Amazon discontinued the ability to create images using their SiteStripe feature and in their infinite wisdom broke all previously created images on 12/31/23. Many blogs used this feature, including this one. Expect my archives to be a hot mess of broken book cover images until I can slowly comb through 20 years of archives to make corrections.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Wendy's Week At Work - As Told By GIFs

The first week of summer reading program, we're short-staffed, and Wendy has to cover the children's reference desk.


Begging anybody browsing the romance section to please come to the first meeting of my romance readers group.


Getting confirmations from 8 authors to be a part of our 2014 literary event.  Oh, and none of them are romance authors who know who the heck I am.


I've read maybe 20 pages of my current read this week.  I am never going to dig myself out from under review books.


Monday, June 24, 2013

Back To Reality

There's been nothing but radio silence for me since Wednesday morning thanks to a trip up to northern California.  Big Sis was flying in for a work conference, and I believe it was the first time since B.L.D. (Before Lemon Drop) that all three of us (me, Big Sis, Lil' Sis) were in the same space together, at the same time.  Which would be why I didn't try to hook up with any of my NorCal blogging/tweeting buds.  My apologies ladies.  Next time, for sure!


Anyhoodle, while it was heavenly to be out of the office for five glorious days, spending time corralling the three-year-old Lemon Drop doesn't necessarily make for the most relaxing of vacations.  Still, the Three Drunken Sisters (we've decided that's the name of our fictional Napa winery - although Lil' Sis isn't a wine drinker so maybe just the Two Drunken Sisters And The Sober One Who Does The Books.....) managed to hit wine country to eat, drink and be merry.  We met picture-taking police officers (seriously, while taking pictures a cop swung by and graciously offered to get a shot of all three of us together!), walked the Golden Gate bridge (for the record, I was terrified), and wrote out deep, philosophical thoughts like "Aunt Wendy Is Awesome" with Lemon Drop's sidewalk chalk.

It also was conveniently close to my Happy Birthday (which is actually in early July) which means I GOT BIRTHDAY PRESENTS!  Lil' Sis got me chocolate and cross-stitched an eye glass case for me that says "Stay Calm and Read On" (good advice since I got little reading done over the last several days).  Big Sis got me a yummy tea blend (black tea with rose petals and cloves - yummers!) and this awesome picture of Bat Girl done by artist Gene Gonzales.  Look how happy and wholesome she looks - see Bag Girl isn't that different from me!  Now I just need to get her framed and figure out where she will reside.


 What's on tap next?  Good Lord - work.  Lots of work.  After a brief respite, I'll be back to ordering books again thanks to the new fiscal cycle.  I also am in the throes of our Adult Summer Reading Program, and I have a Romance-Book-Talk-Group starting up on July 1.  At this point I'm hoping for a couple of warm bodies - which means I need to get back in the office and start hand-selling the idea to our romance reading patrons.  Oh, and you know, I need to read and review.  NetGalley really is the devil's playground.....

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

TBR Challenge 2013: Patrick Gallagher's Widow

The Book: Patrick Gallagher's Widow by Cheryl Reavis

The Particulars: Contemporary romance, Silhouette Special Edition #627, 1990, Out of Print, Not Available Digitally.

Why Was It In Wendy's TBR?:  Reavis is one of those rare authors who has both historical and contemporary books in my keeper stash. This particular book won the RITA award in 1991 in the Best Long Contemporary Series Romance category, which besides the fact that I was glomming Reavis books in general, was another reason I added it to the ol' TBR.

The Review:  First, 1990 was 23 years ago.  Second, that depresses the hell out of me.  Third, going in I fully expected to find aspects of this story that hadn't aged well.  I mean, 23 years is a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.  So imagine my surprise to discover, outside of some fashion and music references, that this story holds up extremely well.  And it's pretty dang good even with all 23 years showing on that epic Old School cover.

