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The Darling Girls by Emma Burstall

The Darling Girls by Emma Burstall begins as Leo, a world famous conductor, dies and his three lovers meet for the first time at his funeral. The three women realize that they have an abdundant amount of unanswered questions and wonder about the man who was capable of juggling his brilliant career and three women all at the same time, whilst none of them ever had a clue.

Victoria, his partner of twenty years and mother of two of his children, relishes the fact that she thinks she knew Leo best, but when secrets start to come forward, she begins to question whether or not she knew him in the first place. Maddy, mother of Phoebe, is a typical career woman who creates trouble of her own when she becomes involved with someone off limits. And then there is Cat, the youngest of the trio. She is dealing with some emotional and family issues and seems to be the most wounded of the three. All three of the “Darling Girls” couldn’t be more different … but you soon realize that they couldn’t be more similar as well.

The Darling Girls is a heartbreaking story that touches on loss, heartache, love and friendship and I absolutely adored every second of it. Emma magically orchestrates the tale of the three women in a way that makes them like puppets in the grand scheme of things in Leo’s world, and you wonder if he will forever control their worlds. Luckily for us, and for the trio, everything works out for the best, but we see how connected everything in the story truly is. I found myself putting pieces of the puzzle together until the very end. Beautifully written, heartbreaking and honest – a truly magical tale.

[Review: 5/5]

Murder & Mayhem In Goose Pimple Junction by Amy Metz

Murder & Mayhem In Goose Pimple Junction by Amy Metz is a murder mystery set in a cute southern town. When Tess Tremaine moves to Goose Pimple Junction in hopes of starting a new life, she things that she has hit the jackpot. Then, she finds something that peaks her interest and soon finds herself investigating a seventy-five-year-old murder. Along the way she is thrown into the charming world of southern comfort and becomes instantly attracted to local celebrity, Jackson Wright. Will she be able to keep her wits about her as she investigates the murder further? Only time will tell, but she realizes soon enough that the closer she gets to solving the murder, the more dangerous things become. Is she ready to risk it all?

This book is probably the cutest book that I have read in quite sometime, and seeing how it is about a murder mystery, I never thought I would describe one that way. The mystery and intrigue are real, and Tess is such a hoot. I absolutely fell in love with her during the first few pages and Amy truly does capture the heart of the south and everything that it entails. It’s been a while since I’ve read a murder/mystery that I’ve enjoyed this much. I definitely recommend it for anyone looking for a little intrigue without anything too dangerous or gritty.

[Rating: 4.5/5]

In My Mailbox: Week of September 23

In Samantha’s Mailbox:

Title: A State of Jane

Author: Meredith Schorr

Received: Via CLP Blog Tours

Synopsis: Jane Frank is ready to fall in love.

It’s been a year since her long term relationship ended and far too long since the last time she was kissed. With the LSAT coming up she needs to find a long term boyfriend (or husband) before acing law school and becoming a partner at her father’s law firm.

There’s just one problem: All the guys in New York are flakes. They seemingly drop off the face of the earth with no warning and no explanation.

Should she join her best friend Marissa in singlehood, making cupcakes and watching True Blood? Or should she follow her co-worker Andrew’s advice and turn the game back on those who’ve scorned her? As Jane attempts to juggle her own responsibilities and put up with the problems of everyone around her, she starts to realize that the dating life isn’t as easy as she originally thought.

Title: Maven Fairy Godmother: Through the Veil

Author: Charlotte Henley Babb

Received: Via CLP Blog Tours

Synopsis: Maven’s new dream job–fairy godmother–presents more problems than she expects when she learns that Faery is on the verge of collapse, and the person who is training her isn’t giving her the facts–and may be out to kill her. Will she be able to make all the fractured fairy tales fit together into a happy ending, or will she be eaten by a troll?

Title: All At Sea

Author: Heather Wardell

Received: From Heather Wardell

Synopsis: Melissa and Owen met on New Years’ Eve and he proposed on Valentine’s Day. Now it’s March, and they’re about to set sail on a two-week Caribbean cruise – and get married on the last day at sea. Though their relationship’s moving fast, Melissa’s wanted to be married for years and she knows the smart stable Owen is a great catch so she’s sure they’ll be fine.

At least, she’s sure until she meets his brothers on the cruise and discovers she’s dated both of them: Austin, the fun-loving flirt whose kisses still haunt her dreams, and Nicholas, the sweet horror movie fan whose lack of ambition upset her in ways she still doesn’t understand.

Melissa expected to spend tons of time onboard with her fiancé, but he instead spends nearly his every waking moment in the casino displaying a previously unseen love of gambling. This surprise, and the time she spends with Nicholas and with Austin, makes her question everything she thought she wanted.

