Psychic Storm anthology – Review

Today’s review is a bit unusual for me because I almost never read M/F, but, surprisingly, I did enjoy most of the stories in this anthology and I truly recommend it to lovers of the urban fantasy/paranormal genre. I APOLOGIZE BEFOREHAND FOR THE LITTLE SPOILERS. Because I suck at coding, I tried to alert their presence with bold writing. Here it goes:

 
PSYCHIC STORM: Ten Dangerously Sexy Tales of Psychic Witches, Vampires, Mediums, Empaths and Seers

Ten books. Ten internationally bestselling authors. Ten different tales of sexy psychics, empaths and seers who solve crimes, fall in love, make magic and fight to save the world.

Over 2,000 pages of extrasensory reading await, with three brand new, original novels and over 1,400 5-Star Reviews for the rest!

From Bestselling Author, HEATHER TOPHAM WOOD –– NEW REVELATIONS –– Life should’ve been perfect. Kate Edwards won the heart of police detective Jared Corbett and is coming to terms with her psychic ability. Things are blissful—until the day she meets Declan Brayden. Kate doesn’t trust the damaged and arrogant seer, but knows combining their abilities would allow her to help more people. When visions of a missing fitness instructor turn into a race against time to save her life, Kate might have no choice. HEAT LEVEL: 2

From Bestselling author, APRIL AASHEIM –– ARMAND –– “Never trust a warlock…” Before Maggie Maddock and her sisters returned to Dark Root, Oregon, a generation of witches and warlocks reigned over The Council — 13 men and women devoted to holding back the dark they believed would eventually end the world. This is the origin story of Dark Root’s most notorious warlock: Armand. HEAT LEVEL: 2

From USA TODAY bestselling author, DALE MAYER –– TUESDAY’S CHILD –– What she doesn’t want…is exactly what he needs. Shunned and ridiculed all her life for something she can’t control, Samantha Blair hides her psychic abilities and lives on the fringes of society. Against her will, however, she’s tapped into a killer–or rather, his victims. Sam knows she must go to the authorities, but will the rugged, no-nonsense detective in charge of tracking down the killer believe her? HEAT LEVEL: 3

From bestselling author, JESI LEA RYAN –– JUST A LITTLE NUDGE –– Marley Sexton never aspired to be a stripper. But it’s the only job that puts a dent in her mother’s medical bills. It’s also the only job where she feels justified using a little talent she calls nudging. But JC Moreno figures out Marley may have taken the nudge too far. Marley’s not big on trusting people, especially a man with a gun, a badge, and a story that doesn’t add up, but maybe they can work together to both get what they want…if they don’t end up dead. HEAT LEVEL: 3

From NEW YORK TIMES and USA TODAY bestselling author DEANNA CHASE –– HAUNTED ON BOURBON STREET –– Jade loves her new apartment—until a ghost joins her in the shower. When empath Jade Calhoun moves into an apartment above a strip bar on Bourbon Street, she expects life to get interesting. What she doesn’t count on is making friends with an exotic dancer, attracting a powerful spirit, and developing feelings for Kane, her sexy landlord. But when the ghost moves from spooking Jade to terrorizing Pyper, the dancer, it’s up to Jade to use her unique ability as an empath to save her. HEAT LEVEL: 4

From bestselling author, MORGAN HANNAH MACDONALD –– SPIRITS AMONG US –– WHAT HE SEES WOULD SCARE YOU TO DEATH. Cajun bad boy and ex-FBI profiler Jon-Luc Boudreaux is in Paris hunting a serial killer. That’s nothing new, neither is being haunted by the victims, but watching the murders through the killers eyes, now that’s something new entirely. Jon-Luc is on the hunt for the most diabolical killer he’s ever encountered, and Angela Henderson, fashion designer, is next on the killer’s list. HEAT LEVEL: 4

From bestselling author, JC ANDRIJESKI –– LONDON –– If there was ever a race-traitor job, this was definitely it. Revik arrives in London with a new job, a new home…and new people watching him, seemingly more than he has helping him watch the Bridge, a holy warrior hidden among humans to keep her safe from dark Seers called the Rooks. Meanwhile, in San Francisco, Allie has no idea that she’s the Bridge…or even that she’s a Seer. Then she meets Jaden. HEAT LEVEL: 4

