Sunday, January 12, 2025

Review: Window Shopping

Window Shopping Window Shopping by Tessa Bailey
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I received this book for free, this does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review 

This man smiles constantly. 
I hate him. 

Window Shopping was a quick steamy holiday read about second chances. Stella is just out of jail after serving four years for armed robbery, the story is a little more complicating and forgiving than black and white, when she's looking at a department window display and gets a dual chance of a lifetime. Intrigued by her and her opinion on the window, Aiden, the general manager and majority shareholder of the store, encourages her to apply for newly vacant job opening to design the windows. This kicks off a “We can't, but boy do we want to!” relationship as second chances and taking chances fill the season. 

I think because...this is a man who pays attention. This is a man who doesn't miss anything. 

This was fairly typical Tessa Bailey, steamy and hot, but with some very careful, “he's her boss” maneuvering. Aiden was pretty much all in for Stella but she was cautious with not wanting to be seen as “given” anything because of her relationship with Aiden. They both had some family issues to work through on the side, Aiden feeling abandoned by his father when younger, leading him to always want to be pleasant and not cause waves, and Stella feeling guilty for how she acted out to her parents and feeling “lucky” compared to her friend Nicole, who liked to get her into trouble and guilt trip her. These issues created some keeping the two from ultimately coming together but not from their hands always being on each other. 

For now, I'm going to let myself have Aiden and this moment. 

Aiden was a sweet goofy guy who was the calm that our tightly held together Stella needed and Stella helped Aiden be more solid with who he was. Around seventy percent, Stella joins Aiden with allowing herself to be all in and all that's left is her dealing with issues relating to her friend Nicole, which got brushed through very quickly, and an epilogue showing their HEA. This was great for lighter, quick and steamy holiday fare reading.

Thursday, January 9, 2025

The Roms: Part 4 - Favorite Quote

 The Roms

Favorite Quote



*Books eligible could be published in any year, they just had to be read by me in 2024 
Clicking on book cover, brings you to my review or GoodReads page if I didn't write one


Nominees:






1.  Principles of (E)motion by Sara Read

Suddenly we really saw each other, and it surprised us both.

My favorite thing in romance is when the characters are falling/in love because they see the other so clearly and are amazed others don't see it too. I like this quote for highlighting that moment and the wonder of it.


2.  Gold Ring of Betrayal by Michelle Reid

'Then go and do whatever it is you want to do, Nicolas,' she sighed, turning away from him in disgust. 'For I rescind the right to give a damn!'

The way I went around and annoyed people with "I rescind the right to give a damn!" weeks after reading this.

Honorable Mention
'Have you quite finished?' he inserted coldly. 
She nodded. 'Yes.' She felt flushed and breathless, incredibly elated. In all her twenty-five years she had never spoken to anyone like that. It had been almost as good as the sex!

Nothing hits like good back-talk!


3.  The Prism Society by Gabi Salas

His eyes held mine in a silent conversation, filled with unsaid words and hushed confessions that had yet to cross our lips. It was as if his stare was whispering secrets his voice couldn't articulate.

Another highlighting of my favorite things, the angsty moments of emotional drama created when a character can't or won't verbally express their feelings but are yelling it out their eyes.


4.  Tales of the Celestial Kingdom by Sue Lynn Tan

He was a hero of the people, a legend of our realm...but for today, I just wanted him to be my husband.

"I just wanted him to be my husband." Oh the emotional exhaustion and want in this quote. It's understanding that our other person might be needed for the outside and their importance in that other role but some of that need and selfishness for them to only belong to you.


5.  Sleeping Beauty by Judith Ivory

What he wanted, when she stopped before the front door, was to say, Tell me more about this ferocious thing that rises up inside you. Who are you? This gaiety of yours, how much is real? How much is well-rehearsed pretense—a metaphorical black-iron gate with wild thorny roses defending where pointed pickets don't suffice?