Her relationship with Owen was just fine before, but suddenly ‘just fine’ doesn’t seem good enough to keep a marriage alive for a lifetime. Melissa has two weeks to decide: stay with Owen or jump ship.

In Sara’s Mailbox:

Title: Valentina Goldman’s Immaculate Confusion

Author: Marisol Murano

Received: Dan @ Hipso Media

Synopsis: Since her arrival in the United States from Venezuela, Valentina Goldman isn’t exactly living the American Dream. She’s living the American Nightmare. Her late husband, Max, has left her a young widow, a step-daughter whom Valentina didn’t want, and a bi-polar ex-wife. And oh, having given up her dream job in New York, Valentina is also unemployed in Arizona. Part “Bridget Jones Diary,” part “Modern Family,” “Valentina Goldman’s Immaculate Confusion” is the story of a woman trying to get a handle on her whacky life in America. In breathless, blog-like snippets, Valentina compares her own story with that of her eccentric sister, Azucena, who has bizarre troubles of her own down in the tropics. “Valentina Goldman’s Immaculate Confusion” is a funny and moving story about what happens when a passionate South American woman moves to the USA and, like so many of us, ends up with a life she never imagined.

Chasing Fools by Aida Brassington

Chasing Fools by Aida Brassington follow Varda, an illegal foods smuggler who scours the world for one-of-a-kind finds. She finally saves up enough money to quit but Anthony, the boss of an elusive underground food club threatens to kill her if she stops working. That is where the story really kicks off in my opinion, causing Varda to do some outrageous, hilarious, scary, and sometimes touching things to ensure that she stays alive. The death threat ironically brings her closer to her boyfriend and his world, which helps out because Gino has been begging Varda to marry him.

When I received a request for this book, I wasn’t quite sure what to expect. The first thing that popped into my head was something along the lines of a food mob and in reality, I wasn’t that far off. There is an interesting cast of characters but they each bring something really unique to the story. I thoroughly enjoyed the dynamic between Gino’s family and I loved how in the end, all the chaos brought Varda and Gino together. Often times, this story is quite amusing and proved to be a wild ride and the ending is definitely unexpected (no spoilers here). I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a fun time.

[Rating: 4/5]

Q&A with Jane Heller

> 1. What are your stories about? My novels are about ordinary women in extraordinary circumstances who come out of their dilemma feeling better about themselves. The stories are romantic comedies in that they’ve got plenty of romance and lots of laughs, but they’re not about how to get a guy. They’re about a woman who’s trying to lead her life in the throes of career troubles or marital troubles or even troubles with her mother or sister. In other words, they’re about relatable women who, in the course of solving their problem, find true love and an inner strength they didn’t know they had.

> 2. Did you draw inspiration from your personal life? My first novel, CLEAN SWEEP, is about a woman who loses her money in the bad economy, gets dumped by her husband and is about to lose her big house to foreclosure. She swallows her pride and becomes a maid – only to find that her employer has been murdered and she’s the prime suspect. I wrote the book after the stock market crash in the late ’80s and it’s just as timely now as it was then. I drew from my own experience in that everybody around me was going through the downturn, losing their money, their homes, their marriages. I decided to have the heroine become a maid because, like her, I’m obsessively neat and if I had to earn money in a hurry I’d probably clean other people’s houses too. My novel NAME DROPPING, about two NYC women who live in the same apartment building and have the same name and discover that their identities get switched, was based on the fact that I lived in the same NYC building as a woman named Paula Heller. We kept getting each other’s mail and phone calls and it was crazy. Then my agent, whose name is Ellen Levine, told me she and the Ellen Levine from Good Housekeeping magazine were always getting each other’s mail and phone calls and party invitations. I figured the idea was the perfect setup for a romantic comedy. THE SECRET INGREDIENT is about a wife who wishes her husband would go back to being the sensitive, communicative guy he was when they were dating, so she secretly gives him an herbal potion – with disastrous results. That idea was triggered by a conversation I had with a friend. We were complaining about all the ways our husbands had stopped being as attentive to us and how the everyday-ness of “real” marriage is very different from the adrenaline rush of dating. So there are some specifics from my own life in the novels. But mostly, the heroines all have my voice. My friends tell me that reading the books is like talking to me.