Johnson Garth is the cop who caught the Patrick Gallagher case.  Gallagher, also a cop, died in the line of duty.  Garth caught the kid who shot him, and should be happy about that.  But he's not.  The whole thing was just too....tidy.  He also doesn't trust Hugh Gallagher, another cop, the grieving brother, whom Garth has a long, colorful history with.  Hugh doesn't want Garth bothering Patrick's widow, Jenna, and naturally Garth can't let that go.  So he starts sniffing around the widow Gallagher, hoping to ferret out the truth.  Instead, he ends up falling in love with her.

Really, that pretty well covers the basics.  It's a deceptively simple set-up for a story that is actually anything but.  Reavis has that ability that all really good category writers do - taking a simple enough sounding idea, acknowledging the word count restrictions in category, and yet having that ability to create rich, complex drama for her equally rich and well-drawn characters.  Not only did she outdo herself with Garth and Jenna, I'm pretty damn impressed that RWA (an organization folks like to throw stones at - a lot) awarded this book a RITA.  Reavis avoids the easy route, challenging her characters and her readers.  Yeah, this is 23 years old now, but it's still a remarkably fresh story in a lot of ways.

For one thing? Jenna loved her husband.  They were having some issues at the time of his death, but she loved him.  Garth grew up on the wrong side of the tracks, loved a girl from the neighborhood, and she died a violent death.  He loved her, and I loved that the author doesn't make excuses for that.  She acknowledges the fact that it is OK for her hero and heroine to have loved other people before.  That doesn't mean they'll be incapable of finding love again and the author knows her readers are smart enough to know this.  She doesn't tear down Patrick or Mary.  They were who they were, they were loved, they died tragically.  And it's OK that the two people most affected by their deaths would find each other and move on.

I loved that Jenna knows the realities of being a cop's wife and that she's bristling with the responsibilities of her widowhood and the perceptions that go with it.  Her husband died a hero, which means everyone from her in-laws to the general public wants a piece of her.  Everyone has expectations on how, as a widow, she should behave and what she should feel.  There have been countless widows in Romance Novel Land over the years, but very few books that address what it is to actually BE a widow.  Reavis addresses it here.  In a 23 year old book.

The romance is solid and heart-wrenching, and the mystery of Patrick Gallagher's death is suitably drawn and compelling.  However, that's not to say this book doesn't have issues.  It's set in New York City, but there were times that the city is portrayed in a vague sort of way.  Also, a few of the secondary characters (Garth's mother, a surrogate father figure, an old-beyond-his-years child at the Catholic school where Jenna is a substitute teacher....) are more caricatures than anything else.  Luckily they're mostly relegated to background noise, and the real meat-and-potatoes secondary characters (Garth's new partner for example) are better drawn.

I also wasn't entirely sure how it was that Jenna and Garth fell in love.  I got the lust part OK.  Jenna is lonely (and horny!), and despite loving her husband, isn't ready to commit herself to perpetual widowhood.  Garth is haunted and wounded, with a protective streak a mile wide.  I get that they're hot for each other, just not sure what makes them fall in love with each other outside of horny loneliness and protective instincts.  But you know what?  They say all the right things, and struggle with all the emotional baggage that people like this should be struggling with, and better still?  The author doesn't make the ending easy.  They don't blissfully fall into bed proclaiming their undying love once the Bad Guys are caught.  They struggle with what they want and how they feel for each other - and I appreciated that.

It's not my favorite of Reavis' work, and I don't think it will make my keeper shelf, but it's still a really good book - even with the added years.  Some contemporary stories aren't meant to stand the test of time.  This is one that does.  Only a few minor tweaks and this is a story that could have leapt from the author's computer keyboard just last week.  It looks like it's fairly easy to come by used, but here's hoping Harlequin and Reavis can get on the same page and make this one part of the digitized "Harlequin Treasury" program.  This is a book that deserves to see the light of day again.

Final Grade = B+

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The Month That Was May 2013

Me: Hey, everybody thinks you'll go far - are you going to be a rock and roll star?

Lemon Drop: Mommy said I should take some time and learn how to play....

Me: Well at this rate you're more likely to go country, holding it slide style.  Do you want to kill your Mommy?

