Showing posts with label Kelly Jensen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kelly Jensen. Show all posts

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Random Review: Chasing Forever by Kelly Jensen #Review #Giveaway




Author: Kelly Jensen
Title: Chasing Forever
Series: This Time Forever #3
Publisher: Riptide Publishing
Cover Artist: Natasha Snow
Publication Date: December 10, 2018
Length: 353 pages 

Reviewed by Sammy

Synopsis

Old wounds, new directions, and a forever worth chasing.

Malcolm Montgomery was a history teacher and track coach until an accident left him with two broken legs. He’ll recover, but life has knocked his feet out twice now. He’s not sure if he’s ready to try again, especially when it comes to love—and slick guys like Brian Kenway. Still, he needs help mentoring the school’s LGBTQ society, so he asks Brian to take some responsibility.

Brian has been hiding behind his reputation as a liar and a cheat for so long that he actually believes he’s that guy—until his nephew, Josh, turns up on his couch, tossed out for being gay. Brian has never considered being a father, but he knows all about being rejected by loved ones. Now Brian wants to be more: a partner for Mal and a role model for Josh.

But when Mal’s recovery is set back and the sad truth of Brian’s past is revealed, the forever they’ve been chasing seems even further from their grasps. It’ll take a rescue effort to revive their sense of worth and make Brian, Mal, and Josh into a family of their own.



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Review

Two men meet. One, has had more than his fair share of knocks in life. The other man is a serial cheater and known player. Several surgeries with potentially more to come find Mal trying his best to see beyond not only the physical pain of learning to walk again but also grappling with the depressing belief that he will never really measure up to anyone’s standards. He has lost at love more than once but the last time really knocked the wind out of his sails and determined he just wasn’t worth it.

 Only Brian knows the real reason he was never faithful to his partner, Simon who is now happy with another man leaving Brian all alone. But all that is about to change. Brian’s story is the third installment in Kelly Jensen’s This Time Forever series and probably the saddest of the three. When we are finally privy to what makes Brian who he is today it is horrifying and brutal. But The author doesn’t leave Brian alone for long—instead she gives him someone who will cherish him just as he really deserves.

I think of all the characters author Kelly Jensen has created, Mal is perhaps the most sensitive and gentle. He is also nearly as lost as Brian is and that is saying something. Mal was told once too often that he is just not good enough and that has left Mal gun shy of ever going after another relationship much less one with the likes of Brian Kenway. But Brian isn’t at all like Mal has been warned of and before long they are taking a chance on finding out about one another.

Chasing Forever is a testament to the healing power of friendship and love. What changes for both these men is the realization that they have to learn to love themselves first before they can commit to loving another. Until they can understand that they themselves are the real stumbling block to their happiness they will never be able to make a go of it. That is the real thrust of this novel and it is lovely to watch their journey even though, at times, it is incredibly painful.



Giveaway

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Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Blog Tour: To See The Sun by Kelly Jensen ~ Guest Post #Excerpt #Giveaway


To See the Sun by Kelly Jensen

Publisher: Riptide Publishing

Release Date: August 13, 2018

Length: Print – 243 pages. Ebook – 295 pages.

Subgenre: Science fiction, western

Reader warnings: past and present violence, and references to past abuse.
For a full list of tags, visit: https://riptidepublishing.com/titles/to-see-the-sun and click on “Additional Details”

Links:






Book Synopsis:


Survival is hard enough in the outer colonies—what chance does love have?

Life can be harsh and lonely in the outer colonies, but miner-turned-farmer Abraham Bauer is living his dream, cultivating crops that will one day turn the unforgiving world of Alkirak into paradise. He wants more, though. A companion—someone quiet like him. Someone to share his days, his bed, and his heart.

Gael Sonnen has never seen the sky, let alone the sun. He’s spent his whole life locked in the undercity beneath Zhemosen, running from one desperate situation to another. For a chance to get out, he’ll do just about anything—even travel to the far end of the galaxy as a mail-order husband. But no plan of Gael’s has ever gone smoothly, and his new start on Alkirak is no exception. Things go wrong from the moment he steps off the shuttle.

