Category Archives: Chick Lit

Review: Finding Felicity – Eternal Press – Monica Marlowe

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Expected Release Date: August 7, 2011 (Available Now!)
Publisher:  Eternal Press
Imprint: N/A
Author’s Website: http://monicamarlowe.blogspot.com/
My Source for This Book: Gift from the Author
Part of a Series: No
Series Best Read In Order: N/A
Steam Level: Warm

Official Blurb:

When Madeline O’Connor learns that her estranged sister is gravely ill, she leaves behind her life in Manhattan to be at her sister’s side in Italy. There, she discovers an ancient Benedictine monastery that accommodates travelers, and she decides to stay there, among the monks. Everything in her life turns upside down when she falls for Brother Anthony Lamberti, a soft-spoken Italian completely different from the men she knows in New York. Together Madeline and Anthony find love for the first time, and learn that life and love always find a way. When her sister dies, a new life for Madeline begins. A new life that she would never have imagined and yet is perfect for her in every way.

What Worked For Me:

  • I loved the imagery of Italy, with its tranquility and romance, and how that helped to spark the transformation of Madeline from the petty and bitter CEO from New York into something else completely.
  • I really enjoyed the historical sub-plot with Marco and Isabella. While I was able to figure out where it was leading early on, it was sweet and poignant to read.
  • As much as I may have disliked Madeline’s character in general, I had to appreciate the growth that her character underwent over the course of the novel. She went from a bitter, shallow, workaholic New Yorker who held onto her hurt and grudges like a miser holds onto a coin,  to someone who not only learned to forgive past hurts, but to also truly appreciate the small things in life, and the transformation really was lovely to watch.
  • While I may not have approved of some of the twists that the plot took over the course of the novel, I have to admit that I was enthralled and truly couldn’t put it down because I had to know what was going to happen next.

What Didn’t Work For Me:

  • The blurb was incredibly misleading.
  • I don’t like when the hero or heroine has sex with anyone else during the course of a novel. Don’t get me wrong, past experience can be a wonderful thing, and I even tend to like characters who have a reputation for being easy, but there’s just something distasteful to me about having sex with one person while wanting another, and I don’t care to read about that in my romances.
  • The ending. *dies* Ok. I live for HEA’s.  They’re essential in order for me to be happy with a book. I truly felt that there was no HEA in this book.  I’m very disgruntled that I can’t give spoilers, because I truly want to rant about some of it and can’t without absolutely ruining the story for everyone.

I felt like the official blurb was totally misleading.  When I read it, I thought that this would be a fairly straightforward forbidden-type romance between a New York City divorcee slash workaholic and a tranquil yet slightly troubled Italian Monk, and that together they would find a balance and fall in love and ride off together into the sunset or whatnot. Instead, there was a complicated love triangle that ended in painful tragedy and a large amount of melancholy, and while the ending could possibly be considered “bittersweet”, it was in no way in line with what I was expecting going into the story.

I think that perhaps the problem lies in the categorization of this novel.  You see, I prefer to read romance.  And yet, I feel that this book would be better categorized as chick lit. Now, before you pull out the pitchforks and torches, there is nothing wrong with Chick-Lit.  It’s simply not typically my genre of choice. While chick-lit typically focuses on the main female character and her evolution over the course of the novel, learning to forgive and love and accept herself and yada yada, romance focuses on the relationship between two (or more in polyamory, but that’s a totally different topic) main characters. Finding Felicity is about Madeline learning to let go of her hurt and anger at the betrayals of the past and allowing herself to be open to true happiness and inner peace.  But “romance” it is not.

That said, the spiritual elements were absolutely gorgeous.  Several quotes stood out to me, such as “Wars don’t happen because G-d forgets about man, Marco. Wars happen because man forgets about G-d.”, and “We all have our own way of relating to G-d. For some of us, it’s not at all. The beautiful thing, though, is that G-d is always relating to us whether we know it or not.” (the dashes are mine, the book contains correct spelling).  Madeline and Anthony both have a spiritual crisis of sorts, and together, they’re able to see that G-d is truly everywhere, and that there are many ways to celebrate Him and His glory.