From bestselling author, JORDAN CASTILLO PRICE –– AMONG THE LIVING –– Victor Bayne, the psychic half a PsyCop team, is a gay medium more concerned with flying under the radar than making waves. He hooks up with handsome Jacob Marks, a non-psychic from an adjacent precinct at his ex-partner’s retirement party and it seems his luck has taken a turn for the better. But then a serial killer with a gruesome M.O. surfaces–and no one agrees what he looks like. HEAT LEVEL: 5

From NEW YORK TIMES and USA TODAY bestselling author, C.J. ELLISSON –– VAMPIRE VACATION –– Meet Vivian. She’s a 580-year-old vampire who exudes sex, has a talent for drama, and is passionate about two things: her human husband, Rafe, and their resort for the undead. Her ability to project physical illusions creates the perfect vacation spot—a dark, isolated Alaskan hideaway where visitors can have their wildest fantasies come true. The powerful vamp is put to the test when she discovers a corpse in a locked guest room minutes before the next arrivals. HEAT LEVEL: 5

From bestselling author, HAZEL HUNTER –– TOUCHED –– In the world of Isabelle de Grey, eyesight isn’t the only way to see. When she touches objects and people, she looks into their past. But her gift is equal parts curse. She has yet to find the lover who can accept the brutal truth of what she sees. Isolated and rejected, she is ready to leave Los Angeles and abandon her career when she meets FBI profiler Gavin “Mac” MacMillan. Thrown together when the daughter of a mutual friend is abducted, Isabelle discovers that Mac could be the man who won’t push her away. HEAT LEVEL: 5

My review:

HEATHER TOPHAM WOOD –– NEW REVELATIONS4 stars

At the beginning I was unsure about New Revelations. Firstly, the story was obviously a sequel, the characters had backstory that I hadn’t known firsthand and I usually, out of principle more than anything else, prefer reading stories that come from a series in the order they were meant to be read. That instantly put me in a bad mood because I would have liked to get to know the character from the very beginning, experience their first adventures together with them. Having landed in the middle of a longer story, I felt irritated and a bit cheated. And then the heroine turned out to be this very unsure girl, sexually frustrated, not confident in her lover’s feelings towards her, barely just getting comfortable with her new psychic gift. Her boyfriend, on the other hand, seemed to perfect to be real—too kind, too patient, too understanding, and, honestly, I didn’t feel they were right for each other at all. No matter how in love Kate insisted she was in every chapter, I only felt her insecurities, rather than their chemistry.

That being said, Kate slowly grew on me, just like mold—her words, not mine. I was taken by her candid kindness and her desperate need to help people. I loved how honest she was and how sarcastic she could be. And I loved, that unlike some other heroines, she wasn’t obsessed with fashion and looking good. She’s definitely a great, lovable character. Just like Declan. Unlike Jared, Declan was real—snarky, playboy-ish, unashamed. He was an imperfect character, which made him very interesting and very fascinating.

The plot was interesting too, though a bit lacking in action. All along, there are just visions that Kate follows to save the victims, but, in fact, all the action consists in her letting the families know what happens and then crying her eyes out. There is little external conflict. In fact the real external conflict only happens at the end of the book—the cliffhanger. If you wanna read this book, I strongly suggest buying the whole series, otherwise you won’t be truly satisfied.

All in all, in spite of its imperfection, I did enjoy the story and I will certainly buy the whole series. Thumbs up!

 

APRIL AASHEIM –– ARMAND3.5 stars

Armand was a very unique read for me because it was unlike most books I read and enjoy. I wish I could rate it higher, but, unfortunately, the style really didn’t match my tastes and I had to struggle to read it, even though the execution was impeccable, in terms of plot and characterization. What I truly missed was humor and a lighter vibe. True, there was teasing between the hero and heroine, but there’s not enough to dampen the dark, depressing atmosphere of the book.

The story takes place is a strange universe where electricity, televisions and all modern appliances coexist with misogyny and primitive religious beliefs. From the start, I was particularly repulsed by the view society, in this universe, has on women.

If that wasn’t enough, the hero himself is a phychic that feeds on sexual energies and uses women to satisfy his urges without caring what happens to them after he leaves them.