Although Gael arrives with unexpected complications, Abraham is prepared to make their relationship work—until Gael’s past catches up with them, threatening Abraham’s livelihood, the freedom Gael gave everything for, and the love neither man ever hoped to find.







Guest Post

Top Five Sci-Fi Romances


Being a fan of both science fiction and romance, I’m always on the lookout for really great combinations of the two. Here, in no particular order, are my top five!

Peripheral People by Reesa Heberth and Michelle Moore
Let me sum it up for you: psychic detectives in space. I know, right? If there is a genre I like more than science fiction romance, it’d be detectives in space. Toss in a love story, and I’m pretty much set. I mean, what else do you need besides a good reading snack? (I recommend Peanut M&Ms.)
What makes Peripheral People unique is the combination of science fiction and paranormal elements. The Ylendrian Empire is a world with a sense of scope and history, but though this is the fourth book in the series, new readers won’t be lost. The authors include enough detail for you to settle in without being overwhelmed. Besides, this is a character driven story. The setting is important and is woven seamlessly into their backstories, but it’s Westley Tavera and Corwin Menivie who will keep you reading. Their relationship begins as a reaction to the sexual escapades of their respective partners and develops into a war between West’s needs and Corwin’s discomfort with intimacy. Oh, so prickly!
The case they have to solve is as interesting and twisty as it gets. And then there’s the cover. It’s pretty and purple. I’m a sucker for a great cover.

Touched By an Alien by Gini Koch
I came across this book at my local library while looking for the next book in Sherilyn Kenyon’s endlessly fascinating Dark Hunter series. One shelf down stood a row of books with pretty covers and the word ALIEN on nearly all of them. What’s this, what’s this! I found the first one, read the back cover, and was sold.
Katherine "Kitty" Katt witnesses a fight between a couple that looks like it’s about to turn ugly. Then it does, when one of them transforms into an alien and goes on a killing spree. Panicking and running would make sense for most of us, but Kitty takes on the alien and kills it. Then a guy in an Armani suit appears beside her, introduces himself as Jeff Martini from The Agency, and takes her to meet his boss. Next day, Kitty has a new job fighting aliens.
List of favourite things:
1. Jeff Martini
2. Jeff Martini
3. Christopher
4. Reader
5. Kitty
6. Kitty's parents
7. Aliens
8. Sexy aliens
9. Guys who are sweet with their sexy
10. Jeff Martini

The Klockwerk Kraken by Aidee Ladnier
Most of my reading buddies know that I have a thing for tentacles. It’s not a super, um, sexy thing (though I’m totally here for the sexy things), it’s more a fascination. One of the ideas in my Big Book of Ideas is to write the book that doesn’t go there. To write a shy alien with tentacles who is actually horrified by the notion he might use them, um, sexily. (But, knowing me, his love interest will probably end up teaching him a few tricks. I mean, c’mon. Tentacles.)
In the meantime, I’m happy to read books like The Klockwerk Kraken. Aidee Ladnier has a wonderful sense of humor and writes really sweet characters. The story also combines my favorite elements: science fiction, a mystery, and romance. And tentacles. There’s great world building with lots of detail and believable settings. Teo is so sweet. Jimenez's past is explored with a compassionate show of restraint. And the love scenes are smokin'.

The Prince and the Program by Aldous Mercer 
The Prince and the Program is a very strange book. The strange is what turns every page, however, as you’re never quite sure what will happen next. Mordred ‘Mori’ Pendragon is exiled to Canada (oh, the horror!) for unspecified crimes. Broke and powerless, he interviews for a job as a software engineer and takes a position with a tech startup in Toronto. It’s pretty clear from the outset that his lack of programming experience isn’t the biggest issue the company has. There are gremlins in the network, another company is trying to steal their data, and the chief technical officer lives in a MacBook. He might be the ghost of Alan Turing or a bloody smart AI or one of the aforementioned gremlins.

