




by Candy • Sunday, June 05, 2005 at 09:58 AM
Ever since Sarah and I started this site, I’ve been reading more romance novels than I have in a long, long time. In fact, it’s been about five months now since I’ve read a single non-romance title. I’m thinking it’s time for a break. I have a couple of romances to review, but once I’m done with those, I’m going to give myself at least a whole month away from mainstream romance. I have loads of science fiction, literary fiction and non-fiction I’m dying to pick up. If nothing else, I really, really want to finish reading Musashi, which I abandoned back in January when I picked up Sharon Shinn’s Angel-Seeker.
This won’t affect most of the updates for this site; I have loads of articles and fun things planned for it, and of course regular features like Covers Gone Wild and the personal ads game won’t be impacted. The only thing that’ll change is the lack of romance novel reviews from me. My question is: would y’all like me to review the non-romance books I read? If yes, would you like me to review only the genre fiction (SF, fantasy, thrillers, etc.) and therefore still keep to the letter of “Smart Bitches Who Love Trashy Novels” or would you be interested in me busting out with the snark on literary fiction as well? I’ll go with whatever the prevailing opinion is.
31 comments •
Trackback •
Categories: Random Musings
Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.







by Candy • Saturday, June 04, 2005 at 02:29 PM
Our Grade:
Title: Till Next We Meet
Author: Karen Ranney
Publication Info: Avon 2005, ISBN: 006075737X
Genre: Historical: European

Colonel Moncrief of the Lowland Scots Fusiliers is in a ticklish situation. One of his captains, Harry Dunnan, refuses to write to his wife, and this has her so worried that she has resorted to writing him to find out if her husband is alive and well. The problem is, Harry Dunnan doesn’t give a rip about his wife (or other men’s wives, or honor, or honesty, or his horse, or other people’s lives—yes, he’s THAT sort of a first husband). In fact, he thrusts her letters into Moncrief’s hands and jokingly tells him to write to her on his behalf.
So Moncrief does. And falls headlong in love with another man’s wife in the process.
Then Dunnan gets his fool self killed. (But of course he does. He’s mean to horsies! And he enjoys killing other people! Such a character cannot be long for the world in a romance novel, particularly if he’s married to the heroine.) Moncrief also finds out that his brother has died, making him the Duke of Lymond. He resigns from the army, returns to Scotland, and though he knows it’s a bad, bad idea, finds himself paying a visit to the widow.
Catherine Dunnan is a royal mess. Harry’s death has sent her into a spiraling depression, and along the way she’s developed quite the laudanum addiction. When Moncrief finally meets her, he finds her condition disturbing, but she’s still attractive, of course—drug-addicted romance novel heroines still look good even if they’re sallow and skeletal. When he returns the next day to deliver a spurious last letter from Harry to help comfort her despair, he finds that she’s deep in the throes of Happy Overdose Land.
He immediately takes steps to shock her back to consciousness, but in the process sees her in nothing more than her nightgown, and even worse, has to undress her. This, of course, is an unacceptable state of matters, so he marries her on the spot.
The problem is, Catherine remembers none of this when she regains consciousness. The overdose, the measures Moncrief took to drag her out of her drug-induced coma, the hasty wedding—none of it. But for better or worse, she’s now the Duchess of Lymond and a newlywed when she hasn’t even reconciled herself to being a widow.
Moncrief’s aloofness and autocratic manner irritate Catherine, while Catherine’s obsession with Harry’s letters chaps Moncrief’s hide. Gradually, though, Catherine learns that the real Harry is quite at odds with the man she had fallen in love with in the letters. Since Harry left for the Lowland Scots Fusiliers a mere month after the wedding, it’s not as if she had much time to get to know Harry’s true character.
Overall, I enjoyed the book quite a bit. The characters were engaging, the plot was interesting, and Ranney’s writing style is quite beautiful, but it lacked that special punch that would’ve made it a keeper. Catherine’s drug addiction was particularly interesting to me. It’s not very often that romance novel heroines are allowed such self-destructive behavior, but her descent into it and her recovery are skimmed over when I wanted more grittiness. And ultimately, in a weird twist provided by an out-of-nowhere suspense side-plot, we find out that her addiction wasn’t necessarily her fault anyway. That struck me as sort of cop-out; I would’ve found Catherine a much more interesting, nuanced character if the dependency (and her insistent denials that she wasn’t an addict) had been all her.
Also, the way Catherine handles the revelation that Moncrief truly was the letter-writer was just a bit too calm for my tastes. This is a situation just begging for some high drama, and Ranney has certainly demonstrated that she can write these sorts of things with a very deft hand—my two favorite books by Ranney (actually, these are two of my favorite romance novels, period), Upon a Wicked Time and My Beloved certainly didn’t shy away from drama—so I’m not sure why Ranney avoided it this time. Like To Love a Scottish Lord, a bit more Sturm und Drang would’ve been appropriate. This is ironic because many romance novels have the exact opposite problem: too much melodrama over small, inconsequential issues.
Catherine’s relative calmness when she finds out the true identity of the letter-writer is a contrast with her far more believable reaction when her former in-laws, Harry’s parents, come for a visit and start making insinuations about her lack of devotion to Harry’s memory while praising his name to the skies at every opportunity. She loses her temper and tells everyone off who has been giving her a hard time, and it’s one of the most entertaining scenes in the story. If Ranney had been able to impart that level of energy, snappiness and depth to the rest of the book, I would’ve liked it even better than I did. As it stands, though, this book is certainly no slouch, and it’s definitely worth a read if you’re a sucker for stories involving unrequited love.