I usually love imperfect characters, but I found Armand had too many flaws to be completely likable. He only managed to redeem himself at the end by righting his wrongs and his finding his father’s grave was such an emotional scene that it truly made me weep for him and almost made up for all the scenes I didn’t like.

I did like Armand, the character, in the end, especially when he insisted he couldn’t love anyone, because characters who build a wall around their feelings are the most interesting and turn out to be the most profound.

However the story ended just when I was getting into the action and starting to love where it was going.

If I were to summarize what this book is about, I would say Armand is a dark, quite lyrical tale about a lonely man’s journey to finding himself and his purpose. Although psychic gifts play a part of the story, it is more a character driven account rather than an action book and I have the feeling it’s one of those books you love from the start or you won’t ever be completely comfortable reading, depending on your personality. If you enjoy dark tales and highly troubled heroes, this is definitely the book for you.

 

DALE MAYER –– TUESDAYS CHILD – 5 stars

I loved everything about this book. The plot was very good, the pacing was perfect and the characters were all amazing. It’s hard for me to find words for praising books, so usually the ones I like most get the shortest review. I will try, however to describe why this book took me from the start.

First of all, it began with visions of death. From the very first chapter I was sympathetic toward the main character, Samantha. Not only does she see the experiences of murder victims, but she feels their physical pain, which manifests on her own body. She bleeds together with them, both metaphorically and physically. Despite all that, and despite how mistreated she’s been all her life because of her unusual gift, Samantha shows incredible braveness and strength. She goes against her fear to do what she believes she’s right and, eventually, she earns people’s respect thanks to that.

But her journey isn’t easy. The police treat her like a suspect and a looney. The only person who believes in her is detective Brandt, who ends up falling in love with her. Brandt sees her hidden strength and falls in love with her vulnerable side as well as her brave side. Together they battle against the system until their voices are heard and they manage to capture a serial killer, bringing justice to his numerous victims.

In the process, Samantha learns how to open up and trust people, how to control her psychic gifts and how to rely on the people who love her. I loved that, on a micro level, her dog Soldier, whom she saved from euthanasia, goes through the same emotional journey of learning to trust. Ultimately, Soldier overcomes his trauma by saving Samantha from his former trainer, who’s none other than the killer.

I can’t wait to read the next books in this series.

 

JESI LEA RYAN –– JUST A LITTLE NUDGE4.5 stars

I had mixed feelings about this book. On one hand, I liked the plot and Marley’s powers and well as the idea of a stripper and a CIA agent solving a case together. It was original and written in an upbeat style. However, I felt like the whole plot was a bit rushed, there wasn’t enough time for a real connection to be created between the main characters. The heroine’s feelings for JC were a bit muddled.

It feels like the author concentrated so much on Marley coming off as a strong female character that she completely ignored giving her a real vulnerable side. True, her vulnerability came from her mother’s health state and her financial issues, but I didn’t feel it was enough. I feel at her core, she was all strength—no hang-ups, no bad choices, no complexes and self-doubts. I didn’t see any of that. She was smart, which I liked, but too cold, whereas, in comparison, JC seemed like a puppy drooling over her. That wasn’t a good match, in my opinion.

That being said, the writing wasn’t poorly executed at all, so, despite voicing those objections, I found it a fun and enjoyable read. If romance isn’t the main reason you buy this book…

 

DEANNA CHASE – HAUNTED ON BOURBON STREET – 5 stars

Wow! This story was intense. Perverted ghosts, witches, strippers, dreamwalkers, nasty exes, lesser angels, ghost hunters and…I’m sure I could come up with more if I think about it. I bet that’s exactly what the author told herself when she brainstormed this book. It had pretty much anything you could imagine. Seen from this point of view, you’d expect a disaster, but I was amazed how well they all fit together. The author managed to create a very entertaining read, lovable character and a captivating plot. That tells me she’s a master at GMC – goal, motivation, conflict. There was simply no chapter without some sort of obstacle the heroine had to overcome. I loved the pacing and the intense chemistry between characters. I’m not only referring to the sexual chemistry between MCs, but the relations between all characters. The bonds of friendship felt real, the supporting characters were strong and had their own distinct voices. I loved this book!

 

MORGAN HANNAH MACDONALD –– SPIRITS AMONG US4 stars

What can I say? This story was perfectly executed, but I didn’t fully enjoy the atmosphere. I loved that it was written from a man’s perspective and I loved Jon-Luc’s character a lot.