Mori develops a thing for Alan. This thing, this crush, is an amusing, gentle, surprisingly emotional and riveting undercurrent to the story. While Alan and Mori debate questions of what makes a soul, and if a soul makes one capable of love, someone else at the company is experimenting with magic that could suck the souls out of everyone, thus ending the world as we know it.

The Prince and the Program is one of those books you need to get a fair way into before asking too many questions. Also, this book is definitely one for those who like to think, and like think about thinking. There is a lot of philosophy and poetry, computer language, geek speak, concepts, otherworldly landscapes, and humor. There is also a rousing good adventure story, including a trip through the realms of death where, luckily, Mori always knows a guy.


Paradox Series by Rachel Bach
A book that captures the reader on the first page is rare. Fortune’s Pawn, the first in the Paradox series by Rachel Bach, had me pretty much at the first sentence. The voice of Deviana Morris, Paradoxian mercenary, is personable and compelling. I fell immediately into her world and eagerly followed her adventures. Thankfully, a reader is only a bystander, because Devi gets beaten up a lot.
I didn’t start reading this series for the romance, and to be fair, some might call this science fiction first, romance second. That’s okay with me as the story here is bigger than three books. It extends before and after as Rachel Bach does what she does best—building a world that is so totally believable, she could return to it at any time to tell another story. Bach always introduces a hero with such a compelling arc, though, that the reader’s focus remains there, with them. And there is always a love story, which in this series, is actually more central than it appears.
Devi is going to sacrifice a lot for her lover, making the third book in the series, Heaven’s Queen a hugely emotional read.







Excerpt 


Bram pushed up from the table. “I’m going to make tea. Want some?”

“I can make it.”

“Sit. I didn’t ship you all the way out here to wait on me.”

“What did you ship me out here for?”

Bram didn’t answer, and the question burned the back of his neck as he performed the mundane task of making the tea. He selected an herbal blend, his favorite, and spooned desiccated leaves, fruit peel, and flower heads into the diffusing chamber at the center of a battered metal pot. He could program the beverage machine, but he preferred to make tea the old-fashioned way. Leaves and hot water. Sometimes the process of a thing was as important as the result.

He reached toward the shelf of mugs and stopped as a hand touched his shoulder. Warm breath ghosted across the cooling skin at the back of his neck, reigniting his blush. Bram let his fingers catch on the edge of the shelf and rest there, and tipped his head forward. Gael moved closer, the heat of his body evident now as he leaned in.

Lips met the back of his neck in a soft kiss. A small quake shifted the muscles beneath Bram’s skin, his body making ready to turn. He held still a moment longer before following another long-held urge, turning slowly—so slowly—until they were face to face. Well, until his mouth was level with Gael’s forehead. Bram pressed a kiss there, one as gentle as the touch of lips to the back of his neck.

“I didn’t bring you out here for this, either,” he murmured.

“Yes, you did.”

Bram took hold of Gael’s slim shoulders. “Not just this.” And not like this.

In answer, Gael lifted his face, offering up his mouth. Bram’s resolve lasted about a second longer than he thought it might before he bent to taste those lips. They’d been interrupted twice now. No longer.

Gael’s lips were so soft, melting beneath his, opening—though Bram didn’t take the invitation right away. He kissed both lips, together and separately. He tasted them, the scent of Gael mingling with the bitter tang of the outside air. Gael made a small sound: a whimper or a moan. Bram deepened the kiss, still resisting the temptation of Gael’s tongue. He didn’t want to fall all in, lose himself.

Then he was there, falling, his lips and hands operating independently of thought. He craved the warmth of Gael’s skin and wanted to compare it to the feel of his tongue. See if he moved the same way—gently, teasingly. Gael seemed as wrapped up in the kiss as Bram. He shifted, constantly, swaying into Bram, hooking his hands into the back pockets of Bram’s work pants.

Blood shot south to pulse in his cock, leaving Bram in that almost-forgotten state of arousal—somewhere between thought and thoughtlessness. He teetered there, reveling in the anticipation, and let his imagination roam. Oh, to touch Gael’s skin, to taste him. To hear the sounds he’d make when aroused, when brought to climax, when drifting in the aftermath. Would he be loud? Would he be shy and sweet?