Lemon Drop:  Well, it could be worse.  I figure it's learn to rock out on the guitar or get myself an autotune machine, low-rise jeans, say y'all a lot and be the next Britney Spears.

Me: So you want to kill your parents, your aunts and your grandparents.  You are a devious little monkey.  Why don't we put your musical ambitions on the back burner for now and talk about what your Aunt Wendy read last month.  I only finished six books in May - but four of them were Bs!  Woo Hoo!

Title links will take you to full reviews.

The Greatest Of Sins by Christine Merrill - Historical romance, Harlequin Historical, 2013, Grade = D+
  • Appreciated the risks the author took, but the fact that the non-blood-related hero and heroine were raised together, as siblings, from the time the heroine was born hit my personal ick button.  Chalk it up to me having an adopted niece growing up with her younger brother (who is biologically linked to the Wendy family gene pool).  My brain, it didn't want to go there....
Down By Contact by Jami Davenport - Contemporary romance, Boroughs Publishing, Digital only, 2013, Grade = B
  • Book three in series featuring an uncouth NFL linebacker hero in need of etiquette lessons and the former mean girl who done him wrong in high school.  Good conflict, zippy story, I inhaled this in one sitting.
A Prior Engagement by Karina Bliss - Contemporary romance, Harlequin SuperRomance, 2013, Grade = B
  • Soldier hero returns from the dead to find out the girl who done him wrong is claiming to be his fiancee.  Author does a good job of crawling inside the characters' and I understood these people even though there were times I wanted to shake 'em 'til their teeth rattled.
The Drifter by Susan Wiggs - Historical romance, Mira, 1998, Grade = B
  • My TBR Challenge read for the month.  Doctor heroine gets some excitement when the hero shows up, in the dead of night, and kidnaps her to help his sick "wife."  Sympathetic characters with interesting baggage.
How To Seduce A Sheikh by Marguerite Kaye - Historical romance short story, Harlequin Historical Undone, Digital only, 2013, Grade = C+
  • French heroine is rescued by sexy sheikh after she's put up for sale at a slave market.  Great use of setting and likable characters - but thought the conflict was too much for a short story.
The First Move by Jennifer Lohmann - Contemporary romance, Harlequin SuperRomance, 2013, Grade = B+
  • Emotionally closed off heroine still living with a fateful decision she made as a teenager finds her life upended by the hero, a guy she went to high school with whom she didn't know existed at the time.  I had issues with the hero and romance, but as a "heroine's journey" this story was absolutely fabulous.
Lemon Drop: You really should reconsider my Britney Spears idea Aunt Wendy.  I mean, she's as dense as a bag of hair - but she is rich.  Rich enough to support her ingrate relatives.....

Me: Ahhh, I think I understand now grasshopper.  

Lemon Drop: That dream gig you fantasize about when you're on your third glass of wine.  Yeah, once I'm rich and famous I'd totally hire you to read romance novels and watch Law & Order reruns. 

Me: The student surpasses the teacher.  Why not?  I figure you have as much of a shot at being the next Britney Spears as your cousin, The Flash, does of playing for the Detroit Tigers.  Solid retirement planning on my part.

Lemon Drop:  Oh, and do my laundry.  And clean my mansion.  And just be at my general beck and call.  I won't ask you to cook though - because, like, whoa......

Me: On second thought....maybe not.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Yet Another Historical Romance Shopping List

Continuing on with the "unusual historicals" theme - I've thrown together a shopping list of June 2013 titles for Heroes & Heartbreakers.  Some of these titles I've mentioned on this blog before, and some of them I have not.  This isn't an all-encompassing list - but hey!  It's a good place to start.

Head on over to take a look.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Writing Her Name In The Sky

Words cannot express how much I loved Aftershock, the first book in Jill Sorenson's trilogy about survivors of a massive earthquake in San Diego.  So to say I was more than a little eager to get my hands on the second book, Freefall, that features Sam Rutherford, a man who spent the vast majority of the first book lying in a coma?  Yeah, understatement of the century.  Sadly, while I thought the main romance had oodles of potential, and the suspense was compelling - the secondary elements in this story were less than thrilling.

