



by Candy • Monday, February 14, 2005 at 12:21 AM
I just got back from seeing the froofy lads of Interpol at the Roseland Theater. They are indeed delicious. Listening to their music makes my chest ache in the nicest way, and seeing them live intensifies it greatly. The feeling is very similar to the early stages of falling in love, but without the uncertainty and emotional risk. And ultimately, without the emotional fulfillment as well, but ah well, you can’t have everything, even if the band has a bass player who looks uncannily like Crispin Glover’s skeletal younger brother as illustrated by Edward Gorey.
But my biggest crushy-crush is on the lead singer. He has a beyoootiful voice.
Cute, too, no?
This has nothing to do with romance novels, other than the fact that their music inspires all sorts of love stories when I listen to them. Too bad I can’t write fiction worth a shit, because otherwise I’d be set.
Other musicians who induce a similar sort of pleasant achiness when I listen to them include PJ Harvey (let me state for the record that I, who love cock in all its firm, fleshy wonderfulness, would give up cock forever for Polly Jean if for some reason she developed a yearning for chubby little Chinese girls), Franz Ferdinand, Nada Surf’s Let Go, and oddly enough, Beck (who has a new album coming out March 29th, yay!).






by SB Sarah • Saturday, February 12, 2005 at 07:17 PM
Our Grade:
Title: Kill and Tell
Author: Linda Howard
Publication Info: Pocket Books 1998, ISBN: 0-7434-7548-8
Genre: Contemporary Romance

