Showing posts with label Jamie Brenner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jamie Brenner. Show all posts

May 18, 2017

Review: The Forever Summer

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B01K3WN0U6/themisaofsupe-20
Even when Jamie Brenner was writing romance (under her own name, and the pseudonym Logan Belle), she always kind of skirted around the edges of the genre.  Erotic elements, high drama of the soap opera variety, and with her most excellent (seriously read it!) Now or Never she blended the very best of erotic romance with women's fiction and it was simply divine.  She's now gone full-blown into women's fiction territory with The Forever Summer and oh man, I loved this book.  Even when I wanted to throttle some of the characters (and that's a compliment), I positively wallowed in this story.

Marin Bishop is a driven, ambitious woman who has had her life plan mapped out for a long as she can remember.  She's a lawyer at a prestigious Manhattan law firm with a handsome fiance.  Her father is proud, her mother over the moon, and then it all comes crashing down.  Marin calls off her engagement because she's fallen in love with a partner at her firm.  Then the affair is found out (and there's a strict no fraternization policy) and she's fired.  Coming on the heels of this disaster?  A home genetics kit unearths a unknown half-sister.  When Rachel shows up on her doorstep on her way to visit the grandmother she didn't know she had, Marin goes completely off the rails and decides to join her on the trip.  They head to Provincetown, Massachusetts, where their grandmother and her wife have operated a bed & breakfast for the past twenty years.

My one paragraph plot description really doesn't do this book justice.  It reads as if Marin is the main character, and she sort of, kind of is - but this is one of those ensemble cast books.  There's a load of interesting, well fleshed-out secondary characters and the author alternates points of view between a handful of the players including Marin, Rachel, Blythe (Marin's mother) and Amelia (the grandmother).  Amelia's wife, Kelly, also plays an extremely prominent role in the story.  As a one week visit morphs into a summer long stay, the author keeps folding in more drama, some of it with nods to soap opera, without making it over-the-top or of the "Oh no she didn't!" variety.

As always seems to happen in books written with large casts, there are inevitably story threads the reader finds more interesting than others.  Blythe, Amelia and Kelly were easily my favorites.  Marin slides in behind when she's past her wallowing, bitter stage, and Rachel was....well, young.  She probably grated on me the most, but I'm a big enough person to admit it's because she was young, inexperienced in many ways, and kinda clueless.  But Rachel illustrates perfectly what I loved so much about this story.  How real the characters felt to me.  I got irritated with them. I celebrated their joy, cried tears with them, and felt their pain.  They felt real.  Like I could go to Provincetown tomorrow, walk down the street and possibly run into them.

There is a lot of drama in this book, not surprising given the main story line.  That said, more drama comes in through side doors, with all the characters experiencing some sort of loss and awakening over the course of the book.  They all go on a journey, and mostly come out OK on the other side.  That said (I'm going to tap dance around this a bit to avoid spoilers) there's tragedy in one of the story lines and a loss that's devastating.  If your reading mood is currently Must Have Happy Sunshine All The Time, take this under advisement.  What's truly remarkable is that even as more and more drama gets piled on (to the point where I was like "seriously?!") it never feels over the top or overstuffed.  Don't ask me how Brenner pulled that off, but she did.

For romance fans, Brenner does weave in some of that - but I have to be honest and say that pretty much all the straight men in this book annoyed me no end.  They're not evil, it's more like I got so frustrated with them that I wanted to slap them into next week.  I didn't find this a satisfying romance read mostly because of that, but then that's not what this book is.  As women's fiction, it's dynamite.  Multi-layered with characters that come to life.  Drama, drama, drama.  Satisfying, rewarding, heartbreaking and tender.  If this is your kind of thing, read it now.