> 3. When did you know writing was for you? I never dreamed of becoming a writer – not even during the 10 years I worked in book publishing in NY as a publicist for authors like Stephen King, Danielle Steel and Judy Blume. I was perfectly happy being behind the scenes and could see up close what a tough job writing was. But then I got an idea for a story. Just like that. I started writing a few pages each night, without telling anybody, and before I knew it I’d written 200 pages. I said to myself, “Hello, you’re writing a novel!” I realized I enjoyed the process of creating characters and coming up with funny situations and dialogue. I found an agent, who sold that first effort (which became CLEAN SWEEP) and suddenly I had a three-book contract. I’m still going, 15 books later.

> 4. How would you describe your books? When my first couple of novels came out, the term “chick lit” hadn’t really hit the lexicon. The books were called “women’s fiction,” although there were some publications that labeled them “romance” or even “mystery” because I try to include some suspense in the plots. But now I’d say they’re definitely “chick lit” because they’re about women told from the female point of view – and because they’re meant to be breezy, lighthearted, entertaining, funny. I once got an email from a therapist who said she prescribed my novels to her depressed patients; that they were better than Prozac. I love that!

> 5. What is the hardest part of the writing process for you? The hardest part is figuring out what to write next. My problem isn’t that I don’t have ideas. It’s that I have too many. I go back and forth so many times trying to decide which one to focus on. I have files and files of aborted novels because I’ll start something and then realize there isn’t enough plot, enough twists and turns, enough forward-moving energy to sustain a whole book. The other thing I’m terrible at is coming up with names for characters. After so many books, I don’t want to repeat a name – even one that I’ve used for a minor character, so it’s a challenge. And unless I hit on the right name for my main characters, I just can’t get a handle on them.

> 6. What are your favorite genres to read? I’ll read anything, but I gravitate mostly toward fiction either by or about women. Some of my friends write mysteries, so I’ll dip into that genre from time to time. And there are some amazing period novels out right now (I’m reading THECHAPERONE at the moment), but I tend to read contemporary novels with strong female characters and if they’re funny, so much the better.

> 7. What do you want readers to take away from your stories? I want readers to laugh, to have a great time, to say when they finish one of my novels, “Now that was fun.” I’m not trying to change the world. I want to entertain. That said, I do think there’s something inspiring about a heroine who goes through hard times and comes out on the other side with a stronger sense of herself. So I’d be thrilled if readers felt better about their own situations and their ability to cope with problems after finishing my books. I’ve gotten mail, for example, from many readers who are going through an illness and read my books to escape. They write to me and say, “Thank you for getting me through a terrible time in my life. I’m very grateful.” I’m the one who’s grateful.

> 8. What is the one thing that you want readers to know about you as an author? That I love hearing from readers. Writing is such an isolating job. You sit alone at the computer staring at a screen all day, hoping for some feedback. It’s so much fun to get an email at janeheller.com and I appreciate it when people take the time to share their feelings and thoughts about the books as well as their own stories.

> 9. How important do you think social media is for authors these days? I have a Facebook page. I have boards on Pinterest. I’m active on Twitter. I have an author page on Amazon and Goodreads. I also write two blogs that are accessed from janeheller.com. So I guess you could say I’m all in when it comes to social media. As I said above, it’s great to be able to connect with readers in whichever way is comfortable for them.

> 10. What would be your advice to aspiring writers? My best advice is to write. Sounds silly, I know, but with all the temptations out there, social media included, it’s harder than ever to be disciplined and put in the hours at the computer. But it’s essential to be disciplined. I rarely make lunch dates because they kill my work day. I get up in the morning and write. Period. When aspiring writers say, “I don’t have time,” I tell them about the woman with whom I was on a panel several years ago. She has just written her first novel and it was getting wide critical acclaim. She was the single mother of 10 children AND she had a full time job. She’d get up at 4 a.m. and write until it was time to take the kids to school and then write more after they went to sleep at night. If she could manage to write a novel, so can I and so can you!

> 11. What is your next book about and when is it scheduled to come out? My next book is nonfiction. It’s called YOU’D BETTER NOT DIE OR I’LL KILL YOU: A Caregiver’s Survival Guide to Keeping You in Good Health and Good Spirits. Chronicle is publishing it in November, to coincide with National Caregivers Month. It’s not chick lit, obviously, but it’s my slightly irreverent, hopefully inspirational take on be married to a man with a chronic illness. Along with my essays on everything from how to get on a nurse’s good side to why friendships slip away when there’s a medical problem in the family, it also includes interviews with other caregivers (some famous, some not; some dealing with a sick child or spouse, many coping with aging parents) and advice from experts. My goal is for the book to be a cheerful companion to the over 65 million caregivers in this country.