I have been dragging my feet about writing this review, because this book was so God awful bad I can’t even figure out where to begin.
I begin my story a few weeks ago. I was looking for books to read on vacation, and I went online to find as many good novels, either romance or romantic suspense (which usually means romance with guns and a mystery as the secondary plot, which is fine with me). I found a few, one by Susan Andersen, which was ok, and four by Linda Howard that were both highly recommended and cheap. One was even a 2-in-1 novel that was about $8.00.
$8.00 for two novels was too, too much. One of them, which I will find a way to talk about without screaming, was so bad I almost chucked the entire book in the ocean. Only fear of polluting the natural fish and coral habitats with poorly characterized novels stopped me.
But the book I discuss presently, this particular book, I left it at home. I thought I was bringing too many books – which was crap because I ran out and had to mine the resort’s library for suggestions – so it stayed on the table in my foyer. I read it on the train once I got home. This is probably a good thing, because I certainly would have chucked it into the drink, pollution be damned.
This book is so damn awful I kept reading just to find out who the bad guy was, and so I could keep marking pages of poor and unrealistic dialogue. And since I’ve dogeared half the freaking book, why not share it with you? I’m sure you’ll get the gist of the novel from the quotes alone. But in case you don’t:
The heroine, Karen, is an RN who lives in Ohio with her elderly mother, until said elderly mother dies of the flu. Let’s not even discuss the whole RN-elderly flu idea that maybe she should have toted her mom to the ER for some O2. We’ll just leave that bit of reality aside with the rest of the reality we eschew while reading this dreck.
The hero, Marc, is a New Orleans detective who is investigating the death of a street bum who turns out to be (a) Karen’s estranged father, (b) a Vietnam veteran, (c) a trained and highly skilled sniper from said days in Vietnam, (d) a man suffering from acute Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome, hence the estrangement from his wife and daughter, and (e) the keeper of a Very Big secret he threatens to reveal, which is why he ends up dead.
Karen flies to New Orleans to i.d. the body, meets Marc, spends about a day and a half in his company, and they Fall In Luuuuuve ™. Meanwhile, a bunch of nefarious and vanilla-ly named characters (Bob. Hayes. Thomson. Lake.) all scheme to find out what Dear Dead Dad did with the secret, where he put it, and if his daughter has it. Likely the daughter does, so all the assassins of vanilla come after her, leaving her subject to the protection of Detective Marc. What is the secret? Who is after her? What do they want? And why does she think she’s in love with someone she’s known for 90 hours?
Most of the questions, except for that last one, are answered by the end of the book, which is wrapped up so neatly you can see the bow for miles and miles before you get there.
My two biggest problems with this book are the leaps demanded of the reader in believing that the hero and heroine are going to fall instantly and madly in lusty hot burning love with each other after 2 days in each other’s company, and that the heroine is going to be able to save her own life using skills she learned from her Dear Dead Dad more than 20 years prior. If your dad took you into the woods, for example – and this is a hypothetical example, because I wouldn’t want to spoil this complete waste of pulp for you, should you want to read it – at the age of, say, 13, and taught you how to follow deer tracks until you reached their water source, and suddenly you were being followed by assassins, and needed to reach water, and you were 30 plus years old, do you think you would be able to reach flawlessly back into the recesses of your memory to recall each and every directive your Dear Dead and estranged Dad gave you such that you could find water on the very first try?
Please. I learned how to play “Gently, Sweet Afton” on the violin two years ago. I couldn’t pick up a violin this evening and play that flawlessly on the first try if you held a gun to my head.
But this Karen? Oh, she is a marvel. Not only does she save her own ass with skills from the depths of her memory, but she falls for some serious shitful behavior from the hero. Let’s go to the dogeared sections, which in SarahLand mean, “Nuh UH the author did NOT expect me to buy that and pay retail!”
Karen has gone to meet the detective after he calls to tell her about Dear Dead Dad’s death. She’s sat in his office to hear about his demise. She’s identified the body via video from the coroner’s office the following morning. And she’s just left the coroner’s video room:
He knew she had cried; her eyelids were swollen. She had cried, and he hadn’t been there to hold her. He would be, he thought fiercely.
From now on, he would be (Howard, 116).
Please note: I just made the Very Cute Husband read that so I could transpose, and he just said, “I’m going to barf.”
He’d roll over and pass out from horror if I made him read page 128, wherein the heroine, Karen, remarks upon, “the neatness of his ears,” while taking a slow survey of the hero as he stands with his back to her. His ears?!
Further into the story, the heroine compares her feet to the hero’s, remarking on how different they are, with hers “slender, delicately formed, definitely feminine,” and his “big, bony, a little hairy on top” (Howard, 134). This is, as with his fierce thoughts from earlier, the second day of their acquaintance. Most people who meet under difficult and emotional circumstances are not munching ham sandwiches on a balcony and comparing the structure of their feet.
Another problem I had with the writing in this book – aside from (a) the leaps of belief required in accepting both the emotional and sexual aspects of this relationship as valid after two days of acquaintance, and (b) the difficulty in following the development of the mystery contained in the secondary plot – is the descriptions of the sex scenes.
Howard seems to refrain from using words as “dick,” “cock,” and “arousal,” but instead, she just comes out with “penis.” Normally, I’m ok with frank depictions. I mean, that is what the organ in question is called. It’s a penis. But when his “swollen penis” juts out from beneath his shirt, “twitching with arousal,” among lurid and purply descriptions of intimacy, the use of the scientific term is jarring.
Further, the hero does something that I consider incredibly smarmy, but I’ll hide the content below in case you don’t want spoilers:
Karen and Marc are dining on his balcony, eating ham sandwiches and drinking red wine, when he goes inside to put on some music. He comes back out, they dance, and he twirls her down the balcony into the other door- his bedroom. And strip, strip, strip, they’re naked, and he’s already wearing a condom. He’s just been dancing away, wearing a jimmy cap.
And she ASKS him about it:
“When did you put that on?”
“When I put on the music.”
Bitch, please! If my life had a sound track, and that was me, you would have heard the sound of a needle skipping across all tracks of that vinyl record followed by the sound of a serious ass kicking being administered to the man who thought he could bet on sex just by putting on the blues. The woman just lost her father, he stood there while she identified the body, and he thinks a little blues and jazz action is automatically going to yield a little hummuna hummuna? Are you SHITTING me?!
This would be the point wherein I thought, If I could open the doors of this train, this book would be flying onto the tracks.
Later, they have sex again, after she’s spent pages and pages worrying over her gullibility in sleeping with a man who so thought she was a sure thing he practically put on the condom the day before he met her. She’s gone back and forth and ultimately decides he wore a condom to protect both of them, but this time, they’re going bareback. She’s mentioned the risk of pregnancy, and the risk of disease, both of which are real because, heck, it’s sex, and that’s how babies get made, and they hardly know each other so there’s a definite risk of prior sexual history with unsavory and possibly crusty characters who complain of pain when they pee. But no, it’s bareback time, and as a sign of her Luuuuuuve ™ for him, she wants to “take the risk.”
This was about the fifteeth time I looked at the picture of the author on the back inside cover and thought, Are you SHITTING me?
Further, aside from sexual scenario weirdness, the hero manages to have bone-jarring sex three times in the space of a few hours (AS IF!), and the third or fourth time, he rolls over and tells the heroine, “I’m going to do you hard this time.”
Hubby adds, for dramatic effect, “UHHH! UUUHHH!” And he is more romantic than this Marc character.
Meanwhile, the Assassins Vanilla, each sporting indistinguishable names, are after Karen, and one burns down her house. But uh oh, he made a mistake. And when his boss calls to tell him so, they have the following conversation:
“She didn’t live there, asshole. She sold the house four months ago.”
“Well, sonofabitch. I hate that. Burning down a house for nothing.”
Gee, me too. I hate burning shit that doesn’t belong to me for no apparent reason.
Seriously? What cold blooded arsonist – or arsehole – says, “Gee, I hate burning down a house for nothing.” I’m dumbfounded by the arsehattedness of this character. It’s like a hardened criminal in and out of prison for years saying “friggin’” or “airhead.”
Now that I think about it, that’s an apt analogy: this book is like the TNT cuss-words-stripped-out-in-favor-of-nonsense equivalent of what might have been a very edgy, suspenseful, scary book, with some hot sexual attraction thrown in for added heat. But the protagonists hopped in the sack after about 36 hours of knowing each other, and the mystery was so confusing and plain yogurt that I didn’t really give a shit either way. This could have been a very, very good book. Instead, it was crap.
The one thing I do give a shit about is the fact that I paid eight goddamn dollars for this book. In fact, this book was so poor that the only credit I can give to it lies in the purpose of this web site. This site exists so that you, dear reader, do not ever have to spend your hard-earned dollars on this dreck, too. Take it from me, this is crap.
“Stay away; stay far, far away,” she thought fiercely.