More of that wanting to see and know the other person, said in that beautiful emotional way Ivory is so damn good at.


6.  Ice Planet Barbarians by Ruby Dixon

It wasn’t a monster come to eat me. It was this monster. Who’s come to eat me out.

I think this quote perfectly encapsulates the Wut I was feeling reading this. I love the many facets of romance and it's subgenres.


7.  Orphia and Eurydicius by Elyse John

Snuffing out the voices of women. It was how they set up the game so that we would lose, even as we convinced ourselves that it was our fault. If we could shout for help, then we might take the hands of our sisters, swim ashore, and manage to win.

A reminder that we need to all start taking the hands of our sisters and start fighting to win, because we can do this.


8.  Morning Glory by LaVyrle Spencer

Will Parker's eyes were drawn to her stomach as she rested a hand on it. He thought about how maybe there was more than one kind of prison.

Going to zip-off for a second and donate to an abortion fund.


9.  After Hours by Cara McKenna

But it was so un-fucking-fair that he could do that. That he could get the better of Marco, make some difference in my problems, just because he was strong and male and pushy. Just march in against my explicit wishes and muscle through the mess I’d been living with for almost three years with his big, stupid arms. And I couldn’t do shit, because Marco couldn’t give a damn what anybody thought unless they were tougher than him. 
I could scream.

I love McKenna and how she has her characters emotionally wrestle, they're not perfect fully formed beings always saying "the right thing". Part of that is emotionally wrestling and ugh, oh my god this. I hate how as a woman you can do all the logical stuff and even get illogically tough and it will still sometimes never make a difference. And working through getting attracted to men for the reason that infuriates you.


10.  The Swans of Harlem by Karen Valby

“But what about Grandma?”

This is said by a little girl when she sees Misty Copeland touted as a first Black ballerina when she knows her grandma was one. It's a stark statement that holds confusion and centuries of pain. It starts a book off about reclaiming your place in history with the perfect tone. 

Honorable Mention
Art is activism. Let the gorgeous lines of his dancers’ bodies serve as fists in the air.

Indeed.


11.  The Master of Black Tower - by Barbara Michaels

He walked like Satan through the wrath of heaven, with a long, free stride and arrogantly poised head; and I wondered how many years it would take to wipe that picture of him out of my mind.

HE WALKED LIKE SATAN THROUGH THE WRATH OF HEAVEN
Excuse me!!! Like. Damn. This is descriptively how you grab the reader (me, anyway) in.


Winner:


Please, grab a hand and start swimming.




















What's a quote you read in 2024 that still lingers in your mind?

Next time, Favorite Leads...

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

The Roms - Part 3: Favorite Scene

 The Roms

Favorite Scene

*Books eligible could be published in any year, they just had to be read by me in 2024. 
Clicking on book cover brings you to my review or GoodReads page if I didn't write one

Nominees:





Honorable Mention


Her arms shook as she applied every bit of strength she possessed. And then she suddenly had the strength of twenty. Gabriel reached over her shoulders and placed his hand on top of hers. He waited for permission. She nodded. The punishment rod snapped in half.

I don't include rereads in my awards but, Top Ten Romance scene I've ever read, was only confirmed during this year's buddy read. The way he pauses, the whole story is a good look at building trust and learning to trust yourself, Gabriel isn't her crutch but he's her support and I love romance relationships that convey this.


1.  Sleeping Beauty - by Judith Ivory

James leaned his forehead into the window pane. "Coco," he said, "let me in."

Listen, there were one million scenes I could have picked from this one but, the HE BROKE THE DAMN DOOR DOWN TO GET TO HER will always be The Scene for me. HIS TORMENT. That maddening love feeling (foundationally on that brick of James earlier stopping when Coco clearly said stop and her acknowledging it). James is torn inside out and going a little mad with his feelings and Coco pushing him, because of her emotional vulnerability fear, and when he broke down the door to get to her, I loved how it then switched to the rope fraying nervous laughter from Coco. I mean, I can't even articulate how real this felt, the heat and connection between these two. It goes back to understanding connection between two people and this author is one of the best at it.

