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The Bo0ki3

A blog about books. I'll be posting reviews, weekly features, giveaways, author interviews, and other things.


Loki’s Daughter
Delle Jacobs
Paperback, 294 Pages
Publisher: Awe-Struck
ISBN: 9-781-58749-264-8
Release Date: March 13th 2002

Summary:

           A Celtic woman nurses a wounded Viking back to health, fearing an attack on her defenseless village if he dies. What she doesn’t know, however, is that he came to the village looking for her. Many years before he had saved her from a Viking raid, and now that he is a leader he has come back to claim her.
            To complicate things, the woman hates Vikings with a passion because they killed all the men in her village, blinded her sister, and now she is left to keep things running in a town of old men, women, and children.
            Now, on his feet once again, the Viking and his friends decide to help the women… by marrying them and taking over the village. The women fight them at first, but through kindness and more than a little manipulation, eventually the Vikings win over the stubborn Celts, merging their cultures and families.

My thoughts:

I love historical novels, and the detail that shows up in this book adds so much to the tale. The characters are realistic and relatable. Plus, how often do you see disabilities like blindness in a romance novel?
            While I felt it got a little silly towards the end, I really felt that the plot kept moving quickly and the supporting characters were well fleshed out. The woman made me laugh in their passive-aggressive fight against the men, and the men made me laugh with their reactions to the women. There is nothing like Celtic fire and Viking steel going head to head!

Author Bio

This Guest post is by Christine Kane from internet providers, she is a graduate of Communication and Journalism. She enjoys writing about a wide-variety of subjects for different blogs. She can be reached via email at: Christi.Kane00 @ gmail.com.

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Out June 25th - Book Six of the Bestselling Someone Else's Fairytale Series!


Preview on:

Radish Fiction

Preorder for $0.99 on:

iBooks
Nook
Google Play
Kobo
(For notice of the Amazon presale, join my mailing list.)

Chloe could have had the perfect childbirth…

If only the baby hadn’t come two weeks early

If only Jason wasn’t working overtime to save his new television series

If only the television crew wouldn’t antagonize the archaeologists working next to the set

If only the archaeologists hadn’t found that dead body

If only the main suspect wasn’t the beloved boyfriend of sweet Lizzie Warner, a girl who deserves to have it all…

Chloe’s first week of motherhood isn’t going at all how she hoped, so she is determined to solve the murder, no matter what it takes. Perhaps then the second week can be magical.

Find E.M. Tippetts on
website | twitter | facebook | instagram
or join her mailing list
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Pride
Ibi Zoboi
Young Adult Contemporary Romance, Retelling
Hardcover, 304 Pages
Publisher: Balzer + Bray, an imprint of HarperCollins
Release Date: September 18, 2018
Overall Rating: 4/5

Zuri Benitez has pride. Brooklyn pride, family pride, and pride in her Afro-Latino roots. But pride might not be enough to save her rapidly gentrifying neighborhood from becoming unrecognizable.
When the wealthy Darcy family moves in across the street, Zuri wants nothing to do with their two teenage sons, even as her older sister, Janae, starts to fall for the charming Ainsley. She especially can’t stand the judgmental and arrogant Darius. Yet as Zuri and Darius are forced to find common ground, their initial dislike shifts into an unexpected understanding.
But with four wild sisters pulling her in different directions, cute boy Warren vying for her attention, and college applications hovering on the horizon, Zuri fights to find her place in Bushwick’s changing landscape, or lose it all.

I’ll be honest with you I haven’t read Pride and Prejudice (gasp, I know) I have the book but when I started it, I just couldn’t get into. I have watched the movie and read a few retellings. I love seeing authors or people in general talking something they love and turning it into their own thing while paying respect to the original work. Ibi Zoboi did just that, yes while this book was a retelling of a classic story it was fresh and stood on its own. I don’t think I’ve ever come across a retelling of Pride and Prejudice like this, one that I could relate to, one that touched on what it meant to be black girl in New York City.