In the end, however, the lovely spiritual elements and the gradual transformation and growth of Madeline’s character could not make up for the fact that by the time I was finished, I felt utterly betrayed.  Had I gone into this book expecting a “poignant love story” with a “bittersweet ending” or somesuch, I think this book would have rated much higher for me.  Instead, based on the blurb, I went in expecting that Madeline would go to Italy to see her estranged sister, fall in love with a monk, be there as her sister dies, and then they would both move to New York, face some challenges, but in the end, live happily ever after.   What I read, however, was so far from that as to be considered an entirely different book altogether.

To be completely fair, the BOOK’S TRAILER VIDEO absolutely mentions the love triangle that is present in this book.  I was sent the link to the trailer when I received this book, and it was completely my own fault that I did not watch it before I started reading.

Removing my feelings about the misleading blurb, and looking at the book from the perspective of a character-driven women’s fiction novel, I must admit that Madeline’s story actually did keep my attention.  The entire book focused on love, passion, betrayal, forgiveness, and spirituality, and Madeline is not the only character who evolved over the course of the novel.   When the book opened, Madeline was a workaholic, fairly frozen in time because of the hurt she continued to hold on to from a betrayal several years prior.  Her bitterness, cynicism, and refusal to open herself up to that kind of pain again kept her from being happy, no matter the fact that she was incredibly wealthy, beautiful, and successful.  Traveling to Italy to reconcile with her dying sister changed not only Madeline’s life, but Madeline herself.  Allowing herself to finally let go of some of the anger at her family’s betrayal, but also the anger at herself, Madeline opened herself up to the beauty of not just Italy, but of moving past mere physicality and lust and into something so much more powerful.

So, my suggestion to readers is this: go into this knowing that there is a love triangle, and that Madeline does engage in sexual relations with two different men over the course of the novel. Know that there are some incredibly painful family issues that this book deals with.  Know that there is a bittersweet ending, but also know that the ending really was perfect for the book, based on the journey Madeline’s character took.   Above all, however, go into this knowing that it is not a traditional “boy meets girl” romance (or, I suppose, in this case, “CEO meets monk”), and disregard the blurb entirely.   I think that if readers are sufficiently prepared for these things, they’re going to enjoy this story.

In the end, however, I was not prepared for this book to be women’s fiction, and so my disappointment at the turns the plot took stained my overall feelings in the end.   Were I rating this as a “chick-lit” novel, rather than a romance, I believe my final rating would have been either 3.5/5 or 4/5 stars.  As it was, in reviewing this as someone who had been expecting a more traditional happy ending, my final rating rests at 2/5 Stars.

Review: Whiskey Rebellion – Lilliana Hart

 

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Expected Release Date: May 30, 2011 (Available Now!)
Publisher: Self Published
Imprint: N/A
Author’s Website: http://www.lilianahart.blogspot.com/
My Source for This Book: Gift from the author
Part of a Series: Yes, Book 1, Addison Holmes series
Series Best Read In Order: N/A
Steam Level: Steamy

Official Blurb:

My name is Addison Holmes, and I teach history at James Madison High School in Whiskey Bayou, Georgia. You might be under the assumption that my life went to the dogs when my fiancé left me at the altar for the home economics teacher, or when I got notice that my apartment building was going to be condemned, or even when I was desperate enough to strip to my unmentionables to earn some extra cash so I could buy a house. The truth is that I’m pretty much used to disasters following me around on a daily basis, but I could have gone without finding my principal dead in the parking lot of a seedy gentlemen’s club.

After the initial shock of finding my first dead body, which included throwing back shots of Jack Daniels like it was water, I decided to take stock of my life. I was in a desperate situation and if the school board ever found out I’d been a stripper, even a bad stripper, I’d be jobless as well as fiancé-less and homeless. Fortunately, I had a friend who felt sorry enough for me to give me a job doing some surveillance work at her detective agency. And it didn’t bother me one bit that it was the equivalent of a pity fuck. Money is money, and I was about to be homeless. Not to mention the fact that I was now able to stick my nose into other people’s business for a good cause, find a murderer and pick up helpful tips from an incredibly attractive detective.

Come check out my story and be thankful your life is relatively normal.