2.  Pack Challenge - by Shelly Laurenston

“Whatever. But he’s one of several. Like the guy’s at the club that first night I was here. He’s Pride.” 
“You mean proud.” 
There was that sigh again. “I mean he’s Pride.” That stated through gritted teeth. 
“Pride? Lions have prides.” 
“Yup.” 
Sara spun around. “There are lions too?” 
Patient Zach made an entrance. “Yes. And tigers. And mountain lions. There’s an array of shifters.” 
“Bunnies?” Sara watched him swallow. 
“No bunnies.” That through clenched teeth. “Think predators. Our ancestors became one with the predators. Bunnies are low on the food chain.” 
“Sharks?” 
“What?!” 
“Don’t get huffy. They’re the ultimate killing machine.” 
“I can’t have this conversation.” He leaned against the bathroom wall.

I loved how this scene leaned into the wildness of a werewolf shapeshifter! story. It's having fun in a not taking itself too seriously and delivering a more realistic response from a female main character just learning about the existence of supernatural beings. Zany can be taken seriously and still have fun with it. But also, justice for shark shapeshifters, they have to be out there too!

3.  Morning Glory - by LaVyrle Spencer

Elly is traveling to meet Will before he ships off to fight in the Pacific and she has to bring the baby along. From the chaotic rush to make her train and then get to Will for their brief time together to the slowed down tension in that hotel room, ooof. I loved how the author described their attraction, from how Will was sitting in the chair and Elly eyeing him up, you feel their heat and want for each other.

Honorable Mention
She smiled into the bluebird's painted eye, her own shining with delight. "A bluebird...imagine that." She pressed it to her heart and beamed at Will. "How did you know I like birds?" 
He knew. He knew.

Screaming, crying, throwing up at the He knew. He knew.

4.  You Should Be So Lucky - by Cat Sebastian

Eddie spends the morning telling her about Lula, about Mark helping the rookie buy suits, about the dumbest shit that could not possibly interest anyone but a mother, and she doesn’t falter, not once.

It's Eddie coming out to his mother without explicit stating and it was the she doesn’t falter, not once. that will have your eyes watering. I felt it hit hard in it's depth without beating it down. 

5.  The Ministry of Time - by Kaliane Bradley

When I was twelve years old, I’d sat at the dining table with my mother, peeling the skins off garlic for her. She was telling me about one of her sisters, who had been beautiful and married rich. They’d killed her, of course – the cadres who sacked Phnom Penh – and she mused out loud, ‘I wonder if they raped her before they shot her?’ Yes, thought twelve-year-old me seriously, I wonder if they did? And I would always be a twelve-year-old who had wondered that about her aunt at the dining table. An underrated symptom of inherited trauma is how socially awkward it is to live with.

Just a hit you hard OOOF scene about inherited trauma, a conversation we need to be having more.

6.  The Story Collector - Evie Woods

The first meeting between the two main characters where she's picking flowers in a field and he's the tall conservation officer who reprimands her for picking the flowers, he has his own grief tied into he wants her to stop, will have a little zing hit you, as you feel the promised magic between them (especially when his little yappy dog clues Sarah into what a softie he is).

7.  A Sorceress Comes to Call - by T. Kingfisher

***This is a decent spoiler scene, so, beware and skip if you hate spoilers***

Story is about a young girl who is controlled, literally, by her witch, literally!, mother. Who she sees as her bestfriend and confides to, is her horse Falada. Falada has been her rock and the only one that seems to give Cordelia strength and when the scene hits that she learns Falada has betrayed her and works for her mother, she lost all that and feels more alone than ever. I hurt so bad for her and felt the numbness this gave her. (I must have some residual horse girl leftover from childhood because I refused to stop thinking that Falada wasn't on the side I wanted them to be for an embarrassing long time)

8.  The Dead Romantics - by Ashley Poston

There was a shimmer in the hall behind her, an older man in an orange sweater and brown trousers, the hair that was left on the sides of his head combed back. He mouthed, “Thank you,” his eyes glistening with tears. 
Sometimes, a spirit’s final business wasn’t talking to someone, or exposing their murderer, or seeing their own dead body—sometimes it was simply a waiting game.