Final Grade = B+

May 13, 2014

Digital Review: Ruin Me

I have issues with "New Adult," most of it revolving around how much I deplore the idea that this is somehow a "new genre" that authors and publishers just happened to stumble across one day while looking for water in the desert.  To put it simply, it's not new and we call it "coming of age."  Anyway, this is a review of Jamie Brenner's latest, Ruin Me, and not Wendy's personal soap box.  Brenner also writes under the name Logan Belle, and stylistically, this story reminded me somewhat of her Blue Angel trilogy.  Direction-less 20-something girl, New York City backdrop, and a soap opera plot that would make Aaron Spelling swoon.

Lulu Sterling is an art student at NYU and her mother owns one of the most iconic art galleries in the city.  She's also dating a major hottie, Brandt Penn, who is an up-and-coming artist that her mother is poised to launch with his own one-man show.  It should all be perfect, but Lulu is lost.  There is drama behind the scenes at the gallery, thanks to Mom's sophisticated and conniving gallery manager and her "perfect" artist boyfriend is turning out to be anything but.  In the midst of these distractions is GoST, a mysterious street artist that Lulu is becoming more obsessed with.  She loves his art, she loves what his art says, now to just track down the mystery man and do what?  Exactly?  She's not sure.  She just knows that she wants to be close to him and his work.  But spending time with a street artist is complicated.  He's secretive, she has a boyfriend, and Mom would not approve.

Here's my thing about the art world.  I like art.  I think paintings are "pretty."  I'm not the sort of person who can look at a painting of geometric solid colors and say, "The artist is making a statement on our insatiable consumerism and our uncontrollable lust for fame at any cost." 

Blah, blah, blah, whatever.

So yeah, I know nothing about art other than what I like.  The author immersed me in this world, the gallery and the players.  I got completely sucked into it, and with the added punch of New York City as a backdrop?  By far my favorite elements of the story.  Readers talk a lot about world-building in historicals and paranormals, but I would argue it's just as vital in contemporary stories.  What Brenner has done here is create a whole world for her characters to run around in; a convincing world.

As much as I loved the world-building and the soap opera plot (seriously, I'm so predictable), the romance was an issue.  Ruin Me has the same problem I tend to have with a lot of stories like this.  In other words, I don't want Lulu to have a romance.  Frankly Lulu doesn't need a romance.  You know what Lulu needs?  She needs to give everyone in her life the middle finger and just be.  As in, be by herself.  Figure out who she is without all these people yapping in her face.  She's dating Brandt not because she loves him.  She's with him because she's 1) in awe of how hot he is and 2) that a hot guy like him would be interested in a girl like her.  This is not a girl who needs a romance.  This is a girl who needs to learn that she's good enough.  Period.  And that she starts to realize that after spending time with GoST kind of annoys me.

Speaking of, GoST is an interesting character but towards the end of it all I wanted to smack him into next week.  I just don't think he's "good" for Lulu - mostly because he's got baggage I don't think he's prepared to deal with.  Plus, I'll be honest, he's kind of a pretentious prick when it comes to his art.  But then, he's an artist - so there you go.  Being a prick is probably a prerequisite.

In the end, this is a romance - so Lulu and GoST will somehow find their way together and while I don't think Lulu should have a romance (right now at least) and GoST did kind of tick me off at times?  The ending shows some promise.  Lulu is in a better place and GoST seems like he's not going to be a total jackass.  Which makes this is a hard book to assign a grade to.  In the end, the romance really should be everything, but the world and the soap opera?  Those flipped major switches for me.  

Final Grade = B-

November 5, 2012

Digital Review: The Gin Lovers #6: Hell Hath No Fury

The final installment of Jamie Brenner's The Gin Lovers is subtitled Hell Hath No Fury - and that is very apt.  This is the installment where the women get their revenge and the villain gets what's coming to him.

Her bootlegger lover Jake Larkin may want her to pack her bags and just leave, but Charlotte Delacorte knows that if she truly wants her freedom, she needs to make sure William pays the ultimate price for his secret life.  With the help of her sister-in-law Mae, Charlotte figures the way to rope in William is to use his foolish pride and obsessive-compulsive need for total control against him.  And it's not a half bad plan, except that Jake may inadvertently muck it all up.

