Showing posts with label Micheal reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Micheal reviews. Show all posts

Monday, April 29, 2019

New Release Review: Forever Moore by Riley Hart & Christina Lee #Review #Giveaway




Title: Forever Moore
Series: Forbidden Love #2
Authors: Riley Hart & Christina Lee 
Self-Published
Cover Artist: Sarah Jo Chreene
Publication Date: April 22, 2019
Length: 288 pages 

Reviewed by Michael

Synopsis

With his raven hair and snow-white skin, Lord Ansil Eirwin draws unwanted attention wherever he goes. After his father’s untimely death, Ansil is set to become Duke of Ravenswood on his next birthday. The gallant and timid lord would never dream of shirking responsibility, so he subverts his desires in order to please his mother and new stepfather, Reginald.

Orien Moore, known as the Huntsman, lives on the fringes and has forsaken close bonds with anyone, even the misfits he has taken in. When Orien is called upon by his brother, Reginald, to kill the pampered future duke, it is the perfect opportunity to seek revenge against his power-hungry brother. Orien formulates a plan to use Reginald’s vicious request to his advantage by kidnapping Ansil and holding him hostage until he can fulfill his birthright.

Soon Orien realizes that Ansil is nothing like he’d expected. Kind and joyful, Ansil enchants Orien and his ragtag group. And Ansil, in turn, cannot help but be curious about the gruff huntsman as Orien’s vulnerabilities are exposed. Their mutual interest transforms into affection, followed by overwhelming desire. But they are living on borrowed time.

With Reginald seeking power in Ravenswood, they have no way of knowing what will transpire once Orien returns Ansil to his proper place in society. The only certainty is that the odds are stacked against them. Will the young lord and his huntsman ever have the chance to experience the happily ever after they’ve found in each other’s arms?

***PLEASE NOTE: FOREVER MOORE is a romantic fairy tale—minus the magic—that features one reluctant lord, one brooding huntsman, and plenty of angsty, forbidden love. It’s loosely based on a treasured fairy tale in a make-believe setting that isn’t part of any specific time period and doesn’t play by any traditional rules. It also completely stands alone from EVER AFTER.






Review


As a kid growing up, I didn’t pay much attention to fairytales.  They were geared toward people like me.  Most of them featured a damsel in distress in need of rescuing by a knight in shining armor.  Once the rescue was complete, the new couple (who had instantly fallen in love, by the way) rose off into the sunset together to live their Happily Ever After.  In fact, unless I’m mistaken, the term “Happily Ever After” comes from these fairytales.  None of these stories had anything to do with little gay boys like me.  So instead, I would create situations in which Luke Skywalker would need rescuing from the dashing Han Solo. Or, Apollo and Starbuck (from the original Battlestar Galactica) would connect and raise Apollo’s son Boxey together.  I was shipping long before shipping was actually a thing.

So, I was super excited when Christina Lee and Riley Hart decided to take these fairy tales and rework them in ways that would be more relatable to little gay boys like me.  Much like the fairytales these books are based on, Christina and Riley’s stories are almost completely independent from one another.

Forever Moore is their second fairytale retelling.  It’s a riff on Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, complete with big Huntsman, the wicked step-parent, and the poison apple. 

Orien is the Huntsman.  He’s noble and reserved, with a well-earned hatred for his brother Reginald (who is also the step-father to the other MC, Ansil).  He maintains an estate far removed from the rest of society, and “collects” people in need of saving, seven of whom have ended up living on his estate.  (Now, it’s here that I will freely admit that I didn’t clue in to the fact that these seven were Riley and Christina’s version of the dwarves because…well… they aren’t dwarves.  But I had a giant moment of duh as I neared the end of the book)

Ansil is every bit the Snow White character:  pale skin, raven black hair, and bright red lips.  He’s about to turn twenty-one, at which time he will inherit his late-father’s title and the wealth and notoriety the title comes with.  Reginald, the snake that he is, comes up with a scheme to get rid of his step-son and take the inheritance for himself.  Which is where Orien comes into play.

Riley and Christina write seamlessly together.  Some authors have a “tell”, certain phrases that they use in their own books that also get used in the collaborations.  There’s none of that here.  The entire book has one, singular voice.

I loved this fairytale!!!  It’s kind of a slow burn.  Despite the circumstances in which they originally meet, the MC’s learn about each other at their own individual paces.  The “Black Moment” was a natural outgrowth of the characters different roles in Society, and the resolution was completely believable. 

So if you believe in the power of the Happily Ever After, do yourself a favor and pick this one up.





Giveaway
Enter the monthly review giveaway
Contest ends April 30th
Thanks!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Random Review: Bases Loaded by Sean Micheal #Review #Giveaway




Author: Sean Michael
Book: Bases Loaded 2nd Edition
Publisher: Dreamspinner Press
Cover Artist: Tiferet Design
Publication Date: January 23, 2018
Length: 210 pages

Reviewed by Michael


Synopsis

Can they survive the off-season and keep from striking out?

Baseball player Brett must get rehabilitation for his shoulder if he wants another season in the Major League. He and his partner, Benj, take off to the boonies to stay with physical therapist Ralph, a tough-talking, routine-setting guy, and Jean, Ralph’s Cajun lover, who cooks as well as he loves.

Brett and Ralph butt heads from the beginning. Ralph wants Brett to be more in touch with his feelings; Brett wants Ralph to give him his therapy and leave him alone. Benj and Jean get along far better, with Jean showing Benj around the kitchen and reassuring him when things with Brett get strained.

Before Ralph can even begin to work on Brett’s shoulder, though, Brett faces an even more difficult physical challenge, one that does more than threaten his career. He and Benj have to work through some tough issues, making decisions that will affect the rest of their lives together. Their gradual friendship with Ralph and Jean helps them through the bad times, but even that might not be enough to pull them through.


Buy Links





Review

I’ll be perfectly honest, I had a really hard time getting into this at the very beginning for one big reason:  I strongly disliked the characters.  I found Brett to be an arrogant, self-centered jerk.  And Benj was so wrapped up in what was going on with Brett, always so willing to please Brett, that he seemed to have no identity of his own.  I like to root for the main characters and hope that whatever obstacles are thrown their way, they can overcome them together.  And I couldn’t see that with these two.

Then something happened, and I took a step back and tried to look at the bigger picture. 

We are, by nature, creatures of habit.  As individuals, we go about our daily routines not even aware that we’re doing it.  Then something major can happen, you get into a car accident, someone steals your wallet, you lose your job, and that routine can be derailed.

Relationships work the same way.  Each relationship has a routine.  And, again, when something major happens, it can threaten to derail the entire relationship.

Brett has been so lost within himself since his injury, and so angry about it, that he has all but shut out the world.  But there are moments where his love for Benj is so clear and evident, that you just know if he could break from his own cycle and focus on that love, he would see that he’s not going through his pain alone, he has a partner that is quite literally willing to do anything for him. 

Taking that into consideration, I realized that’s what this book was really about. Not about Brett’s rehabilitation from a potentially career-ending injury, but Brett and Benj reconnecting as a couple.


Sometimes a break from the break in our routine is needed, a vacation from Life if you will, in order to set everything right.  And sometimes Life throws you a curveball, but it’s how you deal with it together is what truly matters.







Giveaway

Enter the monthly review giveaway
Contest ends January 31st
Thanks!

a Rafflecopter giveaway