Okay, this book is hysterical. It’s a true comedy of errors. Poor Addison is a high school history teacher with an incredibly awesome (and expensive) car, a penchant for ice cream, and a horrible run of bad luck. Having been left at the altar by her scumbag fiance, who was of course busted banging her bimbo arch-nemesis (also the home-economics teacher from the same school she teaches at), and living in an apartment about to be condemned, she doesn’t currently have the funds to buy the adorable house of her dreams. Having made a bargain with the local sleezebag banker to have the money to him in 60 days, she’s desperate for money.

Enter her ill-fated — and incredibly short-lived — career as a stripper.  Not only does she have absolutely zero talent for stripping, but she spies her Assistant Principal from school in the audience. Immediately after her only dance, her career as a stripper is over, and grateful to make her escape and put this horrible day behind her, she literally trips over a dead body in the parking lot of the strip club.

Unfortunately for Addison, things are rarely simple, and the body she stumbled over belongs to the same Assistant Principal who minutes ago was getting a lap-dance from another dancer and taking lewd photos of Addison during her performance.

Enter police hottie detective, Nick Dempsey.  Immediately at odds with Addison, both feel an intense pull of attraction. However, neither lets that small fact get in the way of their animosity, and soon it seems that Addison can’t decide whether she wants to rip Nick’s clothes off and have her dirty, dirty way with him, or clobber him over the head with whatever heavy object happens to be handy. Or maybe both.

When Addison’s best friend, Kate, who also happens to be a private detective, takes pity on Addison and agrees to hire her to do some surveillance for her agency in exchange for $100 a day.  Addison jumps at the chance, but she’s not exactly the most circumspect woman in town, and while she does get some good results, her methods are unorthodox to say the least…

What Worked For Me:

  • If Addison didn’t have bad luck, she’d have none at all. She is constantly bumbling into bad situations, injuring herself in one way or another, and generally making a muck of things.  She’s ditzy, sure, but I actually liked that about her. Having grown up in a small town myself, I can attest to the fact that just because someone’s a high school teacher, that doesn’t automatically mean they have more sense than G-d gave a turnip.
  • I really enjoy Addison’s penchant for nice things despite her minuscule budget. Her tendency to use convoluted logic to justify expensive purchases earned a chuckle each time because I know so many people who do the same thing.  There’s also her deep and abiding love for Dairy Queen, which of course I can appreciate as well.
  • Oh man Nick is HOT! *fans self* And the chemistry between him and Addison is wonderful, especially with all the animosity they hold towards each other.
  • At first, I wasn’t sure if I would like Addison’s mother because of her guilt trips and so forth, but I have to say events towards the end definitely changed my mind about her. Without giving anything away, she was definitely more than a stuffy old mom and I loved that.
  • I literally LOL’d at the results from Addison’s confrontation with Veronica ;)
  • The mystery itself was actually pretty good. I was surprised at the end to find out the identity of the killer, and even though I wanted to smack Addison by that point, it was still a very exciting ending.

What Didn’t Work For Me:

  • Nick and Addison never actually do the nasty. There was an incredible amount of UST and even some second-base-about-to-steal-home action, and when there wasn’t any sort of consummation to their relationship, I admit I was a bit disappointed.  To be completely fair, I think this book would be better categorized as “Comedic Chick Lit Mystery” than a straight up “Romance”, so I’m not horribly upset that their relationship was never taken to the next level.
  • Some readers may be frustrated by the idiotic decisions Addison makes.  She’s being stalked by someone who obviously knows her connection to a murder, and yet doesn’t think to mention this to her Private Detective best friend, or to the cop who is investigating the case?  There are other examples as well of several Too Stupid To Live moments that Addison partakes in over the course of the novel, and while I personally enjoyed her stupidity, I think some readers might be put off by the extent of her moronic ways at times.

Overall, I loved it. A perfect summer read, this is lighthearted and funny, while still possessing a pretty well executed (no pun intended) murder mystery.  While Nick and Addison never go all the way, I think romance readers will still enjoy all the UST, the transformation from enemies to partners, and the delicious moments where it looks as though these two crazy kids might actually score.

While Addison does have a tendency to have quite a few Too Stupid To Live moments, the sheer amusement gained by reading her escapades is enough, in my opinion, to make it worth reading.

4/5 Stars