A soft click sounded behind him. The tea. Blinking as though roused from a dream, Bram pulled back. Gael leaned in immediately, following him. He kissed Bram’s neck and ground his hips forward. Bram tugged Gael’s hands from his pockets, regret making his movements clumsy.

Gael tipped his head back. “What are you doing?”

“The tea is ready.”

One long, slow blink. “What?”

“The tea.” Bram was still holding Gael’s hands, and stupidly, he didn’t want to let go. But he did so he could turn and collect the mugs. Pick up the pot.

“Did I do something wrong?”

“No.”

“Then why did we stop?”

Bram had to consider his answer because he didn’t really know, not in a way he could express in words. It would have been so easy to keep going. To have had something fast and dirty in the kitchen, or to have picked Gael up and carried him to the bedroom.

Gael followed him into the HV room and sat beside him on the couch. Waited quietly while Bram poured the tea and handed over one of the mugs. Picking up the other mug, Bram thought a little more. Wrapped his fingers around the warm composite of ceramic and plastic and searched for just the right words.

“We’ve got time.” Bram raised the mug to his lips, but decided the tea was still too hot to take a sip. “Doesn’t all have to happen in one night.”








About Kelly Jensen:


If aliens ever do land on Earth, Kelly will not be prepared, despite having read over a hundred stories of the apocalypse. Still, she will pack her precious books into a box and carry them with her as she strives to survive. It’s what bibliophiles do.

Kelly is the author of a number of novels, novellas and short stories, including the Chaos Station series, co-written with Jenn Burke. Some of what she writes is speculative in nature, but mostly it’s just about a guy losing his socks and/or burning dinner. Because life isn’t all conquering aliens and mountain peaks. Sometimes finding a happy ever after is all the adventure we need.








Enter the Giveaway


Prize: Enter to win any back catalog Chaos Station ebook by Kelly Jensen and Jenn Burke or paperback of Always and Forever: A Chaos Station Collection by Kelly Jensen and Jenn Burke. Open internationally. 




a Rafflecopter giveaway Link: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/88d45f0364/

Thursday, January 12, 2017

Blog Tour: Block and Strike by Kelly Jensen #Review Guest Post #Giveaway





Author: Kelly Jensen
Book: Block and Strike
Publisher: Dreamspinner Press
Publication date: January 6, 2017
Length: 266 pages


Reviewed by Meredith


Synopsis



Jacob Kendricks is three months out of prison, estranged from his daughter, and ready to get his life on track. Taking care of the bum curled up on his doorstep isn’t part of the plan. When he realizes the man has been assaulted, Jake takes him to the hospital, where he learns that Max is his downstairs neighbor… and that he could really use a friend. Keeping Max in the friend-zone would be easier if he wasn’t so damned cute.
Maxwell Wilson has been bullied for years and the only person who ever cared lives too far away to come to his rescue. Now his upstairs neighbor is offering support. Max remains cautious, suspecting he is little more than a project for the handsome Jake. When he learns Jake has had boyfriends as well as girlfriends, Max has to reevaluate his priorities—and muster the courage to take a chance at love.
Just when a happy future is within their grasp, life knocks them back down. A devastating blow leaves Max lower than ever and Jake wrestling with regret. They both have to find the strength to stand on their own before they can stand together.





Review


This is the second Kelly Jensen book I’ve read. Here’s the interesting thing; the two were polar opposites. One was light, funny, magical. Block and Strike was emotional, raw, a bit gritty, and a lot amazing. I love the fact that the author is so versatile in her writing.

Block and Strike deals with something so many people are familiar with…bullying. Sometimes bullying is words and sometimes it’s physical. In Max’s case it’s both. 

Max’s journey in life has been nothing but push down, drag out situations. A sick mom, a homophobic abusive father, bullies at school and as an adult. The man broke my heart so much. We see what the effects of prolonged harassment and abuse do to a person and I thought the author really did an outstanding job fleshing out this character and the evolution of his story.