I have really, really enjoyed this serial novel.  I have loved the soapy goodness.  I have loved all of the characters and their various naughty shenanigans.  The problem though is that a serialization is only as good as the final installment and this one has major problems.  Namely, it doesn't so much end as it does stop.

Look, I get it.  This is not a romance novel.  I can't expect everything to be all neat and tidy at the end.  But I am the sort of reader who tends to get annoyed when all my questions aren't answered.  When characters that I have followed, and grown to care about (even if it is in a warped and slightly cracked way) are left twisting in the breeze.  Oh sure, the villain is dealt with.  And even to a certain extent Mae rides off into the sunset.  But Jake, Charlotte, and Rafferty?  Hell, even Charlotte's parents?

OH MY LORD WHAT IS GOING TO HAPPEN TO THEM?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?

It just STOPS!

Excuse me a moment.....

ARRRRRRGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

I need something.  Another installment.  An epilogue.  Something!  Anything!

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?!?!?!?!?!?!?!??!?!?!?!?

Sigh.

So where does this leave us?  Well, it leaves me torn.  As much as I was hooked on the first five installments, this final one really left me disappointed.  I mean, it ends in such a way that I feel like the author isn't done yet.  The story does not feel remotely finished.  And yet?

THIS IS THE FINAL INSTALLMENT!

Excuse me a moment.....

ARRRRRRGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

I just.....

I need time.

Final Grade = D

October 29, 2012

Digital Review: The Gin Lovers #5: Dangerous Games

Jamie Brenner's fifth installment of The Gin Lovers: Dangerous Games immediately picks up where the bombshell ending in previous installment left off.

Now that Charlotte has discovered the Big Whopping Secret that her dear husband William has been keeping from her, she's now more determined than ever to find a way to leave him.  Unfortunately, just as her new resolve is kicking in, her bootleggin' lover, Jake Larkin, seems to be growing weary.  He thinks Charlotte should just up and leave William.  Run off with Jake and live happily-ever-after in Far, Far Away Land.  Charlotte is a bit more practical.  She knows that if she leaves William in such a manner she walks away with nothing.  No money, no security, and her "good name" in total ruin.  No, our girl needs a plan - and thanks to the grand opening of the Delacorte Library, and Amelia Astor's machinations, she just may have found one.

Meanwhile, good-time cocktail waitress-slash-hooker, Fiona Sparks realizes just how much she misses Mae, and now Mae is engaged to be married!  In turn, Mae realizes that her engagement to Jonathan Astor has had a lovely side benefit of making Fiona jealous and she really begins to turn up the heat.  Unfortunately everyone gets burned when a meddling gossip columnist discovers Mae's lesbian predilections and threatens to splash them all over the society pages.  What to do, what to do?

This entry in the serial does a very good job of bringing everything to a head and setting up the final installment, which promises to be quite the showdown.  I have a sinking suspicion that Charlotte is going to end up with the wrong man (What can I say?  I've got a thing for hunky Irish butlers), and I love how Mae has grown from rebellious petulant child to trying to get her way by playing within society rules.  I saw the Big Secret coming a mile away, but now I'm positively breathless to find out how the whole thing is going to be resolved.  Sixth and final installment.....here I come!

Final Grade = B

October 22, 2012

Digital Review: The Gin Lovers #4: Vice Or Virtue

The beautiful people behaving badly are back in The Gin Lovers: Vice Or Virtue, the fourth installment of Jamie Brenner's six-part serial novel.

After getting caught in a compromising situation, Charlotte finds herself having to toe the line with hubby William.  William has money that Charlotte has discovered she now very much needs, which means swallowing her pride and putting up with the jackass.  But her lover, the bootlegger Jake Larkin has big plans, with big ambitions, and has promised her that her days of suffering not-so-silently in her marriage should soon be over.