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by Candy • Friday, February 11, 2005 at 09:48 PM
Candy: What a delightful cross between grubby-ass hippie and gym freak. Enjoy looking at the chronic assne from all the steroid abuse while inhaling the delightful scent of patchouli! He’ll help you set up tent at Burning Man, then when you pass out from eating one too many magic brownies, he’ll hump you while you sleep.
Leisure Books uses some of the creepiest-looking models. All of them seem to exude some slick sheen of grossness, or at the very least look like they could really, really, really use a shower, but this guy is pretty ucky even for them. I pity the poor flower being fondled by the guy. I’d wilt on the spot from mortification.
Sarah: When Candy first showed me this cover, I’d never seen it before, and the greatest sum reaction I could come up with was to stare at the monitor with my mouth open, similar to the expression I wear when I have consumed an entire 40 oz. of St. Ides by myself.
Wait, did I say that out loud?
Perhaps this dude consumed the entire 40 by himself, because, dude, he looks stupid. From the visible indent where he appears to be punching himself in the kidney with some degree of force, to the bizarre proportions that render his chest entirely much too short- does he have some sort of bone disorder? - this dude is a piece of work. And certainly not what I would envision as a romantic hero.
And finally, what is UP with that phallic leaf at the bottom there, curving up and away from his groin? Is his throbbing, pulsing, shivering arousal, his fleshy sword, his love staff, his steely pole, his Spear of Love (TM Candy) - is it...green? Because he needs to have that looked at, pronto.







by Candy • Thursday, February 10, 2005 at 07:26 AM
Our Grade:
Title: When The Laird Returns
Author: Karen Ranney
Publication Info: Avon Books 2002, ISBN: 0380813017
Genre: Historical: European