Jake was a different story. He’s a criminal and I knew the second I read him that whatever he did, it was for a good reason. He got a raw deal but he owned his mistake and works every day to be a better person. When he saves Max he also saves himself and so we watch these two broken men grow into extraordinary people. 

The secondaries in this book were terrific. Mostly Jake’s family. Their love and support for their son filled me with a kind of warmth only a mother could understand. Then to bestow the same love, affection, and support onto Max? Yeah, they win all the awards.

This is a great book. Emotional, dark at times, but it’s a gritty love story. Great read.






Hobbies 

I love giving my characters interesting hobbies and Max and Jake from Block and Strike are no exception!
When choosing hobbies for my characters, I try to match the activity to their personality. It doesn’t need to be an obvious match, but Jake’s hobbies are. He works in construction and his main hobby is restoring furniture he finds on the side of the road. It’s a great activity for him because he likes to work with his hands. He’s also a very nurturing guy. Just as he sees the beauty in an old table that needs to be stripped and refinished, he sees the potential in someone like Max.
Jake also enjoys cooking. He likes to eat and that nurturing side of him loves to feed people. Having his friends gathered around a table he’s set is something that pleases him very much. The scene in Block and Strike where he prepares dinner for his friends is one of my favourites. It says a lot of about Jake.
Martial arts training appeals to Jake’s need for structure and discipline. He’s a pretty emotional guy. Training gives him confidence in his choices and his physicality. You can tell that he takes the lessons he’s learned in the dojo seriously, and that his training has been an integral part of his growth as a person.
Max is a quiet little dude and his hobbies mostly reflect that. He collects plants—cast offs from the supermarket where he works—and has a bookshelf full of science fiction novels. (Wonder where he got that hobby?)
He also likes to run. For pleasure. Running is one of those hobbies that really defines Max. It’s a solitary sport, which suits his shyness, but it’s not limited by time or location. He can just step outside and go, whenever he wants. Wherever he wants. Running is his escape. The exercise also has the benefit of keeping him fit and somewhat sane. While he’s running, Max enters a relaxed mental state he calls Max-Space where he worries less and dreams a little bigger.
Perhaps the most unexpected hobby in Block and Strike is Max’s obsession with motor racing. On the one hand, it’s hardly surprising. His father is a mechanic with his own garage. Max basically grew up with a wrench in one hand. The roar of engines and the thrill of speed doesn’t exactly seem like Max’s thing, though. It’s easy to picture him with a book, or loping along the trails at Pennypack Park. But behind the wheel of a sports car?
He doesn’t get to drive all that often, but he does watch a lot of driving. One of the few luxuries in his hole of an apartment is a DVR so he can record and watch every race—and it’s in the watching that this hobby makes more sense for him. It’s a quiet pastime. Yes, the sport is noisy, but watching it is actually kind of peaceful. Especially the endurance races. And it’s not the sport where the biggest guy wins. Drivers can be the quiet, unassuming sort. Drivers need focus and patience. So, it’s hardly surprising that these are two of the traits Jake most admires in Max.




About Kelly

If aliens ever do land on Earth, Kelly will not be prepared, despite having read over a hundred stories of the apocalypse. Still, she will pack her precious books into a box and carry them with her as she strives to survive. It’s what bibliophiles do.
Kelly is the author of a number of novels, novellas and short stories, including the Chaos Station series, co-written with Jenn Burke. Some of what she writes is speculative in nature, but mostly it’s just about a guy losing his socks and/or burning dinner. Because life isn’t all conquering aliens and mountain peaks. Sometimes finding a happy ever after is all the adventure we need.
Connect with Kelly: Twitter | Facebook | Website






Giveaway

Thanks for following my tour! At the end of every post, I’ll be asking a question. Leave a comment with your answer (and your email address). Every comment throughout the tour counts as an entry in my giveaway. Two winners will each receive $25 (US or equivalent) to spend at the Dreamspinner Press store.
Question: What’s your favourite hobby?