Meanwhile, rebellious Mae Delacorte is learning how to play the game.  She needs her inheritance, and for that she turns to Jonathan Astor, dour Amelia's party-boy cousin.  These two are a match made in Hangover Hell.  On one hand you admire their ingeniuity, while on the other you see disaster looming ahead.

Speaking of disasters - the Prohibition Agent lurking around Fiona is turning up the heat, and Fiona finds herself providing more services at Boom-Boom's club when the booze supply starts to get a little thin.  Charlotte finds herself spending some quality time with her butler, Rafferty, who is really starting to wear his heart on his sleeve.  Poor guy.  He's even got a sexy Irish accent and his mistress is all-hot-to-trot for some trouble-making bootlegger.  Oh Rafferty, she doesn't deserve you.  Might I suggest a not-so-mild-mannered librarian?

Things really heat up with this installment, with the bread-crumb trail the author has laid out starting to bear fruit.  Things end on a OK I Knew It Was Coming But Still, Oh No She Didn't! note, that will have readers sucked into the soapy shenanigans chomping at the bit for the next entry in the series.  Still hooked, still cannot stop reading, cannot wait to see how the author wraps it all up with just two installments left.

Final Grade = B

October 15, 2012

Digital Review: The Gin Lovers #3: Society Sinners

Jamie Brenner's The Gin Lovers keeps rolling on with installment three, Society SinnersWhen last we saw Charlotte Delacorte, she was falling hard and fast into the orbit of speak-easy bartender Jake Larkin.  Now, after a memorable night with Jake, her marriage to William becoming increasingly intolerable, Charlotte knows that she can't keep living the way she has.  So she convinces her continually annoyed husband to let her travel to Philadelphia to visit her parents.  Charlotte's plan is to gently break the news to them that she's thinking about leaving William, and let's be honest, to cry on her mother's shoulder.

However once she gets there she realizes that things with her parents are not well.  Oh sure, they're still living in the carriage house, having sold the family mansion years ago when Daddy's fortunes turned, but she hadn't realized things had gotten more precarious.   Charlotte ends her visit knowing one truth: she can never leave William.  Ever.  Money isn't buying her happiness, but it sure has hell can grease the wheels that she just found out are squeaking.

Further developments include Jake scratching together a new business deal in the hopes of being with his new lady love, Charlotte.  Fiona attracting the attention (wink, wink, nudge, nudge) of a Prohibition Agent working undercover, and Amelia Astor sharpening her claws, waiting in the wings to undermine Charlotte at every turn.

This installment does further things along nicely, although honestly it feels a little like a place-holder in some ways.  It's the entry where the characters turn a little introspective, and are looking for ways out of (or into) situations they either 1) want to be in or 2) are looking to escape.  Charlotte fancies herself in love with Jake, which I honestly don't see - but hey, good sex has been known to cloud the judgement of even the most sensible of women, and you can't entirely blame her because heck- if I were married to William I might fancy myself in love with a potted plant if it gave me any sort of affection.

I missed not having as much Mae in this installment, although I liked the fact that it now seems to be Charlotte and Mae Against The World.  Charlotte telling Mae to be smart, play the game, bide her time - that eventually her inheritance will come her way.  Although, naturally, William hasn't told Charlotte all of the stipulations of mama's will.  I also liked the development of Fiona and the Prohibition Agent, and I'm just about ready to have babies with Charlotte's butler, Rafferty.  That guy = awesome.

I'm still hooked.  I'm still loving the trashy, soapy shenanigans.  I'm dying to get started on the next entry in the serial.

