To the Edge by Cindy Gerard (★★★★☆)
E-Book • Owned (Amazon) • Romantic Suspense • 2005
This is my third time reading this romantic suspense novel, and I loved it just as much as all the other times. This novel was written in 2005, and the last time I read it was 2015, and things have changed a lot in those 8 years. For example, there were frequent mentions of Mar-A-Lago and I have to imagine most of the characters in the book skew Republican, so it tempered my enjoyment of the book a bit. But still, it was a good, suspenseful mystery with a brooding hero and sassy heroine. It’s about news anchor Jillian who starts to receive death threats, so her father hires Nolan as her bodyguard. And of course, you always fall in love with your bodyguard! Always! It was a decent romance. It won’t change your life, but you will get to enjoy a good love story.
The Measure by Nikki Erlick (★★★★☆)
Print • Library • Fiction • 2022
I really liked this novel, and it definitely made me think about my own mortality. (Which isn’t always a good thing, but in this case, it was!) The novel starts with people around the world over the age of 22 receiving a smaller wooden box right outside their doorstep. Inside the box is a string that measures how long your life will be. If it’s a short string, this means you’ll die earlier than expected. If it’s long, you have a long life ahead of you. This, of course, puts people into categories, i.e., short-stringers and long-stringers. The long-stringers begin to fear the short-stringers: What will they do after finding out they will die early? The novel follows a handful of people, both short- and long-stringers, and I thought the author did a great job of fleshing out each story and making me care for all of these people deeply. The ending was especially poignant. Overall, the book made me think about what I would do: Would I look in my box to see how long my life will be? Would I want my mom, my brother, my cousins, my friends to look in their boxes? Would it give me relief if my mom had a long string and I knew I didn’t have to spend so much time worrying about her? It’s an interesting conundrum, and I thought Erlick did a fantastic job showing how society would react to this kind of revelation, both the good and the bad.
The Roughest Draft by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka (★★★★☆)
Audiobook • Libby • Contemporary Romance • 2022
I don’t normally listen to romances on audio (there’s just something about listening to an explicit sex scene that feels very awkward), but I decided to give this one a go because it was immediately available. And I enjoyed it a lot! This book is about Katrina and Nathan who wrote a bestseller together a few years ago, but something happened to cause a rift in their working relationship and they haven’t written together since. But they are contractually obligated to write one more book together, so they decide to spend a summer at the beach house in Florida where they wrote their first book to hammer it out. In the process of writing about a love story gone sour, they rediscover the love they have for one another. It’s a simple concept for a romance, but what I loved most about this book was getting a behind-the-scenes glimpse of not only writing a book, but of two people writing a book. What does that process look like? How do they work together (or not)? I also loved learning more about the marketing side of the publishing world. Did I have problems with this book? Yes, of course. Katrina could be a bit of a pushover at times (she was engaged throughout most of this book, and her fiance was such a goddamn jerk). I thought the reason for the rift was dumb (just communicate!) But those issues didn’t temper my enjoyment of the book too much. It was a fun romance, and I think these kids will make it work.
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