OMG. Follow Your Heart books. I remember these. I had a few that I picked up from the school book fair. It’s about all they had by way of romance back in the day.
Here’s one on Amazon:…

I have been glomming the Crusie books on my Books(not)Free queue, as lately I have a hankering for contemporary romance like I often have a hankering for chocolate. Usually with chocolate it’s Watchamacallit candy bars, which I adore, especially since I can’t get Clark bars in New York. With contemporary romance, I want light, somewhat fluffy, funny, fresh, fun, all works beginning with F, and let’s be real, some hot f’in is ok, too!
While I was sitting down organizing my reactions to this book, it occurred to me that I ought to develop a rubric for discussing my grading levels. So here is a rough sketch of the Grading Scale of Sarah:
Why do I give a book an A? I read books on the train to and from work, and if the book is so good that I can’t let it sit in my bag overnight, and have to head upstairs to read it all evening long instead of watching tv with the Hubby, AND if the quality of the book does not falter and let me down at the end, then it is an A book. If I want to grab it out of my bag and end up wishing I hadn’t, or if I am content to read it on the train but still enjoy it while I am reading it and don’t catch myself staring at the other passengers’ books to see what they are enjoying, then it’s a B. If I read it and it’s not bad, but nothing that makes me almost miss my train stop because I am into it, it’s a C. If there are egregious errors, the plot line leaves me cold, and I find myself forcing my fingers to turn pages so I can finish it already, then it’s a D. F books are books that were so torrentially bad, I couldn’t bear to finish them, or only did so because I wanted to watch the train wreck (no pun intended, and God forbid) until its end.
So on to my review. Crazy for You was delicious, and it had some elements that I adored and couldn’t wait to reread before I put it back in the bag for a Books(not)Free return shipment. But there were some major flaws that, though they didn’t get in the way of the romance (which was quite hot, thank you Ms. Crusie!), they got in My way as the reader, especially when the flaws were errors that slapped me back into reality.
Awwww. The story about you and your Hubby was was so cute! Here, have a picture of a baby owl.
Awwwww. SQUEEEEEEE!
Thank you!
Yeah, I loved the romance in Crazy for You. Nick and Quinn shone. The rest of the book was not as strong but fortunately didn’t harm the romance.
It kind of reminded me of television shows that I love, sheerly on the basis of loving one or two of the whole ensemble. I tune in and watch just to see those characters, and the rest is just filler that helps bring them together every now and again. I’ll keep tuning in, but I never care as much about the others as I do about my favorites. If Quinn and Nick’s romance was a tv show, I’d TiVo that bad boy every week.
I have this one on the TBR pile and I’m not sure why. I loved her category romances and was happy to see her move to single title. I’ve never made it past the first chapter of Welcome to Temptation and the book is still in the TBR pile. This is the one where the heroine discovers her husband is cheating and then her old high school boyfriend showed up on her doorstep and there is a teenager - all in chapter one. I couldn’t see how reading about the end of a marriage was going to be happy. Then there was that teenager… Anyways, I have been picking up her titles on and off - fell madly in love with Bet Me but I wanted more heat. So maybe Crazy For You is just what I am looking for.
CindyS
Er....that’s Tell Me Lies, Cindy. Welcome to Temptation starts with the heroine and her sister getting in a fender-bender.
Back to the review, I do agree on the spoiler bit- that annoyed me as well. But otherwise, I pretty much enjoyed this one. Nice to see some Crusie reviewing going on!
Jennifer, Candy & I are big fans of Crusie, which is odd considering just about every author that makes one of us go, “Squeeee!” the other goes, “Meh.” For us to agree is a rare thing. So expect more Crusie, especially since a couple of her books left us cold.
I more or less agree with all your comments, but disagree on the balance—which is to say, I found the negatives did get in the way of the romance. I’d rate it more a weak B- at best. I haven’t reread it, and have no impetus to, the way I did with Temptation, Faking, Fast, and Bet.
---L.
Which ones left you cold?
I’ve got Strange Bedpersons and Charlie All Night in my TBR pile, but somehow I can’t motivate myself to actually read them. I just have a feeling they won’t be as good, somehow. And I don’t remember being all that impressed with the Bradley book or What The Lady Wants.
Welcome to Temptation is what sold me, though. Phin + pool + nookie = whee!
Funny enough Welcome to Temptation was “meh” for me, but I just finished “Faking It” and I literally had to force myself to keep reading it. It was like chewing cardboard. Only the fact that I was on a plane made me continue to read it.
aww Welcome to Temptation and Faking It were my favorite Crusie’s. The spoilered part made me hate Crazy For You. I tell everyone that asks about it that Bill was just a little too crazy for me.
There was definitely an over-amplified crazy applied to Bill, especially because you never understood the root cause - was he a looney or did he have an obsessive tumor?
But Faking It - I just never got into either the hero or the heroine, and everyone felt two steps away from me, as opposed to Quinn and Nick, whom I was totally into.
04.05.05 at 01:03 PM |