However, some things weren’t as enjoyable. For instance, I felt his and Angie’s instant attraction and instant “love” was a bit forced or, rather, the way the author described it all was implausible.

*SPOILER* Moreover, Angie’s experience with ghost is coming out of nowhere, like the perfect solution to Jon-Luc’s doubts. That seemed to be solved too easily and with no preamble whatsoever—another implausible detail. It’s like the author though: “Hmmm, ‘kay, I need Jon-Luc to confess to Angie he’s a psychic, but how do I do this? Oh, I know, I’ll just give her a past ghost experience! I’m a genius!” All of a sudden, when we were already at two thirds of the story with no mention of this whatsoever before this point? Didn’t work for me.*/SPOILER*

I also didn’t enjoy the descriptions of the ghosts. For me it was a complete turn-off *SPOILER* the scene when Jon-Luc has a vision of having sex with one of the victims */SPOILER* . That scene grossed me and I didn’t think it was a necessary scene either. And after that scene, all the ghosts apparitions grossed me out. If the author was aiming for horror, it was a total success.

From the point of view of the plot, however, I have no criticism, aside from Angie’s ghost experience scene I mentioned before. The plot was well-thought. The characters were charismatic, the killer was interesting and I really didn’t expect that turn of events, which is a huge plus! Unlike 90% of the stories where you know who the killer is, this one came as a surprise and it really tied the plot like a perfect bow placed over the gift box. I loved it. The scene at the end seemed a bit rushed, but all in all, the plot was full of adventure and interesting twists and the characters were really likable.

So, despite my reservations, I recommend this book. I think readers of the genre will enjoy it a lot.

 

JC ANDRIJESKI –– LONDON4 stars

In terms of plot and originality, this book was a masterpiece. I was so impressed with the universe the author has created and with the complexity of the intrigues she’s woven. In fact, this series is so big I can’t help feeling it’s all happening in an alternate universe for real.

But, the reason I gave it a tad lower rating is the lack of a satisfying ending. The whole story was full of angst and abuse. I cried 90% of the time and I craved that ending which would have made the pain worthwhile. *SPOILER* The ending however showed Allie falling in love with her abuser while Revik was forced to witness her confession and withstand the pain that came with it. */SPOILER*

From a logical point of view, I get that this was necessary for the story to come and I applaud the author for bearing to do this to her characters. I think this is one of the most skilled writers whose books I’ve ever had the honor of reading. On the other hand though, the story was so depressing and the ending so bitter-sweet that I don’t think I want to read more. Because I have the feeling there will only come more pain in the future volumes. This is not a story for those of us who like humorous, light reads.I don’t want to say it’s a story that has more depth, because that would mean implying humorous stories have no depth and that is absolute BS, but it’s definitely a story that treats very serious subjects. Disguised as a fantasy book. It’s not just a fantasy book, just an adventure book, just a story about unrequited love. It is also a story about the human condition, about abuse, about human behavior under particular circumstances. I couldn’t help feeling, at certain points, that it was a lot like a study in psychology.

London is only a prequel to a long series and the world the author built is so complex and amazing that I’m sure many of you will be fascinated. So, give it a try, see what you think. I think this is one of those that you either like or not, depending on your personal tastes and the events you’re going through in your own personal life. Either way, whether you’ll like this particular prequel/series or not, keep an eye on this author because she’s a true gem! Warning: You will need a lot of tissues and a certain bitter mood to be able to stomach some of the scenes.

 

JORDAN CASTILLO PRICE –– AMONG THE LIVING 5+ stars

I may be a bit biased because the whole reason I wanted to read this collection of stories was Jordan Castillo Price’s Among the Living being featured in it. I’ve already read Among the Living twice and, even though it’s not my favorite out of Jordan’s works, it holds a very dear place in my heart because it’s the first story I ever read by this amazing author. This review is more about the whole Pyscop series, because this book is just a small bite ad the entire development of the story is much more complex. I feel the need to explain what exactly psycop is about for those readers who are completely new to M/M and/or Jordan Castillo Price’s works.

Among the Living is the first book of the Psycop series, a series about a medium who helps ghosts cross over and solves mysteries in his own special way.