Okay so let’s get down to it, I’ve had my eye on this book for months and I was not disappointed, though if I’m being honest I didn’t think this would be a bad book at all. It was well written, well-paced, relatable and just good. Zuri, (huge fan of the name) is smart, stubborn, passionate, family orientated, and extremely judgmental. She had a plan for her life, work hard and go to a good college. I loved that Zuri was excited to spend the summer with her older sister Janae, who just came home from her first year at college. That spoke to me because I do pretty much everything with my siblings, and when the twins went away to college it was weird not to have them around.

My one biggest problem with Zuri was how judgmental she was. It honestly was maddening how she judged Darius and his family solely based off the fact that they had money. She judged them before she had even seen them, and in her head, she knew she was absolutely right about them. Though if I’m being truthful I can’t tell if Zuri was that bad or if the reason I’m so hard on her is because I relate to Darius so much. I’m not rich but I definitely know how it feels to not fit in to that box of what people think it means to black. Darius as a character spoke to me because all my life I’ve done things in a way that was different from what other black people around have done and had people questioning if I was truly black.

Now this is not to say Darius is a perfect character because he too is judgey as hell. If both Zuri and Darius got over themselves, they might have been friends from the beginning. One of my favorite parts of the book was how Zuri felt about her neighborhood. She was worried about people moving in and gentrifying the neighborhood. Sometimes people only see an area they think is “ghetto” or “hood” or that needs to fixed but what they don’t see that these neighborhoods have a culture and life all their own. It showed that neighborhoods are more than the buildings and landscaping, neighborhoods are people and personalities. I might seem like I’m reading too much into it but it’s something I can relate to and it made me happy to see these things reflected in a book.
               
I recommend this book to any and every one, it was fun book, a quick read and a reminder that sometimes people need to let go of their pride. You do not have to be a person of color to enjoy this book. Please do yourself a favor and get this book when it comes out, I promise you won’t be disappointed.
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The Wedding Date
Jasmine Guillory
Paperback, 310 Pages
Contemporary Romance
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Release Date: January 30, 2018
Overall Rating: 4/5
Top of Form
           
Bottom of Form
Top of Form
Bottom of Form

=
Agreeing to go to a wedding with a guy she gets stuck with in an elevator is something Alexa Monroe wouldn't normally do. But there's something about Drew Nichols that's too hard to resist.

On the eve of his ex's wedding festivities, Drew is minus a plus one. Until a power outage strands him with the perfect candidate for a fake girlfriend...

After Alexa and Drew have more fun than they ever thought possible, Drew has to fly back to Los Angeles and his job as a pediatric surgeon, and Alexa heads home to Berkeley, where she's the mayor's chief of staff. Too bad they can't stop thinking about the other... 

They're just two high-powered professionals on a collision course toward the long distance dating disaster of the century--or closing the gap between what they think they need and what they truly want...

Alexa and Drew meet when they get stuck in an elevator together and next thing Alexa knows she’s agreeing to be Drew’s date to his ex’s wedding. They hit it off rather quick and fly out to see each other during the weekends. It’s supposed to be fun and easy, but feelings start to get in the way and the pair aren’t sure what they should do about it.

This was a quick read, which tends to be the case for me with books of this genre. It was well written and had some funny moments. I really liked the fact that they were not the same race, yet that wasn’t a big deal between the characters. That was actually refreshing. The book definitely had some sexy moments but wasn’t in yourself about it. I really liked the mix of different personalities. My favorite part of the book was that no one needed to be saved. Both Alexa and Drew were strong and steady in their careers and lives. Honestly there wasn’t anything I didn’t like about this book, it was really good. I recommend this to anyone who is interested in fun read.  
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About Me

About Me
Hi, I’m Shanese. Welcome! I love books and talking about them. I’m from NYC. Take a look around.

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      • Loki’s Daughters Review by Christine Kane
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What I'm Reading

Shanese La'tia's bookshelf: read

The Bride Test
The Bride Test
by Helen Hoang
tagged: currently-reading
Slayer
Slayer
by Kiersten White
tagged: currently-reading
Candy Color Paradox, Vol. 1
Candy Color Paradox, Vol. 1
by Isaku Natsume
tagged: currently-reading
The Avengers, Volume 1
The Avengers, Volume 1
by Brian Michael Bendis
tagged: currently-reading

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    Upcoming read : We Shouldn't by Vi Keeland
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