The Not So Secret Emails of Coco Pinchard by Robert …

The Not So Secret Life of Coco Pinchard by Robert Bryndza is an absolute hoot. This book was sold to me as being “where Bridget Jones left off” but it is so much more than that. Coco never lived up her single days. She got married young, had a son and put her dreams on hold to raise a family. But years later, with a novel under her belt, a graying husband and a grown son, she feels like her time to really “live” is now. But, that all changes wen she catches her husband in bed with a younger woman. Armed with her iPhone as a confessional of sorts, Coco takes on the world and meets hunky Adam and begins to see forty as the new twenty. In emails to her friend Chris, she documents her hilarious transformation as she picks up the pieces from her old life and moves on.

I found this book hilarious and I also enjoyed the angle seeing as how it was written by a man. I loved watching Coco transform into a strong woman and I loved it even more that she did it when she was forty. The narrative and use of the emails was unlike anything that I’ve ever seen before and I think it really helped pace the story and give us a timeline as to what was going on. Robert did an amazing job at creating a very likeable character in a not so great situation. Although one might expect this story to be sad considering the subject matter, it really is inspiring in a “new hope” kind of way. Overall, a really fun read. I thoroughly enjoyed it!

[Rating: 4.5/5]

What the Heart Remembers by Debra Ginsberg

Deeply engaging and haunting, What the Heart Remembers by Debra Ginsberg follows young Eden Harrison fresh off receiving a heart transplant from an unknown donor. At first things are fine, but things begin to change when Eden begins to have dreams of people and places that she doesn’t recognize. Convinced that her new heart has a memory of its own, she leaves her old life behind and moves to San Diego, where she meets and befriends Darcy, a recent widow. Adding more mystery to the story, Darcy was having an affair with a young musician named Adam, who has also suddenly vanished out of her life. Eden begins to suspect that there is more to the story than what meets the eye and tension escalates between the two girls. Will Eden be able to get to the bottom of the mystery? And will we ever find out how the two of them are linked? You must read the story to find out….

I have had this book scheduled for review but wasn’t sure if I would have it read in time in order to post a review due to a mailing mix-up … but I started reading What the Heart Remembers last night and couldn’t put it down. This book is amazing. Debra does such a fantastic job at creating a seamless mystery surrounding a donated heart that leaves you fully engaged and mesmerized. I loved the tension between the two gals and was absolutely blown away by the ending. Wow! I may be a little sleep deprived today but it was well worth it. It’s been a while since I’ve had my pulse quicken while reading, but this book was that good. Overall, a great read with a suspenseful plot!

[Rating: 5-5]

Rita Hayworth’s Shoes by Francine LaSala

Witty and charming, Rita Hayworth’s Shoes by Francine LaSala follows Amy Miller who has just been dumped on her wedding day. Apparently it’s for the best … or that is how everyone feels except for Amy. Sad and alone, Amy’s best friend Jane tries to cheer her up, and it seems like nothing will do the trick, that is until she convinces Amy to buy a pair of overly priced heels that supposedly belonged to Rita Hayworth during her hay day. As if like magic, the shoes instantly give Amy the extra va-va-voom that she has been missing and begins to turn her life around.

Rita Hayworth’s Shoes is unlike anything I’ve ever read before. The characters are quirky and charming, yet utterly realistic. I absolutely fell in love with Jane and eventually with Deck and found myself ripping through the pages toward the end to find out what happened between the two of them. This book is heart felt and I absolutely loved the idea of purchasing a pair of Rita’s shoes (who wouldn’t?) and having them turn Amy’s life around. At first the book seems to be stereotypical chick-lit, but then it knocks you on your toes and you realize that it is part comedy and part mystery. Overall, a delicious page turner that will leave you wanting more.

[Rating: 4.5/5]

Free Gift With Purchase by Jackie Pilossoph

In a clever twist in regards to a free gift with purchase, Jackie Pilossoph tells the story of two sisters, who happen to be polar opposites. Emma is the stereotypical party girl and Laura is the hardworking doctor. Although they couldn’t be more different in most references, they do have one BIG thing in common- dating post marriage. Emma is a widow and single mother and Laura was dumped by her cheating husband. A financial dispute between Laura and her ex leaves her homeless and on the doorstep of Emma’s house….and that is when the fun truly begins.

I really enjoyed reading Free Gift With Purchase by Jackie Pilossoph. The two sisters are cleverly told and hilarious in my opinion. I loved watching the gals scouring the city for men and a hopeful chance at love. The slew of men that come into the picture leaves one cringing yet hopeful at the same time. This book is captivating and realistic and I know that several of my single gal friends could definitely relate to the bad apples that come crashing into the scene. Overall, a really fun read that will make you think twice about the way you view your sister/mother/girlfriend and the lives you think they may lead.

[Rating: 4/5]