Our female lead can see ghosts and communicate with them. When she goes back home for her father's funeral, she also takes on some of the tasks he used to do. This was a really little quick scene where the lead is delivering flowers that a ghost husband still sends his alive wife and it made me tear up at how enduring love can/could be.

9.  The Hostage - by Susan Wiggs

The pan on the stove caught fire at the precise instant that Tom Silver came into the house. He looked tired, his face and hands chapped by the wind, but he moved swiftly toward the blaze. Deborah was quicker, dumping some of the hot water from the potatoes onto the fire even as Tom shouted, “Don’t do that!” In a split second, she understood why. Some alchemy between water and burning fat made the flames flare even higher, licking black tongues of soot onto the ceiling. Swearing, Tom grabbed the frying pan and rushed outside with it. She heard more cursing, then silence. 
He returned, holding the pan with the charred fish in it. “I take it supper’s ready,” he said. 

I'm a goofball for scenes like this, fish out of water trying because they like the person they're trying to impress/show value to. His exasperation turned into dry wit instead of anger, these are the moments that make a couple. 

10.  Courting Catherine - by Nora Roberts

“It’s warped.” She swallowed, hoping to smother the squeak in her voice. “Everything around here is warped or broken or about to disintegrate. I don’t know why you’d even consider buying it.” 
Her face was pale as water, Trent noted, making her eyes that much deeper. The panicked distress in them seemed more than a warped tower door warranted. “Doors can be repaired or replaced.”

Gawd, I love scenes like this! It's a layered under the surface talking, she's feeling for him but scared she's not good enough, so she's using the house in place of herself, and he's all I got you. Sucker for such scenes, I tell you.


Winner:


I'm sorry, but, HE BROKE DOWN THE DAMN DOOR TO GET TO HER! It's hot because of the layers and emotional depth that has been built up in and between these characters up to this point. Just, inject these kind of scenes into my veins.




















What's a favorite scene that's still sticking with you from 2023?

Next time, Favorite Quote...

Sunday, January 5, 2025

The Roms - Part 2: Favorite Secondary Character

 The Roms

Favorite Secondary Character


*Books eligible could be published in any year, they just had to be read by me in 2023 Clicking on book cover brings you to my review


Nominees:


1.  Wren Gao - Red String Theory by Lauren Kung Jessen

Wren is Rooney's (FMC) mother, they have a friction relationship as Wren is a famous artist and garnered a lot of fame from videotaping and showing her giving birth. Rooney is also an artist but tries to keep anonymous to avoid nepotism. Wren has some problem seeing where Rooney is coming from and this leads to growing pains between the two. While it'd be easy to fully side with Rooney, our main character, I found myself wanting to read Wren's story, her strong personality and background had me fascinated with how she became the powerhouse woman she was today.

2.  Worldbuilding - Heartless Hunter by Kristen Ciccarelli

I was captured by this world the author created. It's a fantasy world where witches once ruled but a revolution occurred and the Witch Queens were killed. This lead to witches hunted and sent into hiding. Our female main character is a witch and the love interest starts to become a member of the Guard who hunt witches down, leading to a dangerous created world. I liked how the world was thought out and delivered to the reader, it felt real, enhancing the story and characters for me. I also loved that witches get their power from blood and our FMC uses her menses for her source of power.