What I love about this author’s books is the way she builds characters. Her boys are always troubled, rough guys who, deep inside, fear intimacy, fear opening up to others, making friends, falling in love. This series essentially follows Victor in his own personal battle against himself and his innermost fears. We see him falling in love, slowly making friends and maybe even realizing that not everyone wishes him harm.

Among the Living, in particular, introduces readers to a universe where psychics are pretty much government dogs. Victor is one of the first generations psychics, meaning that before him the people who had real psychic powers were catalogued as mentally ill. As such, Victor has been experimented on and virtually held prisoner in what his generation’s psychics called Camp Hell. As a result, Victor doesn’t trust authority figures, he doesn’t trust anyone—this is, in fact, the main internal conflict of the whole series. He was smart enough not to show his true power while he undergone Camp Hell and, even so, he’s considered one of the strongest mediums in the world. No one is actually aware of the true extent of his powers. And that is the main external conflict—him trying to keep his powers hidden.

As all of Jordan’s characters, Victor has a snarky, sarcastic personality that instantly amuses you. At the same time, readers will fall in love with him due to his unawareness to how amazing he is and, especially, thanks to his weaknesses and vulnerabilities.

From a romantic point of view, the whole series isn’t extremely graphic so I doubt any new readers of the M/M genre will be scarred for life reading sex scenes between male characters, however the books have a certain heat level and I, personally, believe the author is quite a master when it comes to passionate scenes.

I could write a whole book about the Psycop series alone so I will try refraining from singing its praises further before this turns into an essay. Bottom line is, I can guarantee this book is worthwhile and, more so, the books to come. You will fall in love with the world-building and the amazing characterization. Hands down one of the best authors ever!

 

C.J. ELLISSONVAMPIRE VACATION – 5 stars

Woot! This book was written to match my tastes like a glove. Loved the very original idea of a vampire resort. Loved that it had lots of sex, yet it wasn’t so overwhelming to the point of wanting to browse over it. And, most of all, I loved the main character. She is the strong, lonely type, only truly trusting her husband. However her hidden strength attracts everyone and makes them naturally gravitate around her.

In this story, we’re shown how Vivian/Dria slowly, albeit reluctantly, opens up to others by allowing them to witness her true abilities and by welcoming new people into her family.

Hot guy, snarky humor and a meddling hostess playing matchmaker—this had all the ingredients of a really fun books. I loved the plot so much I will definitely buy the next books in the series.

HAZEL HUNTERTOUCHED – 3.5 stars

The idea behind Touch is very nice and I liked the execution. My only complaints are the short length and the lack of a satisfying ending. I love the twist about the killer, but it felt like it all ended too abruptly. Still, this being a novella, I think the author did a great job. But, obviously, if you want to get the nice ending you’ll be waiting for, you have to buy the following books, otherwise, there’ll be no point.

I loved the characters and the way Isabelle’s powers manifests. I think it’s worth buying the whole series.

 

Ah, this has been quite a rollercoaster ride. I loved the whole stories in the anthology, despite not being a huge hetero stories fan. I am, however, a really huge psychic stories fan, mainly thanks to Jordan Castillo Price (OMG! Don’t I sound like a stalker?). But, this whole collection was filled with exceptional stories written by very skilled authors that I would love to check out in the future as well. I want to thank the whole team and especially Jordan for the opportunity to read and review this book.

Sacrati by Kate Sherwood – review

A year or two back I stumbled upon Kate Sherwood on a writers’ forum and took the opportunity to tell her how much I loved her writing. I was truly taken aback that such an amazing author like her was so modest, saying how she needed a lot more experience and she was just a beginner writer. Truly? Even after years from her Dark Horse series no other author has managed to write a better M/M/M, yet this really wonderful woman thought her work was just beginner level. I wonder if Kate Sherwood has any more excuses to be modest after this masterpiece .

It’s why I wanted to read Sacrati even though, to be honest, the blurb and cover didn’t appeal to me. Because, Knowing the quality of Kate Sherwood’s work I couldn’t imagined it being anything other than flawless. What I got though, exceeded even my expectations.

Like Dark Horse, I don’t think this book will ever be unpopular for the M/M readers. It will be an iconic read. The plot, the characters, they were all flawless. But beyond all that, I loved the message of the book, the emotions it makes you feel.

