late wife that are hard to face.

They must also grasp one horn of a dilemma: if Michael and Colleen were never attracted to each other in the past, then is their current attraction merely a reaction to Sheila’s sudden death? Can they trust it? On the other hand, if they were attracted to each other in the past, aren’t they awful people? Were they just subconsciously waiting for Sheila to go away? What would Sheila have wanted for them? is it Sheila’s voice they hear in their heads, or their own selfish desires rationalizing what they are doing?

I think there are many readers who wouldn’t care for this book, particularly readers who like their heroes and heroines to be morally perfect. I know there are many readers who would never accept this relationship between a sister and her brother-in-law, I found it really fascinating.

The pregnancy was a way to both bring Michael and Colleen together, as well as create conflict. Washington state surrogacy laws do recognize surrogacy contracts (many states do not), as long as payment is not made. Since they are both genetic relations to the child, I am guessing that had they not worked it out by falling in love, custody would have been granted to Colleen (who is both gestational and genetic surrogate) with visitation to Michael. On the other hand, Washington is very big on the written contract in surrogacy arrangement, and they had only a verbal one.

I think viewing surrogacy arrangements as akin to other kinds of contractual arrangement neglects important human, emotional aspects of conceiving and carrying a child. It’s just not like housesitting or selling a used car. The product of the arrangement is a human being, whose interests are paramount in my view. On the other hand, parties to the contract need protection, and women who agree to serve as gestational surrogates should be compensated fairly (it’s amazing how, when women donate eggs or act as surrogates, everyone says we can’t commercialize the arrangement. Women are only allowed to do things for free.).

I thought Colleen’s character arc was surprising and interesting. I really liked the way the pregnancy was handled. Colleen became very attached to her fetus, and had to question whether she would have ever been able to give the baby up to her sister. She wondered if the promise to give the baby to Michael was still in force now that Sheila was dead. Was she a bad person to change her mind, or a bad mother not to? Through her relationship with Michael, she came to reassess her first marriage and her part in its failure.

I haven’t given you much of a sense of the writing, and it’s because Johnson’s writing doesn’t stand out for me as much as the complex moral psychology she explores. But it is good writing, I think. Here’s an example of the characterization of Colleen’s attorney as she meets him at court:

Of course, he looked completely relaxed.; his hair was damp, as though he’d come straight from the health club. She could picture him playing a hard game of racquetball, maybe lying afterward in the sauna, dressing, leisurely, taking his time to get to the courthouse. Half of her fiercely resented his casual attitude; the rest of her was comforted that he apparently regarded this as routine.

One drawback to the book was that the conflict was so intense that the romance was not allowed to grow as much as I would have liked. Their sexual attraction was very believable, but there were very few scenes when Michael and Colleen just enjoyed each other’s company. They were never at peace together, until the very end.

Overall, though, I really liked it. My first Johnson was a free Kindle download, and this one was fifty cents at a charity book table. For twenty-five cents a book, I’ve gotten about 8 hours of enjoyment from this writer. I’d say that’s a more than fair bargain.

12 responses so far

Review: Snowbound, by Janice Kay Johnson

Apr 26 2009 Published by under Reviews

This 2007 Harlequin Superromance was a free Kindle download. I would have paid considerably more to read this sweet, romantic, sometimes sad romance. Read on for why I think contemps are the purest form of romance and my thoughts on the hero with PTSD.

0373714548

Setting: Contemporary Oregon. During a snowstorm.

Hero: Former engineer John Fallon, mid thirties, Iraq war vet with a limp, a scar and PTSD, who is trying to cure himself by running an isolated mountain inn.

Heroine: Fiona MacPherson, age 23, sweet but sensible teacher at a private high school.

Plot: Fiona and her vanload of 8 teenaged students get stuck in a snowstorm on the way home from an academic event. They seek shelter at the Thunder Mountain Lodge, and are stuck there with its surly (but very hot) proprietor for several days.

Conflict: I already told you the hero had PTSD! Pay attention!

Interesting feature: Hero is a beta. He even cries!

Fun factoid: Snowbound was the RITA award winner for best contemporary series romance.

Word on the Web:

Book Binge, Casee, 4.25 out of 5

“I’ve read quite a few Superromances. This one is now it my top 3. For a category romance, it packs quite the emotional punch.”

Shannon C., B (a brief review)

AAR, LinnyGayl, A-

[Note: I think there is a DA review, but I couldn't locate it. If anyone wants to give me the link, I'd be grateful!]

Racy Romance Review:

This admission may get me into trouble, but here it is: I think of contemporaries like Snowbound, ones that focus on the relationship, with no suspense or paranormal elements, as the purest form of the genre.  For many people, the historical, perhaps the regency, would serve this role, in part because it’s the original form of the modernish romance (I think?). For me, the only essential elements of a romance are the focus on the relationship and the HEA. Anything else is “extra”, including the historical research required to write a regency or the worldbuilding required of paranormals. I know in my head that (a) the worldbuilding in any good romance is essential to the relationship, and (b) that contemporary writers have to worldbuild, too. But in my heart, as an immersed reader, I “feel” like the historical or fantasy worlds are “extra” (and the more poorly written the romance is, the more nonessential they feel).  But in contemporaries, I read “through” the familiar world, straight to the romance. It just feels pure in some sense that doesn’t reflect what I know in my head. Hard to explain, and totally indefensible, but this is one reason why I just love a satisfying contemporary like Snowbound.

Continue Reading »

18 responses so far