It’s always nice to find that a sequel is as good as, if not better than, its predecessor. When the Laird Returns, the second book in Karen Ranney’s five-book series about the MacRaes, is pretty damn decent. There’s enough derring-do to keep you interested in the action, the characters fall in love and learn to compromise and grow with each other along the way, and there aren’t any annoying overused plot devices (like the “hero with a double identity” chestnut employed in One Man’s Love). In short: this is going to be one boring-ass review.
It’s 29 years after the events that ended One Man’s Love. Alisdair MacRae, eldest son of Ian and Leitis MacRae and a very successful ship captain, is visiting the ancestral MacRae lands that were abandoned when the clan decided to escape to Nova Scotia instead of suffering the full brunt of British rule in the aftermath of the Battle of Culloden. He wants to look at Gilmuir Castle, which he’s heard so much about but never seen in person. But really, the visit is supposed to be a quick detour; he’s on his way south to London to talk to his father’s stepmother. When Ian MacRae (born Alec Landers, heir to the Earl of Sherbourne) decided to commit treason and aid the Scots in defying and eventually escaping the British, his stepmother, Patricia (who aided the escape) had him legally declared dead and her son installed as earl. However, her son is now dead, and Alisdair is presumed to be next in line to inherit. Alisdair has every intention of refusing the earldom. His life, he thinks, is with the sea and with a steady, sturdy woman in Nova Scotia.
Until he rescues a beautiful young woman named Iseabal. Iseabal is the only child of Magnus, laird of the MacRae’s age-old rivals, the Drummonds. The ruins of Gilmuir and the strange, sudden disappearance of the MacRae clan has always stirred her interest, and Iseabal uses every opportunity she has to escape there from the intensely abusive Magnus. Then one day, while exploring the castle, she quite literally falls down a hole. 30-year-old ruins that have been bombed to fuck and back by British cannon are full of holes—who knew? Not Iseabal, apparently. But conveniently enough, Alisdair is right there to yank her out.
Alisdair doesn’t really think too much of the encounter. Gilmuir and the MacRae land are actually foremost in his mind, especially when he sees the land being grazed over by sheep. He finds out that Magnus Drummond has been ceded the ownership and use of the property, and on impulse he heads over to the Drummond stronghold to buy the land back. Magnus is willing to sell it, on one condition: that Alisdair marry his daughter too. It’s not every day a man gets to marry a woman he pulls out of a hole, but fate has selected Alisdair for just such a destiny.
After the wedding, Alisdair and Iseabal and immediately sail for London, where Alisdair plans to annul the marriage and tell his step-grandmother gently but firmly: Thanks, but no thanks. But on the voyage down the two of them discover Things of Great Hotness about each other. For instance, Alisdair discovers that Iseabal is a sculptor, which he finds to be a turn-on. And Iseabal discovers that Alisdair has a genuine core of kindness and gentleness to him, and that’s a turn-on for her too, especially given her experiences with her father.
And Alisdair’s plans all go awry once he sets foot in London, of course. He doesn’t expect to like Patricia quite so much, for one. He also doesn’t expect the Sherbourne estate to be quite so prosperous. He suddenly realizes that if he accepts the earldom, he’ll have enough money to rebuild Gilmuir and start a shipyard there, and since the MacRae land has become a new obsession of his, he makes an old woman very happy and accepts the title. Similarly, his plans to annul his marriage to Iseabal are abandoned when Patricia, playing matchmaker, makes him aware of what exactly he’s giving up.
The happy couple sail back to Scotland to rebuild their future, except Magnus, as befits a romance novel villain (romances are not known for their multi-dimensional, believable bad guys—I know, SHOCK, HORROR, GASP!), has reneged on the deal and has reclaimed the land. And so begins a battle in earnest,and Iseabal feels herself horrified at the depths her father will sink to—so much so that she begins to doubt that Alisdair can truly love the daughter of the man who is able to commit such atrocities.
But they work it out in the end (I know, SHOCK, HORROR, GASP!), and everybody gets their just desserts. No, trust me. They do. There’s even a really sweet secondary love story involving Fergus, Leitis’s older brother and presumed dead at Culloden in the previous book.
Ranney does a good job of creating characters that aren’t quite your usual, run-of-the-mill romance novel archetypes. Alisdair strikes a nice balance between being confident and assertive on one hand, and being a genuinely nice guy on the other. Iseabal is one of the more interesting characters I’ve encountered lately. Her abuse at the hands of her father has led her to exercise extreme restraint over any outward manifestations of emotion, and her struggle with the repression is presented very believably. Alisdair’s desire and corresponding efforts to break through that restraint are similarly well-portrayed.
The writing style in this book is quite beautiful; it’s lyrical without being overwhelming. Ranney has a very distinct voice, and although I’ll read just about anything she releases, a few of her books have collapsed under the weight of her prose style (My Wicked Fantasy is one book that comes to mind, and Above All Others is actually almost completely unreadable because of it). Thankfully, she manages to avoid that particular pitfall in this book.
When the Laird Returns is a pretty entertaining book. It’s well-written, and it doesn’t insult your intelligence, though it comes close to calling it mean names a couple of times. Check it out. If you’ve read and enjoyed other Karen Ranney novels, look this up. If you’ve never read any Ranney, I suggest trying Upon a Wicked Time or My Beloved to get you hooked, those two books kick ass.
Notes:
The Highland Lords novels, in the order in which they were published:
One Man’s Love
When the Laird Returns
The Irresistible MacRae
To Love a Highland Lord
So In Love












by Candy • Tuesday, February 08, 2005 at 11:07 PM
There, I hope that title just upped our ranking on Google when people search for “romance novel reviews.” I looked in our referrer log and just about died laughing because here’s what people were Googling for when they stumbled on us:
- Sarah Paoletti
- Smart bitches
- Trashy bitches
- Dominican bitches
I’m going to say Romance Novel Review several more times throughout this entry because maybe Google will pick up on the key words (i.e. romance novels) and perhaps our target audience (people looking for actual romance novel reviews) shall start trickling in, as opposed to people who are looking for bitches of various nationalities and varieties, because the latter category would be people who probably aren’t interested in romance novel reviews. Maybe Sarah and I should start employing a system wherein we use the word “romance novel” the way the Smurfs use the word “smurf.”
Hey Sarah, are you having a romance novel day? Mine is absolutely romance novel-icious. Would you like to review more romance novels? Gosh I sure love to read and review romance novels.
OK, I’ve typed the phrase “romance novel reviews” so many times now that it’s beginning to lose meaning for me.
But in good news, we are the #1 Google search result for the phrase “trashy bitch” and “smart bitches.” Go Team Smart Bitches! However, sorry to disappoint y’all, no Dominicans here, just an agnostic Chink and a honkey Hebe.