At first it made me think a lot of Captive Prince. The idea itself is very similar in the beginning, but then the book, thankfully, takes a completely different and original route. The action is placed in a fictional world where civilizations are divided in valleys. On one hand there’s the Torian Empire with its many valleys and the Elkat valley, one of the few left unconquered by the Empire.

Theos is a Torian Sacrati- a group of highly trained soldiers. He’s grown up and lived in a society where people are separated by gender: women live in the city, they rule over everything that doesn’t have to do with war. Once a year they choose men to conceive their children with and then men and women never see each other again until the next year. Men live outside the city, in barracks; they train, have sex and go to war. For Theo’s society, sex with the same gender is normal and natural.

On the other hand, Elkati have completely different principles. They believe in mating for life and only with people from the other gender. When Prince Finnvid of Elkat is captured by Theos and his men, he’s forced to change his whole view on sexuality and social customs.

The story would have been beautiful just like this. But that’s only one layer of the story. Mrs. Sherwood went much farther than that, layering levels upon levels of complexity to the plot. She brought in political intrigues and emotional betrayals. She forced her characters to face their fears, she made them see behind the façades and challenge everything they’ve been raised to believe in. For example, while Finnvid learns that Torians aren’t the vulgar, barbaric people he was led to believe, Theos understands there is much more to the world than having sex and going to war.

You’ll find touching pieces of dialogue, superb characterization and so much adventure it will keep you on the edge of your seat until the very end.

I’m telling you, you will never forget this book.

*Disclaimer – No, I do not know the author and I was’t paid to write this, in case anyone’s wondering. I just loved it SO much and I vow to bugger everyone I know to read it !

Cold Feet by Jay Northcote – review

Hello everyone! Merry Christmas! Hope your holidays are filled with warmth and love.

My gift to you is a review of Cold Feet by Jay Northcote. In exchange for this review, I received a free copy of the book.

ColdFeet_JayNorthcote_FINALBlurb:

Getting snowed in at a remote cottage in Wales with someone he’d fancied for ages isn’t exactly how Sam expected to spend Christmas. His feelings for Ryan are pointless. Ryan’s straight—or so he thought.

Until now, Ryan’s kept his feelings for Sam buried. Why ruin a friendship over what might only be gay experimentation? Playing it cool seems safer, until a cold snap makes sharing body heat vital. In their Welsh safe haven, anything seems possible.

As Ryan’s reserve melts away, Sam wants more than stolen kisses under the mistletoe. But a sudden thaw means making decisions. They could face the New Year together—unless one of them gets cold feet.

Buy Links:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00QFN1NY8

https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-coldfeet-1689541-149.html

You can find an excerpt of the story in my previous post: https://shaylamist.wordpress.com/2014/12/20/what-mm-books-to-buy-this-xmas-day-5/

My rating: 5 stars

I fell this story because it had all the themes I love (and most other readers love) – best friends to lovers, snowed in in isolated location were the heating doesn’t work (eeep!), college boys and closeted MC. Wow! With themes like these it was impossible not to enjoy the read.

Now some of you might think this is too cliché. I know some people really hate clichés. But think about it: why do clichés exist in the first place? Because clichés are proofed to work. Because people love them just as much as they hate them sometimes! If a writer takes a cliché and renders it in such a way that it makes it unique, then the readers will fall hard for the story. Such example is Cold Feet. Despite the cliché situation the characters were in, the author excelled in characterization, thus giving the story its unique voice. I loved how the story was paced, I loved that there was no hurry and, at the same time, it was filled with sexual tension. I loved how threedimmensional the characters were and I’d truly want to read more about them in the future. The story had an amazing ending that will make your heart stutter.

In other words, there’s nothing cliché about Cold Feet.

I also noticed some readers didn’t like the “miscommunication issue” (yes, I do tend to read other people’s reviews too). Not sure what was wrong about that. I think it added just the right amount of angst to move the story forward, and, believe it or not, miscommunication exists in real life as well. I blowed most of my relationships thanks to that. Read any study on relationships and they’ll tell you communication is the key. Per a contratrio, this mean people don’t communicate enough. So what exactly is the problem that the author used miscomunication as the internal conflict factor? I think people who latch on that to give bad reviews are being entirely too subjective.

