by Priscilla Oliveras ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 26, 2017
A sweet debut marred by superficial conflict but worth reading for the well-developed secondary relationships and...
A divorced dad who has sworn off love tries to resist the allure of his daughter’s dance teacher in the first in a series about three Latina sisters.
Yazmine Fernandez left a busy Broadway dance career to return to her hometown in the Chicago suburbs to care for her ailing father. Although Yaz’s friends and family view her as a big success, a disastrous relationship has made her question her self-worth and her career. Yazmine finds contentment living at home and teaching dance to children, but she doesn’t want to disappoint her dying father, who sacrificed his own creative dreams so she could pursue hers. Complicating matters even further is her intense attraction to workaholic ad executive Tomás Garcia, the single father of one of her favorite dance students. Tomás was burned by a “career-focused woman” and wants a partner who puts family first. Both conflicts could be resolved by frank conversations, but feeling hopelessly incompatible, Tomás and Yazmine try to resist their mutual attraction, focusing on a growing friendship. Family is vital to both, and the well-developed secondary characters flesh out what could be one-dimensional leads. Tomás, a workaholic who often misses his daughter’s practices, will strike many readers as a hypocrite, while Yaz’s self-pity becomes grating. Yazmine’s father’s physical decline is presented sensitively, without overwhelming the romance, and both protagonists’ Latin heritage elevate the novel by introducing cultural influences and dynamics rarely portrayed in the genre.
A sweet debut marred by superficial conflict but worth reading for the well-developed secondary relationships and introduction to the Fernandez family.Pub Date: Sept. 26, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-4201-4428-4
Page Count: 336
Publisher: Zebra/Kensington
Review Posted Online: Sept. 5, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2017
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by Sherryl Woods ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 28, 2013
Not Woods’ best, but a smoothly written, beach-themed story with a happy ending helps forgive the weaknesses.
When Samantha, an established-yet-struggling actress, comes home to act as maid-of-honor in her sister’s wedding, the family unabashedly tries to pair her with the best man, Ethan, her teenage crush and now a local war hero.
Samantha is the oldest Castle, and while her two sisters found true love in quick succession, she’s in New York with a struggling acting career and no Mr. Right on the horizon. Coming home to Sand Castle Bay, N.C., for youngest sister Emily’s wedding, Samantha is continually thrown in the path of Ethan Cole, local football champion–turned–war hero. Samantha had a huge high school crush on Ethan but is surprised to learn he lost a leg in Afghanistan, and his then-fiancee abandoned him soon after. Spending time with him now, Samantha realizes what a wonderful man he is, but the association is tainted by the humiliating lengths her family is going to in order to get them together. And while Ethan is a great and honorable man, his post-war romantic experience has left him gun-shy and determined to avoid relationships. At a crossroads in her own life, Samantha has to decide whether she’s going to stay in Sand Castle Bay or go back to her sputtering career in New York—and what her hopes are with Ethan. The two navigate insecurities and misunderstandings as they fall in love and fight for their happily-ever-after. Woods' latest is slightly off-key. Great writing and deft characterization can’t save a thin romantic conflict, and the more Ethan clings to his “I’ve given up on love” position, the less heroic he becomes. Some secondary storylines offer similarly shrill undertones that denote a disturbing lack of communication, unrealistic expectations and waffling with annoying justification. Still, in the end, love conquers all in satisfying ways for everyone concerned, and this ties up a few loose ends for the trilogy.
Not Woods’ best, but a smoothly written, beach-themed story with a happy ending helps forgive the weaknesses.Pub Date: May 28, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-7783-1446-2
Page Count: 400
Publisher: Harlequin MIRA
Review Posted Online: April 28, 2013
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2013
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by Sandra Brown ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 15, 2017
As the plot grows more complicated, it also sheds believability, leaving sex and witty banter to carry the day.
Brown (Mean Streak, 2014, etc.) ticks off the boxes that elevate her books to the bestseller lists in this sexy romantic thriller set in Texas.
Rock-jawed hero with a dark past: check. Strong-willed, beautiful woman who resists his charms: check. A Whitman’s Sampler of bad guys: check. And finally, a convoluted and not always plausible plot: check. In this latest outing, readers meet TV journalist Kerra Bailey, whose family was torn apart years ago by a hotel bombing that killed 197 people in Dallas. Just in time for the 25th anniversary, Kerra scores an interview with the notoriously private Maj. Trapper, who saved her life, among others, when he emerged from the blast to lead the survivors out of danger. There's an iconic, prizewinning photo of the major carrying a little girl from the wreckage, but the child has never been identified—until now, when Kerra goes public with the information that it was her. Just after they finish filming the interview in his home, the major is shot, and an injured Kerra escapes in the confusion. The major’s son, disgraced Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent John Trapper—a name M*A*S*H fans will appreciate—steps in, igniting a chain of events that leads to murder, intrigue, betrayal, and a series of dark revelations. As with most of Brown’s heroes and heroines, there’s palpable sexual tension between Trapper, whose taut rear occupies ample literary real estate, and Kerra, who when dealing with Trapper feels “like he’d lightly scratched her just below her bellybutton” when he’s not making her “pleasure points throb.” The complex plot plays out in a round of reveals that don’t always make a lot of sense, but that’s not why Brown’s fans read her books. They check in for the witty, pitch-perfect dialogue and fluid writing. A master of her genre, Brown knows how to please her most ardent readers but relies too often on the same basic formula from novel to novel.
As the plot grows more complicated, it also sheds believability, leaving sex and witty banter to carry the day.Pub Date: Aug. 15, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-4555-7210-6
Page Count: 432
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Review Posted Online: July 3, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2017
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