3.  Setting - Kilt Trip by Alexandra Kiley 

This takes place in Scotland, so a real place doesn't need the laid out structured time as fantasy but I feel like settings are often underutilized, not so here. We get a feel for the real place with facts, legends, history, and atmosphere from in and around Edinburgh, which also helped to get a feel for and understand our male main character. 

4.  Miss Beasley - Morning Glory by LaVyrle Spencer

A small-town spinster who greatly, through emotional and actionable deeds, helps our main characters, individually and together, out a lot. She pushed them, educated them, and loved them. I'll always want a novella with her and the lawyer that helps the main couple out and always feel bad at how done dirty she was with the numerous mentions of her facial hair. 

5.  Joe - Here We Go Again by Alison Cochrun

As I said in my review, you're going to hurt when you read this one, and a big part of that is because of the character Joe. He was the inspirational teacher for the two leads and requests they both take him on a cross-country trip, as he's dying from cancer. On the trip he helps the two make their way back to each other and even gets an emotional closure with a past love of his own. He brought the humor, grief, and helped get our couple together, great secondary character.

6.  Suspense Plot - Don't Look Back by Rachel Grant


This was me one point (ok, several points) to my partner as I manically  calmly discussed and tried to work through what was going on in this story. It could almost be argued that the suspense plot was the main character but I wanted to talk about it and this is the category it fit in, so, yeah, it was a doozy. I said in my review if you liked the shows The Night Agent, The Old Man, and Bodyguard (British), you definitely want to pick this book up. Family secrets, spy games, conniving Russians, and reveals you see coming and don't. I was locked all the way in.

7.  The town - A Novel Love Story by Ashley Poston

Our female main character ends up lost on the road one night and ends up stranded in a town, a town that turns out to be Thee Small Town from her favorite romance series. How cute and magical realism wonderful is this concept?! Her realizing and then geeking out was fun to read and how it lead to delivering the message that happily ever afters are never the end, for better and worse. 

8.  Claudine - They Dream in Gold by Mai Sennaar

The ride this, seemingly innocuous, secondary character took me on! Claudine is the mother of a female main character but isn't heavily in her adult life after giving her up to her grandmother as a kid. Reader's, mostly, get a look at Claudine through her daughter's eyes, a lens heavily clouded but informative, with some understanding and love. It's when we get Claudine's point-of-view that I felt myself sitting up. She's flawed, lost, and floundering but comes to a point where she starts to build back up. There was an ending scene with her that had me tearing up, which felt out of nowhere, until you think back to how the character had been laid out and built up to get to this point. 

9.  Gordon - Ain't She Sweet by Susan Elizabeth Phillips

That's right, the dog. Just reminding people who's award show this is. This character was sly, mischievous, humorous, and loving and he said a whole lot without saying a word (in English, anyway). I found myself wanting a Gordon pov.

10.  Atmosphere - The House at Watch Hill by Karen Marie Moning

If you enjoy Gothics and want a modern one, this was positively dripping in spooky old house flair. There was alluding paranormal/supernatural elements, lies, deceit, danger, and a is he/isn't he a killer mysterious man, swirling all around our female lead character. It's very much a prelude book but read this during the months of late August and December 1st to drown yourself in delicious Fall, spooky season vibes. 


Winner:

Claudine


I read this in July and after I finished it, I was 99.99% sure Claudine was going to take the win here. I wanted to go back and reread this just for Claudine's parts! Normally, I'd say I want her to get her own book but her life story is filtered through here enough that I think her story got told, probably another reason she so clearly takes this win. I just, that gentle, tense, egg shell scene where it finally seems like she's on the road to getting it right, read so loud triumphant in it's quietness to me. I completely understand writing people off from your life, but I sure love reading, hearing about when they make good.















Who or what stole the spotlight for you in 2024?

Next time, Favorite Scene....

