Give him our snarkworthy favourite “Decadence”. I want to know what he’d do with the immortal “I’m in her ass, saving her life” line..
old63: that smartbitches review never gets old, even if I’ve read it more than…
I admit, until recently I’d never read a Silhouette. Now, I have to come clean and admit I’ve never read a traditional Regency romance, either. Not a Heyer, not a Cartland - the closest I’ve come is Evil Auntie’s Parody. So - give me the straight dish: what traditional Regencies (not Regency-set historicals) do you recommend?
And we shall expediently add these to our Good Shit vs. Shit to Avoid category. I swear!
A while back, somebody gently *koff* pointed out that we came up with a neat idea, and then did shit-all with it. Namely, the “readers recommend, we post the recommendations!” idea. Today, we finally got off our asses and sorted all this shit out.
Asterisks denote books that aren’t really romances, so if you’re looking for an HEA and a neatly wrapped-up ending by the end, tread carefully with these books.
Kerry recommends Sherrilyn Kenyon’s Dark Hunter series.
recommends:
Alyssa recommends Charlaine Harris’s Sookie Stackhouse series* (Dead Until Dark, Living Dead in Dallas, Club Dead, Dead to the World, Dead as a Doornail).
Meljean recommends:
Jorie recommends Sunshine* by Robin McKinley.
Angie recommends:
Rosario recommends:
cw recommends:
Samantha Winston recommends My Fair Pixie by, well, Samantha Winston. Heh.
recommends:
Nicole recommends:
Irsyangel recommends Charlaine Harris’s Sookie Stackhouse series*.
Monica recommends Midnight Gamble by Nancy Gideon and Laurell K. Hamilton’s Anita Blake books*, but only until and including Blue Moon.
Darlene recommends:
Gabrielle recommends:
recommends Katie MacAlister’s vampire novels.
recommends Linda Lael Miller’s Vampire Valerian series.
recommends:
Gail recommends:
October 28 Update
recommends Tanya Huff’s Blood series*.
recommends Rachel Morgan’s series* by Kim Harrison.
Emma Gads recommends Susan Squires’ Companion series.
recommends:
Ellen Fisher recommends:
Maili recommends:
Robyn recommends Those Who Hunt the Night* and Travelling with the Dead* by Barbara Hambly.
recommends Kim Harrison and L.A. Banks’ series*.
So does Sara.
And so does La Karibane, and also recommends The Companion by Susan Squires.
Vera Nazarian recommends:
recommends the Carpathian series by Christine Feehan.
recommends the Katie MacAlister’s vampire books.
Anything that makes people read more makes me happy. Therefore, the Harry Potter phenomenon makes me happy. People are really, really excited! About a book! How fucking cool is that?
But man, I wish people would go nuts over a better book.
Oh yes, that’s right. I think Harry Potter is vastly overrated. The premise is all right, but based on what I read (all of the first book, half of the second) the writing was pedestrian at best, boring at worst, and rife with cliches. Someone I knew wrote this very interesting post about the magic system and pinpointed something else that was bothering me:
Anyway, maybe I’m being picky, but [Candy] is certainly right, the writing is nothing to write home about. But most of all the MAGIC is rather silly.
I’m not even quite sure what I mean by that - but the magic seems kind of spoofy and farcical in nature like - oh, I’m going to go take Magic Charms 101. And then Hagrid is going to move the plot along by doing something stupid. And then I’m going to fly around on a magic broom. And wear an invisibility cloak. Forgive me if I didn’t get past the first book.
And then there’s the division of the kids into 4 types of people: the heroes, the villains, the clumsy idiots, and the smartypants. That irks to no end.
I feel like you can tell a lot about a book or author by the way they use magic. The magic in worlds like Ursula LeGuin’s Earthsea (she should be added to the list by the way) or Tolkien’s Middle Earth is much more part of the fabric of the world, much more natural. C.S. Lewis’ magic is based in Christianity - I think. Diane Duane’s books are much more comparable to Rowling’s world, because they are also set in the “real” world, and the magic there is based on the idea that wizards are fighting against the forces of entropy. And Rowling’s magic is...like I said… silly.
Here are some magical children’s books that I’ve read and loved--books that, in my opinion, are Better than Potter:
Feel free to fire away in the comments and tell me what a shitful freak I am. Or if, like me, you’re a fellow children’s book/YA novel reader who just is not impressed with Harry Potter, feel free to speak up in solidarity. Feel free to recommend your favorite children’s books, too--yes, even if they’re Harry Potter novels.
Top of the Monday to you. At this hour, only the east coasters and our fabulous Europeans are up and writing, so it’s time for another edition of “Good Shit vs. Shit to Avoid,” where we throw out a genre type and you recommend reading material for that there style of romance. Not that we’re avoiding the west coasters, since this will be up until Candy wakes up and something romance-related burns her toast. Me, I’m too tired from getting ready to move to get worked up about anything.
Last time, we did Paranormal: Vampire Romance, so today I thought I’d mix it up and ask for your knowledgeable recommendations for Contemporary Romance: Military/Police/Law Enforcement. All you CSI, NCIS, and Brockmann addicts out there, what regimented authority do you like your heros and heroines to work within, and possibly struggle against?
Kristin, a commenter on an older entry today asked, “I like the new trend toward paranormal romance. It poses some very interesting conflicts. But you need to be a good writer to pull it off. Can someone suggest to me some paranormal romance authors that are worth reading???”
Pondering this question, and the many, many, other recommendations people have made on this site (thus raising Candy’s and my own TBR piles to such precarious heights that I am told I need a builder’s permit before I attempt to reduce them) has made me realize: collectively, we are among the more well-read romance readers out there, particularly when Candy or I try to stump you with a romance personal ad.
This got me thinking: we should set up a reference section of recommendations by genre and type. So here’s what we’ll do: we will request any and all author/title/series recommendations from you, our knowledgeable and clever readership (don’t ever say kissing up never gets you anywhere), for a specific genre and type of romance. Then, Candy and I will take your names, website links, and recommendations and compile them into reference pages. That way, if you’ve got a hankering for some paranormal romance with a particular type of paranormal activity, you can check out our community recommendations, and check out what other authors a particular person has recommended. Thus, you know who likes what you like, and can take your word that one should stay away from recent Jude Devereauxs in the paranormal department, but run like the wind to find yourself some Anne Stuart.
Kirstin was looking for paranormal recommendations - but that seems a broad request. So for our first reader recommendation request: Paranormal: Vampire romances.
Bring us your tired, your bloodthirsty, your huddled undead yearning to get it on with some hot monkey lovin’!