So before buying any book, do read excerpts, go to the author’s blog, read about the process of writing that particular book, read about their research, their struggles. I cannot stress enough how important it is. You will have build your own opinion without being influenced completely by reviewers, who, at the end of the day, are people just like you, which makes them subjective and not truly reliable.

That being said, for what it’s worth, I really enjoyed this book and I think it was the perfect cozy holiday read.

If you wanna take my advice, check out the excerpt I mentioned above, as well as Jay Northcote’s website: www.jaynorthcote.com

Cheers guys! Happy holidays!

The Valjevo Encounter by J. Vaughn – Review

Well, hello friends. It’s been a while since I updated my blog. My only excuse is real life, but, let’s be honest, I’m simply a procrastinator. *cough cough*

I’m back with a review of J. Vaughn’s new book, The Valjevo Encounter. Those of you who’ve browsed through my posts surely already know I’ve got a weak spot for J., but, please don’t dismiss this simply by considering it too subjective because of my friendship with the author. I’m gonna be honest with you. If I don’t like a book I’m not gonna trash it to pieces. There’s always something good about any book, not matter how bad it is, believe it or not. But, at the same time, I won’t sing its praises either.

So, the only reason I’m giving Jay’s book five stars, it’s because I honestly believe she deserves it. Now, all reviews are fundamentally subjective, so you might end up not loving the book as much as I did, but at least give it a chance. Read an excerpt, an interview, read the author’s blog etc. before deciding whether to buy it or not.

That being said, let’s move on to the review (you can find this review both here and on my Goodreads account, Blogspot account and Facebook account – links on the main page).

This is the actual review:

Oh, this was a book I’ve been waiting for. Firstly, because it’s written by Jay (:P) and, secondly, because I was getting sick and tired of shiny vampires. Don’t get me wrong, I have nothing against them, but I miss those books where vampires are evil impersonated. That’s exactly what this book is about and that’s why I loved it. It’s so much different than what’s out there right now in the M/M world. It’s original, it’s fresh.

But that’s not its only good point. The best point of The Valjevo Encounter is the characterization. It is amazing how much connection the reader feels with this characters. Well, I didn’t expect otherwise from Jay Vaughn, but for those of you who haven’t read her Rough Boys series, it might come as a pleasant surprise how much you’ll fall in love with her characters.

On one hand, you have this strong alpha male named Guy (real name Salvatore) who’s gone through so much hardship in his life, he’s not afraid of anything, but becomes vulnerable as all hell when he meets Melvin and instantly falls in love. Yes, the whole story is mostly insta-love, but it’s one of the few plots that worked for me. They didn’t mate like animals in heat though they both felt the unstoppable, palpable attraction. They didn’t declare undying love for each other or called each other silly endearments. On the contrary, both characters had pride and an underlying fear that wouldn’t allow them to act on their attraction, which made the plot all the more captivating.

On the other hand, you have Melvin-cute, tiny and angelic virgin whose world turns upside down when he discovers vampires and other monsters are very real and very deadly. I loved this character because he’s so proud and so strong on the inside. At the beginning of the book, he goes by the nickname “Tigger” only to give it up at the end by asking his best friend to start calling him Mel. I liked this metaphor for growing up, for becoming someone new. Not sure if anyone will see it like I did, but I tend to see subtle metaphors in anything, really, and I strongly believe J. Vaughn is a master of veiled messages.

But I also loved the supporting characters—Ed, Consuela and, most of all, Mel’s best friend, Jon—all strong, brave, exceptional characters that will make your reading experience even richer. I honestly hope Jay will prepare a sequel with Jon as main character because he was amazing!
For those of you who’ve read Rough Boys and enjoyed it, you’ll be happy to know J.’s writing is still as fantastic as ever and I’m sure you all can’t wait to read this book.

For those of you who couldn’t finish Rough Boys because of the dark subjects, I’m happy to announce you will certainly be able to stomach The Valjevo Encounter. It’s much lighter in comparison to the Rough Boys series, and focuses a lot more on the romance between characters rather than the dark theme of vampires. Although not completely lacking dark moments, The Valjevo Encounter will not make you uncomfortable, will not make you cry rivers of tears. The whole purpose of it is a beautiful love story with just a bit of adventurous angst.

I’m sure everyone will enjoy this book immensely.