Saturday, January 4, 2025

Reading Romance Bingo Challenge

 That's What I'm Talking About (Twimom227) 2025 Romance Reading Bingo Challenge


Back for another year! Missed blackout by two squares last year, but like my fast start in hopes of completing this year :)



*clicking on book title takes you to my review


Sports - The Hook Up by Kristen Callihan

Snow/Ice on cover - Window Shopping by Tessa Bailey


Reading Update: Page 1

 



My area is not getting snow, but it's in the negatives here. What's a gal to do but have a bowl of chili and a hot contemporary romance? 

Stella doesn't realize she's snarking on a window display to the owner of the department store.
However, it's the holiday season, and serendipity is in the air, so she winds up with a job. 
But so is temptation and romance. 

Can't wait for Bailey to deliver on her usual sweet and spice with a grumpy FMC and sunshine MMC! 




Review: The Hook Up

The Hook Up The Hook Up by Kristen Callihan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

4.3 stars 

I received this book for free, this does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review 

Tonight was obviously an ill-advised hook up for her. And I’m so screwed because it was the best thing that has ever happened to me. 

As soon as Anna and Drew see each other in class, they're hot for each other. Anna carries self-esteem issues from being overweight in highschool and social anxiety, so when she learns the tall good-looking guy that is sending tingles up her spine is the college's star quarterback, she wants nothing to do with that fish bowl. Drew doesn't know or understand fully all of Anna's issues and why she's being so stubborn about acting on their obvious chemistry but he senses deep down that she's The One, so while he'll go slower to earn her trust, he's all in. 

If only he was someone else. Something else. A regular guy. A nobody like me. But he’s not and never will be. When I think of the public scrutiny he, and by default anyone he’s with, endures, I want to hide away, run for the hills. 

The Hook Up was a New Adult story about a sparking chemistry couple in different college cliques that hotly delivered (did it ever!) on it's title, at least in the beginning. I said that Anna was stubborn about acting on their chemistry, don't worry, the stubbornness doesn't last long on the physical front. These two were hot little potatoes and bless Callihan and her open-door scenes in a contemporary romance (not surprising the original pub date on this). However, since I was enjoying those scenes so much, I grumpily felt like it was a little bit of a bait-and-switch when the second half lost some of that fervor in favor of a dragged out Anna and her issues with mini little tangents. I understand that the tangents were there to entice for the secondary characters that will star in later books in the series but too many distracted from the spicy main course. 

“Why won’t you let me kiss you, Anna?” 

I flew through the first half filled with hot, snappy, chemistry between Anna and Drew and liked how, told through alternating povs of both characters, we could see how much Drew liked Anna but was letting her lead and go at her pace, when emotionally it was hurting him because he wanted to share how much he liked her but was scared she'd run. These two had connections, Drew's parents died when he was in high-school, Anna's father left when she was young and has a mom that chases love with the wrong men, they've felt alone. Emotionally and personality wise they connected, and I felt it through their dialogue, it's the outside world that messes with them and Anna's fear of being scrutinized, which with Drew's popularity, is going to be a given occurrence. The second half has them fighting with misunderstanding where the other is coming from. That and how they're both coming into their own, Anna questioning what she wants to do with her life after she graduates and Drew realizing that he's done with the partying, helped to make this have a great New Adult feel. Their romance also had some of those sweet and angsty new adult giddy romance feelings. 

“I’ve missed you.”

The first half I was ready to give this five stars but the second half changed the pace on me so much, a decent amount of it dragging, that it couldn't stay there for me. Drew proclaims his feelings, Anna's “rules” wall crumbles, and we a get a third act break-up that simply gets resolved when Drew gets hurt during a game (people who don't like sportsball, never fear, mentions of football to more so introduce teammates for future books and only a brief look at his practice and even briefer scene of one of his games). The injury works to help them resolve their romantic relationship and then the last twenty percent was about Drew's mental health regarding his injury, it almost felt like a completely different book from how it started. We do get a two years later epilogue to check in on their HEA. A hot, new adult love first half that shouldn't be missed with a slower paced working it out second half, so maybe the best of both worlds for some readers.