2 comments •
Trackback •
Categories: Reviews by Author, Q-S •
Reviews by Grade: B
Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.





by Candy • Friday, June 03, 2005 at 01:03 PM
Maili correctly guessed the answer to today’s Personal Ad contest, and behold the title we Smart Bitches bestow upon her!
All Hail our new Empress.
8 comments •
Trackback •
Categories: Guess That Lonely Heart!
Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.







by Candy • Friday, June 03, 2005 at 11:09 AM
All right, kittens! Friday Personal Ad time! Guess the heroine’s name, the title of the book and the author correctly, and you get to have your very own Smart Bitch title.
Love In the Time of Bubonic Plague
Beautiful single shiksa, into herbology and folk medicine, looking for hot, progressive Jewish doctor for intense clandestine love encounters. Ability to differentiate between me and my identical twin sister definitely a plus. We have to keep our liaisons secret, though--my father’s betrothed me to a goy.
8 comments •
Trackback •
Categories: Guess That Lonely Heart!
Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.





by Guest Bitch • Thursday, June 02, 2005 at 06:46 AM
Disclaimer: The following is the opinion of a single individual, and does not represent the sentiments of any other person or group of persons. If you agree with the views expressed, feel free to offer support to anyone involved in the ongoing attempt to create an Erotic Romance Chapter of the RWA. If you disagree, please direct your ire solely toward Selah March. Thank you.
Ah, Spring--when a young (okay, early middle-aged) romance writer’s thoughts lightly turn to the upcoming RWA National Conference. For those of you not in the know, this year’s shindig will be hosted by that icon of romantic love, Reno, Nevada. Yes, that’s right. The city that once sported the rep of Quickie Divorce Capital, USA. Classy, no?
But I kid the RWA, because everybody knows that, as an organization, it’s ALL ABOUT THE CLASS. In fact, it’s SO chock full of the stuff that it recently very nearly didn’t allow a group of its members in good standing to apply to form a special interest chapter devoted to erotic romance.
Read that again. The National Board of the RWA nearly didn’t let a group of its members APPLY TO FORM A CHAPTER DEVOTED TO EROTIC ROMANCE.
Not FORM the chapter.
APPLY to form the chapter.
The jury is still very much out as to whether the chapter will ever be formally recognized, but at least the application process is underway at the time of this Bitchery posting. And I’ll bet even the most uninformed, disinterested non-writer among you can guess why: that awful world, erotic. And, of course, everything for which it stands. Because even after the lot of us agreed, following much outrage and gnashing of teeth, to eradicate the offensive word from our
title and description, nothing has been guaranteed. After all, even if we don’t CALL ourselves authors of erotica or erotic romance, the fact remains that we consistently write about The Act in terms that leaving little-to-nothing to the imagination, and often include same-gender participants and/or threesomes, foursomes and moresomes.
And even those of us who don’t stray far from the more vanilla combos of one man/one woman/one horizontal surface often force our couples to indulge in hedonistic activities like, as mentioned by an incensed author in an RWR* letter-to-the-editor, ORAL SEX ON THE FIRST DATE. This, the aforementioned author insists, is not her idea of romance. She didn’t bother to give an alternate definition, but I’m guessing the word “porn” wasn’t far from her mind. Or maybe “smut.” Frankly, I’d be surprised if she were thinking “erotica,” but I could be wrong. It’s been known to happen.
So, to recap…
We can’t call ourselves the Erotic Romance Chapter because...well, because. No one’s really given us a GOOD answer as to why the word is verboten. Lot’s of blather about “image,” and what romance really IS, and what it ISN’T. None of which has anything to do with the fact that EVERY MAJOR NEW YORK HOUSE is now dipping its toes--hell, its heels, soles and ankles, too--into the erotic waters. Even Harlequin, that bastion of the closed bedroom door, is beating the coochie drum with its new “Spice” line. And yet, RWA remains resistant. Seems nonsensical to me, but what do I know? I’m unpublished, and a trashy, ill-bred EROTIC ROMANCE WRITER, to boot.
I am one member of a potential chapter, among over two hundred, who is waiting to hear if the sitting National Board has the grace to say, “We don’t much like HOW you write romance, but since you’re writing about people in love and including that all-important happily-ever-after, we agree that you DO WRITE ROMANCE. So come on down, girls, and get yourself a slice of the
pie!” But I’ll be surprised if they do.
On the other hand, I’ll be equally surprised if they say, instead, “Sorry. You just don’t make the cut. In fact, you fall so short of what we consider an exemplary group of romance authors that we sort of wish you’d just...disappear. Completely. And take those icky-poo readers who LIKE your nasty girlie-porn with you.” (Rounded off nicely with a delicate, ladylike shudder, of course.)
We should be so lucky to get such a direct, honest response. If I could face the board today, here’s what I’d tell them: Don’t squirt me with feminine hygiene spray and tell me it’s raining. For God’s sake, ladies, if you haven’t the balls to say you don’t like us or the studmuffins we rode in on, at least don’t lower yourselves to hypocrisy. I--and, I suspect, many of my sisters in smut--would respect you more for a little forthright bitchiness than all the genteel double-speak in the world.
For one thing, your average forthright bitch has class. And I can appreciate that, even when I don’t agree with her about much else.
*RWR - Romance Writers Report, a monthly journal distributed to RWA members.
(Smart Bitch Editorial Note: Two paragraphs of unduly sensitive and detailed information that wasn’t meant for public consumption have been deleted by request.)
Selah March, aspiring writer of high-quality smut, won our
Another Chance to Be a Bitch contest.





40 comments •
Trackback •
Categories: Ranty McRant
Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.