Every year, Sierra Nevada park ranger Hope Banning and her sister, Faith, take a vacation together.  Faith's idea of a vacation is lounging by a pool at a fancy hotel.  Sadly, for her, Hope plans their trip this year, which means whitewater rafting at the national park where she works.  Just as they're nearing the site to meet their rafting group, Hope gets a call on her radio.  Yeah, she's technically supposed to be "off duty" - but emergencies are a different ball of wax.  A climber spotted a small engine airplane crash in a remote area.  Hope goes to talk to the witness, only to realize it's Sam Rutherford. Ok, sure - the sex was off-the-chain, but that's the best thing she can say about the doomed one-night-stand they shared some months prior.

Sam survived the San Diego earthquake with his body intact, just not his memory.  His amnesia  only really pertains to the events in his life before the earthquake - when his fiancee died in a climbing accident.  They were climbing together, and Sam feels guilt over the incident even though he can't actually recall said incident.  So yeah, our boy is screwed up.  The one-night-stand with Hope was his way of running from his problems - but instead he ran straight into a whole new set of them.  He likes Hope.  He really, really likes her.  And that just will not do.  He finds himself taking her to the crash site, only to be further thrown into her company when it turns out the plane crash is really a murder scene.

I'll be honest, before I even started this story it felt like placeholder until I get the book I really want (Penny & Owen!  January 2014!  Squee!!1!1!!!).  But you know what?  Sorenson does some interesting things with this romance.  I suspect some readers will find it lacking given the depth of Sam's grief over The Dead Fiancee - but I liked that both Sam and Hope are damaged in their own ways.  They both have serious baggage.  And I like the fact that they both recognize that the other is "different" and holy crap keeping their emotional distance from each other is going to be a challenge.

What didn't work as well for me?  Hope's sister, Faith - who naturally falls into trouble once Hope runs off to investigate the plane crash.  Naturally a guy linked with that crash stumbles across the rafting group, and naturally decides to infiltrate them as his "cover," and naturally Bimbo Faith falls for him hook, line and sinker.  Now Sorenson does do a good job of laying out Faith's character.  She's not really a bimbo.  It's more like being a bimbo is a defense mechanism.  And OK, so she has hot, sweaty sex with a member of a drug cartel but hey!  It's OK since he's really not a Bad Man, and he's trying to extricate himself from said cartel, I mean, so what?  So he brings danger right at Faith's doorstep and the girl is dragged through the ringer for the entire book.  That's no big deal, right?  Ugh.  It just didn't work for me, at all.   Which I know sounds hypocritical since the "challenging characters" in Aftershock worked just dandy for me.  But here?  Yeah, not so much.  The Faith storyline pretty well annoyed me for 3/4 of the book and the ending of said plot line kinda pushed me over the edge.

Honestly, I strongly feel the reader's enjoyment of Freefall will be in direct correlation to how much they enjoyed Aftershock.  I loved Aftershock.  So yeah, I was pretty well juiced in to liking Freefall - even with all my quibbles.  I wanted to be back in the world that Sorenson created, and I wanted to be back with these characters (plus we get more Owen in this book!  Squeee!!1!!1!!!).  But if I had read this book without having read Aftershock first?  I can honestly say I wouldn't have enjoyed it as much, or been as forgiving.  I mean, the whole Faith thing really annoyed me for a big chunk of the book.  I kept hoping she would....fall off a cliff or something.  Except, you know, that would have made Hope more screwed up and that just wouldn't have worked.  Final verdict?  Mileage is going to vary considerably.  But for me?

Final Grade = B-

Friday, June 14, 2013

Reminder: TBR Challenge For June

For those of you participating in the 2013 TBR Challenge, this is a reminder that your "commentary" is due on Wednesday, June 19.