Thursday, January 2, 2025

Reading Update: Page 1

 



It's college bowl game season, so let's match the seasonal theme 

This is a repub, but with bonus material! 

Anna's just trying to finish college and then figure out her life. 
But what's a girl to do when the star quartback and her end up having a chance encounter that leads to the hottest night of her life? 

You keep meeting up with that quarterback! 
But what if he wants more? 

Oh, to have the problems of romance book female main character 




Wednesday, January 1, 2025

The Roms - Part 1: Favorite Cover

 Happy New Year!
Where did that year go????

As always, enjoyed chatting and discovering books with you all, hoping to continue doing so with old friends and welcome in a few new ones.

It always takes me until February to really get going and settled in, because every year I can't help but commit and join in with reading challenges and buddy reads that I know are coming up a month in advance but do nothing to prepare for. I also do nothing to prepare for my end of the year awards and question if I even want to do them, but I'm trudging on as at least I enjoy looking back on and thinking again about what I consumed.

I read 100 books this year (GoodReads Year in Review) which is a little low for me but after that year and how busy I was, we are counting it as a win. It was a very average reading year as my average rating was 3 stars (that means I Liked It) and I had three books I gave 5 stars (none of them were romance and I hate that). I still show up and leave the dance with romance but I'll do some waltzing with other genres. 

My Halloween Bingo play was pathetic this year but considering it was a Presidential election year and one I cared a whole lot about and ran myself ragged outreaching, maybe it's amazing I even covered as many squares as I did. I forgot that I didn't even do a closing post :( 

Wendy's TBRChallenge I only missed three (?) months on, which I think is the best I've ever done. Seriously, this is one of my favorite I do, the gems I've found for this Challenge

I did Twimom227's Romance Reading Challenge for the first time last year and enjoyed it so much, I'm doing it again (you know me and Bingo games). I almost managed a blackout, all but two squares, Bingo Card

My goal was for a Buddy Read a month, but I think I missed two or three months as things got busy, my goal again! I'm getting a good start on this goal, as Laurie Bark at the Ghouls was kind and awesome enough to invite me to a Horror Discord and their January Buddy Read of This Cursed House by Del Sandeen.

We're not going to talk about my goal of accepting less ARCs. But I've got a 0 showing for how many Accidents ARCs have you accepted this year.

I hope nothing but the best for everyone this coming year and I will be out there trying to make it happen, please join in, in anyway you can. Love & Solidarity to you all

Onto the awards, 

The books eligible for my Roms, can be published in any year, they simply had to be read by me in 2024. There will be the usual 9 categories, Favorite Cover; Favorite Secondary Character; Favorite Scene; Favorite Quote; Favorite Leads; Favorite Couple; Favorite Contemporary and Historical, and Favorite of 2024. Again, hopefully reflected in the new awards name, as I participate in Halloween Bingo, some horror books could sneak in there, along with other genres I read; basically any book I rate or discuss on GoodReads is fair game. 

Without further ado, let me kick off the award show today with Favorite Cover, I try very hard to not let how much I liked or disliked the actual story affect this one, all visual judging a book by it's cover here :) 


*Click on the cover for my review if I wrote one and if I didn't, you'll be directed to it's GoodReads page 


The Roms 

Favorite Cover 

Nominees:






1.  You Should Be So Lucky by Cat Sebastian  
This cover is sporty, Baseball Man!, flirty combative, Baseball Man is talking with a reporter!, and places you in the NY setting, Statue of Liberty sketch!. I'm sure Derek Guy could tell you all the reasons I can tell it's historical by their attire but I'll just say, I feel it. This cover is fun and it's immediately telling me this is a Queer Sports Historical Romance. Wild concept, a book cover that's working to accurately inform the reader about what's happening in it's pages.