Final Grade = B

October 8, 2012

Digital Review: The Gin Lovers #1 and #2

I did not get introduced to the romance genre thanks to the Ubiquitous Bag Of Harlequins.  That glorious honey-hole of Alpha male goodness that many a reader stumbles across in her mother's closet or grandma's attic.  My mother and grandmother did not read romance novels.  No, they watched soap operas.  I was raised on the trashy shenanigans of The Young And The Restless and Dallas.  I cut my teeth on marriages that lasted three months, ended in divorce, and resulted in remarriages that lasted another three months.  So while I've seen other readers poo-poo the "gimmick" of the digital ebook serial?  Yeah, I'm more than likely to fall hook, line and sinker.  Because really, what is a serial if not a soap opera?  And Lord help me, I'm a girl who cannot say no to a soap opera.

The Gin Lovers by Jamie Brenner is set in New York City, during the heady Prohibition era of the 1920s, pre-Great Depression.  Bootleggers, jazz, beautiful people dancing the night away, and a shockingly interesting era for women.  It's the passing of the baton from Old School Victorian society mavens to young party girls (and boys) wearing Chanel, long strings of pearls, and drinking cocktails in back-door speakeasies.

The serial opens up with Charlotte Delacorte trying to navigate the society event of her mother-in-law's funeral.  Despite the fact that her father never could keep the family finances afloat, Charlotte was respectable enough to land handsome William Delacorte as a husband.  In turn, marrying Charlotte is the only remotely rebellious thing William has ever done.  But now the Queen is dead (long live the Queen!) and Charlotte is at a loss.  Some are looking for her take over, and others are hoping for blood in the water.

Arriving into this mix is Mae Delacorte, William's hellion 19-year-old sister.  Mae, who dresses at the height of flapper fashion, sleeps all day, parties all night, and is shockingly....a lesbian.  With no inheritance forthcoming (turns out, Mommy knew about the lesbian thing), Mae moves in with Charlotte and William.  William has grown distant and is always away on business.  Charlotte is depressed, lonely, and feels like life is passing her buy while she's trapped in a gilded Old School Victorian society cage.  Naturally, with Mae now orbiting their lives full time?  Shenanigans ensue.

This installment's job is to introduce all the players.  There is Amelia Astor, (yes, those Astors) with her eye on William and waiting to pounce on Charlotte's failures.  Fiona, the ambitious cocktail waitress and Mae's lover.  Boom-Boom, a night club owner looking for a new liquor connection, and Jake Larkin, a sexy bartender who catches Charlotte's eye.  Who will be the villains and who will be the heroes?  At this point, we don't rightly know.  What we do know?  All these beautiful people are on a collision course with each other.

The Gin Lovers: Little White Lies is when some of those initial questions get more complicated.  In this installment Charlotte realizes that her husband hasn't been entirely honest with her when she arrives home after a late night, brought on by Mae and the handsome Jake, to discover the police in their home.  Why exactly are the cops there?  Then there's Amelia Astor still lurking around, and William has to go on yet another business trip?  Really?

The delectable Fiona finds herself getting promoted to "hostess" (wink, wink, nudge, nudge) when Boom-Boom realizes other clubs are sending over sexy competition to woo away high-roller customers.  Fiona was gunning on Mae being her meal ticket, but with no inheritance forthcoming, her interest in the volatile not-so-fast heiress has waned considerable.  In turn, Mae starts to feel a little desperate when her lover starts ignoring her.  Oh, and just to make things really tricky?  There's now a prohibition agent hanging around, undercover of course, at the club.

The story concludes with Charlotte reaching a turning point.  She's found an ally in their butler (awesome character!), but William is still distant, and something is definitely rotten in Denmark.  She's also having a hard time getting Jake Larkin out of her mind - and in turn, he seems just as taken with her. With law enforcement circling the wagons, Mae getting desperate, Amelia looking to woo away William, William being secretive, and Charlotte and Jake circling around each other?  Yeah, things are definitely about to get very interesting.

Dear Lord, I can't wait for installment number three!

Final Grades = B (for both #1 and #2)