The theme this month is Lovely RITA.  Reading a past winner or past nominee of RWA's RITA Award.  Past winners can be found on the RWA website.  Past nominees?  I haven't found a good source outside of Googling (example: "rita nominees 2007).  Or, you know, you can always go with one of this year's nominees.  However remember, the themes are totally and completely optional.  Maybe there's nothing in your TBR that fits, or maybe you think awards are the devil's playground.  Hey, that's totally cool! The themes aren't important - it's the act of reading something, anything!, that has been lying neglected in your TBR pile.

Hey, we're halfway through the year, which means halfway through the challenge!  Details and more information can be found here.  You'll also find a list of the current participants, should you wish to follow along.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Now On Facebook!

So apparently people spend like, all day, on Facebook.  I don't because, you know, I'd rather spend all day on my blog or on Twitter.  But to each his own, and let it not be said that Wendy isn't out there marketing her wee lil' corner of cyberspace to the best of her ability.

Which means, yes - this 10 year old blog now has a Facebook page.  Because, you know, Facebook junkies shouldn't get a respite from my awesomeness.

Why not head on over and "like" The Misadventures Of Super Librarian?

Monday, June 10, 2013

Wishing On A Star....

OK, so I've already publicly stated on this blog that I don't think historical romance is 1) dying 2) already dead or 3) in serious trouble.  Doesn't mean I don't have hopes and dreams, ambitions and desires for the subgenre.

On that score, I have a new post over at Heroes & Heartbreakers: Wishlisting on a Historical Star: A Historical Romance Starter Kit.  Go on over and read my wishlist of things I want to see more of in historical romance.  Oh, and hey - why not share some of your own?

Thursday, June 6, 2013

RSVP Today: An Invitation To Sin

"And suddenly she realized what a clever strategy that was.  Because he didn't appear to hide anything, no one looked deeper.  No one suspected there was anything more to expose...."
Quick.  First response that pops into your head when I say "Harlequin Presents."  Go.

I'm going to go out on a limb that more than a couple of you probably said, "asshole heroes" or "innocent, virginal heroines." Or, you know, a combination of the two.  That's what makes An Invitation To Sin by Sarah Morgan such a good read.  It's not necessarily what a lot of readers would think of when you say "Harlequin Presents."  Oh sure, you've got an Italian hero who is a demon in bed.  And, oh sure, you've got a glitzy Italian backdrop where the actress heroine is filming a movie.  But not only is this book glitzy and sexy - it's also fun.  And besides the fun?  There's also a decent amount of angst floating around.

Taylor Carmichael has been an actress since she was a child.  Her mother was your stereotypical stage mom, until at 17 years old Taylor fired Dear Ol' Mom as her manager.  That, naturally, generated some headlines and it also led to events that continue to haunt Taylor.  It got so bad at one point, the pressure built up so much, that she literally went underground for a while.  Well now she's back.  As much as she abhors the public spotlight, the constant intrusion of the paparazzi, she loves acting.  She just needs to prove to everybody that she is a good actress, and not just a pretty face with a habit of causing train wrecks.  She's landed a juicy part, which is why she's in Italy - attending a wedding with the film's producer.  He's preaching to her to be on her best behavior, no negative publicity, yada yada yada.  And then she stumbles across Luca Corretti hiding out in the garden with a bottle of champagne.

Luca is hiding from last night's entertainment.  Our hero is a bad boy with a great head for business, and a well-honed taste for fast cars and faster women.  Unfortunately the last fast woman he took to bed is acting like she wants a "relationship" ::shudder:: which Luca does not do.  Then he meets Taylor Carmichael, movie star.  Her reputation is almost as bad as his, but unlike Luca she tries to repress her true nature.  That just makes our boy sad.  I mean, what a waste?  Flirtation follows, banter ensues, and before you know it - the press gets a photograph of Luca and Taylor sharing a passionate kiss.  This is not good, for Taylor at least.  And frankly she's so annoyed that she figures since Luca got her into this mess?  He's getting her out.  There's not a faster way towards respectability than crying "engagement," so that's what she does.  Luca, at first, balks, but quickly realizes that this fake engagement may also work to his benefit as well.  So the charade is on!