2.  Blood & Mascara by Colin Krainin
I don't read a lot of noirs but I fairly swooned at how much this screamed one. The dark silhouette of the detective, the dame (there's always a dame!) crying, and with the pop of red because there's a murder (there's always a murder!). Let me just rub this smoke and scotch out of my eyes. This cover makes me hear some form of deep, dark jazz music. I barely read the synopsis before I was one-clicking this one.

3.  Meet Me in Tahiti by Georgia Toffolo
Whoever decided on this sunset, tropical-ish color scheme, I hope you got a bonus. The colors have me feeling some island heat and breeze placing me in the setting. The way the two characters are distance but facing each other tells me they're starting off apart but they don't want to stay that way. Also, you can never beat representation. 

4.  Love, Lies, and Cherry Pie by Jackie Lau
It's just so cute! If rom-com had a representative, I'd want it to be this cover. From the title to the two characters sitting on a piece of cherry pie and a cherry, this cover is telling me that there will be fun, flirty antics to be had in it's pages. And food! 

5.  Jewel Me Twice by Charish Reid
I don't even know where to start to say how much this cover is For Me. Action romances are MY JAM. So to have Jewel and Thief right there spelled out on the cover, two dressed up combatives, who I know are going to be eventual lovers, well, WANT. Also, this may be one of the "Intense Dork" moments of mine, but the fact that his sock is red, gah! It screams Wild Card to me and then see it opposite how far her dress slit is but still showing off that leg, Y'ALL. This cover is screaming action, sexy, come at me I'll meet you, tension. 

6.  Phantasma by Kaylie Smith
If you're new here, I love Romance AND Horror. So, this cover, YES. Roses and a skull? I'm a simple creature.

7.  Deja Brew by Celestine Martin
Ok, so this is cartoon, not immediately my favorite and it's done in, what looks like to me, very simple outlined drawing. But you know I like seasonal vibes, so the pumpkins and coloring are nudging me. What grabbed me though and The Reason it made my nominees list, That Look between the two characters. Honestly, more emotion there than some books tried to create for me in 300 pages this year. Drawing stick people is a challenge for me, so when I ask HOW do they accomplish that emotion in a seemingly simple drawing, I mean HOW???

8.  The Legend of Meneka by Kritika H. Rao
I'm finding I like a sense of movement on my covers and I feel swirled up in this one. I've seen another look for a cover for this book and it erases the powerhouse Meneka from bold, center stage and I Do. Not. Like. Look at this goddess! I believe she can seduce and bend anyone to her will with this cover. 

9.  Wild Bells to the Wild Sky by Laurie McBain
A paradise island, a parrot, a jaguar, a thumb making it's way up a titty, WHAT MORE DO YOU WANT??? I may hate what's inside Bodice Rippers at times but my god do I LOVE their covers.

10.  Oceansong by C.W. Rose
My little yearning heart is a mess for the way their arms, hands are reaching out for each other. They way they're in different worlds, Landwalker and Merman, and he seems to be floating away from her against his will, YEARN.

11.  The Stars Too Fondly by Emily Hamilton
If you guessed this was a space romance, well, you're with me in how much I like that this cover immediately portrays that. Sidenote:  I feel like space romance/opera is a subgenre I like a lot but somehow never seem to get to a lot of, I need to work to change that. The floating in air, darker around them with a brighter lighted focus on them, gives the feeling of vast space but two people coming together in it. Talking about them back-to-back, it feels like a version of Oceansong to me now. Colliding and reaching for. 


Winner:

Jewel Me Twice by Charish Reid


Oh my god, is this because of that sock?!? Look, I don't know what to say but I feel like it could be the clencher. I'll say it again for new people here, this could all be called the "Intense Dork" awards. 
Sexy, wild card, combative, I can more than meet you, vibes has this my favorite book cover of the year.













What was your favorite cover of 2024?

Stay tuned for Favorite Secondary Character...