What we have here is a bad boy with vulnerability issues he hides very well and a bad girl heroine who is desperate for respectability and to be taken seriously.  Taylor also has a Big Secret and massive trust issues.  Essentially Taylor and Luca are a lot alike, they just choose to go about dealing with fame and the trappings of it in different ways.  Luca refuses to hide from anybody, this is me, this is who I am, if you don't like it I don't really care.  Taylor is more insecure about it, although she does her best to put on a brave face  - it's just hard sometimes when some pushy paparazzo is shoving a camera up your nose.

Like all stories of this ilk, naturally the fake engagement leads to something more.  Our bad boy hero who has sworn off commitment falls hard.  Our heroine who is running scared finds a way to stand on her own two feet, in part because of the support she gets from the hero.  The banter is fast and furious, the sexual tension is sizzling, and I loved the pairing of bad girl meets bad boy.  It's slick, it's charming, and it's sexy.  And better still?  Even though the story is fun, the author slips in just enough angst and baggage to give her characters depth - meaning that the whole time you're reading slick, charming and sexy?  You aren't likely to dismiss the book the moment you hit the final sentence.  If the rest of the books in the Corretti Dynasty continuity series are even half as good as this one, romance fans are in for a real treat.

Grade = B+

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Unusual Historical Spotlight: China, Old School, Highlanders, Civil War, Western, Yachts, And Vikings

I'm going to do my darnedest to do one of these posts every month, highlighting "unusual" historicals that catch my eye.  I try to spread the wealth around among publishers, but dang - it's a venerable Harlequin-Palooza this month!  Have your shopping list handy.....

The Sword Dancer by Jeannie Lin - Harlequin Historical - May 21, 2013

Description:
Sword dancer Li Feng is used to living life on the edge of the law--a woman alone in the dangerous world of the Tang Dynasty has only her whirlwind reflexes to trust. She "will" discover the truth about her past, even if that means outwitting the most feared thief-catcher of them all....

Relentless, handsome and determined, Han sees life--and love--as black and white. Until he finally captures the spirited, courageous Li Feng, who makes him question everything he thought he knew about right and wrong. Soon he's faced with an impossible choice: betray the elusive sword dancer he is learning to love, or trust his long-disregarded heart and follow her to dangerous, tempting rebellion....
What Makes It Unusual?:  WooHoo!  More Tang Dynasty China from Lin!

Forever Wild by Louisa Rawlings - Samhain - Digital Only - May 21, 2013

Part of Samhain's Retro Romance Line, this was first published in 1986 by Popular Library (Warner Books)

Description:  
From the corruption of Boss Tweed’s New York to the Paris of the Impressionists, two couples fight to fulfill their greatest dreams and desires.

Willough, a well-bred child of wealth, yearns to take her place at the head of her father’s iron empire in the wilderness of the Adirondacks. Accustomed to polished city men, she finds herself drawn to the raw masculinity of Nat, her father’s foreman. Can she leave behind the trappings of city life and learn to embrace the rough country and rough man she is destined to love?

Marcy was born in the mountains, attached to the High Peaks, and yet she yearns to leave and see the world. Drew, Willough’s artist brother, has rejected his father’s business and thrown himself into painting. Together they travel the world, but is love enough to see them through the hard times?
 What Makes It Unusual?  I swooned when I read "Boss Tweed's New York."  Seriously.  1986?  This one could be chock full of Old School Shenanigans!

Highlanders by Brenda Joyce, Terri Brisbin & Michelle Willingham - HQN - Digital Only - June 1, 2013

Description:
The Warrior and the Rose by Brenda Joyce
Lady Juliana MacDougall prays for her loved ones to survive battle against Robert Bruce...but the battle comes to her when her lands are attacked by a band of Highlanders, including a man wearing the colors of her clan's worst enemy. Taken hostage by Alasdair Og, Juliana quickly learns he's as exceptional a lover as he is a ruthless warrior. But how can she ever love Alasdair when he's her blood enemy?
The Forbidden Highlander by Terri Brisbin
Honor-bound by an arranged betrothal, James Murray never anticipated falling in love with his intended bride's dearest friend instead. The passion between James and Elizabeth MacLerie is undeniable, but they are torn between love and loyalty to their clans....
Rescued by the Highland Warrior by Michelle Willingham
Celeste de Laurent is determined to never again live in poverty. After sacrificing love for a secure marriage, she now stands to lose everything as a widow. Her only hope is to bear an heir--and what better man to father her child, and save her from a terrible fate, than Dougal MacKinloch, the only man she ever loved?
 What Makes It Unusual?  Och!  Lassies lurve their Highlanders!  (Please note all three of these stories are connected to series by the authors).

An Outlaw In Wonderland by Lori Austin - Signet - June 4, 2013

Description:  
In a time of war, love has its own rewards...
Saving soldiers' lives at the Confederate army hospital Chimborazo, Annabeth Phelan is no ordinary Southern belle. She's never known work more exhausting or rewarding. And she's never known a man like Dr. Ethan Walsh, with his disarming gray eyes and peculiar ways. But now the Confederacy is charging her with another service: find the Union spy at Chimborazo.
Ethan's one passion is saving lives, and if he can do that by helping to end the war, he will--even if it means spying for the North. He's gotten used to fooling Confederates, but he can't bear lying to Annabeth. And together, they are about to discover a new passion--one that could even transcend the chaos of war.  
What Makes It Unusual?  OK, so yeah.  The title makes my brain hurt a wee bit.  And OK, so Chimborazo Hospital was in VIRGINIA and I'm not sure why the cover model is dressed like a cowgirl in Utah.  Whatever.  It's an American Historical!  Yippee!


Heart of the West by Penelope Williamson - Pocket - June 25, 2013 - Reprint (first published 1995)

Description:
She was torn between two brothers...
All her life proper Bostonian Clementine Kennicutt yearned to escape the pious tyranny of her father's rule. So when Gus McQueen rode into town and swept her off her feet, she was ready for him. Eloping with the carefree cowboy was the answer to her prayers... until she met his brother.
The One She Married...
In the Big Sky country of Montana, Clementine yearned to feel the simple love of a wife for her husband. She'd pledged her troth to Gus, and she swore she would die honoring her promise, but each day her heart betrayed her.
And The One She Was Born To Love...
Zach Rafferty's love was not like the soft affection of her husband -- it was the wanton need of a dangerous man. And, despite her promise, Clementine knew he was the one meant for her all along...
 What Makes It Unusual?: A western!  I would appreciate comments on this one - because I know Williamson has many fans out in Romancelandia.  I'm intrigued by this one, but the love triangle aspect makes me a little squeamish.....

A Lady Dares by Bronwyn Scott - Harlequin Historical - July 23, 2013

Description:
According to society, I, Elise Sutton, haven't been a lady for quite some time-a lady couldn't possibly run the family company and spend her days on London's crowded, tar-stained docks. And she most certainly wouldn't associate herself with the infamous Dorian Rowland-privateer, smuggler and the Scourge of Gibraltar himself.
But I need Rowland and his specialized expertise-especially with the wolves circling, waiting for me to fail. I yearn to feel alive, and Rowland, who can kiss like the devil, inflames my senses and makes me dare to break free....

What Makes It Unusual?  While set in 1839 England, the author puts a different spin on things by including yacht racing into her story.  Also, we should all buy this book if only for the cover art.  That hat rocks my world.

To Sin With A Viking by Michelle Willingham - Harlequin Historical - July 23, 2013

Description:

Caragh O Brannon defended herself bravely when the enemy landed-only, now she finds herself alone with one very angry Viking....

Styr Hardrata sailed to Ireland intending to trade, never expecting to find himself held captive in chains by a beautiful Irish maiden.

The fiercely handsome warrior both terrifies and allures Caragh, but he is forbidden territory. He is the enemy...and he is married. Yet Styr harbors a secret that just might set them both free....
What Makes It Unusual?  Vikings!

Whew!  I have several of these on tap already, waiting to be read and reviewed (the Lin, the Highlanders anthology and the Willingham).  Any of these catch your eye?  Read any good "unusual historicals" lately?