Select Page
Escaping Christmas by Marie Landry – Review

Escaping Christmas by Marie Landry – Review

THIS POST MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS!!!! 

This post may contain affiliate links for products and services I recommend. If you make a purchase through these links, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission. 

Hello sassy people! Today I’m gonna talk about another ARC!!!!! I had the honor to receive an Advanced Readers Copy from Escaping Christmas by Marie Landry!!!!

This book is a sweet, loving story about the Queen of Christmas and her small-town handyman. Two people, with their own baggage, trying to find love and security. This book was delicious and thoughtful, and I believe a lot of people would relate to these characters’ experiences, thoughts, and fears.

Escaping Christmas by Marie Landry

Escaping Christmas

by Marie Landry

Joss’s no-strings-attached holiday is about to become more tangled than a string of Christmas lights.
What happens when the so-called Queen of Christmas feels more like Scrooge? In actress Josslyn Hazelwood’s case, she decides to escape it all: the heartache and mess of her very public divorce, the press, and, most of all, the holidays and everything that comes with them. Spending a few weeks in the small town of Honeywell Hollow as “just Joss” is exactly what she needs.
Liam Doherty is happy to help Joss test her BFF’s theory that the best way to get over someone is to get under someone else. Her no-strings-attached holiday fling soon becomes more entangled than a string of Christmas lights, and she finds herself not only caught up in a whirlwind romance with Liam, but also getting sucked into the festive fun of Honeywell.
Joss knows she’s falling for both Liam and Honeywell, but the ghost of Christmas Past is determined to visit this Scrooge after all. No matter how much she tries to escape her past and Christmas, she’s forced to confront them both before she can appreciate the gifts of Christmas Present.

Genre: ARC, Romance

Year: 2021

Tropes: Celebrity Romance, Cheating Ex, Christmas Romance, Divorced, Handyman, Movie Star/Actress-Actor Romance, Small Town Romance

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 3/5 (sex on the page)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): No content Warnings According to StoryGraph

 

Main characters:  Josslyn (Joss), Liam

Main conflict: Recently divorced, past traumas, lives and works in another city. Joss is only on vacation in Honeywell Hollow

Pacing: Slow (I read it slowly, but it was more about my mood than about the book)

Mood: Deep, Sweet

Hero: Cinnamon Roll Hero

Plot or character-driven: Character Driven

P.O.V.: Single P.O.V.

Character development: Deep

Diverse Cast: Small secondary characters are a bit diverse

Read in: November 2021

 

 

My Rate: 4/5

Feminist rate: 4/5 (I loved the process Joss went through in this book, recovering from her divorce and other traumas and being strong and finding love again, not only romantic love but family love, something she missed most of her life. But I didn’t see major “feminist romance” vibes, but that is okay.)

Adjectives and general thoughts: Sweet, deep, adorable, and positive. Beautifully written.

Great development on secondary characters, I want to read about all those people, the problem? They don’t have books out yet (this is a stand-alone, you can read it by itself and be fine, but I love a series and if I could, every single one of these characters would get a book). Also (SPOILER) I’ll be pissed if Murph dies in the next book, even though it sounds very likely 😭

Recommend this to People who love a sweet but deep book, that deals with mental health, past traumas, and cute small towns.

I have to say, I had never read a book by Marie Landry, but now I’m going to read everything I find from her. The writing in this book is fantastic, and I saw that from the first sentence in this book:

Quote from "Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates" by Emily Bunney

From the start, it was funny, but also heartfelt and realistic (That’s not to say that the whole book is realistic, most of us would never find a loving family and the love of our life in a weeks-long vacation) but the whole situation, the divorce, the adjustment, the shame and the will to scape, is all too understanding.

Quote from "Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates" by Emily Bunney

Also, I’m a sucker for deep character development, and this book delivers it. We understand these people’s fear, reluctance, and wants. The whole story is rooted in their past and I love that they deal with them. The fact that Joss sees her therapist again and deals with her feelings in a positive and professionally assisted way wins my heart right away.

Quote from "Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates" by Emily Bunney

I love the emotions, the severe, realistic problems some of these characters are going through, and how these people form a support system. There are a lot of romances where the only person the heroine has is the hero and I am so happy that this is not the case here. Liam is just a small part of this story, and I cannot express how happy that makes me. This is a book that tells a story about really good people, people who help everyone, people who have big hearts and warm hugs and good intentions.

Quote from "Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates" by Emily Bunney

And last, but definitely not least, the best part of this book is the scenario and secondary characters. This is why I love small-town romance so much, we don’t only get to see this couple’s journey, we get to meet and follow the stories of Mae, Murph, Thea, Nathan, Fiona, and the adorable Rex. This story would be so different without them. The town itself is a character here, it has a big role in the book, and it takes a really good writer to deliver and piece together all of these parts, which makes this book just a joy to read.

If you want to buy this book, it is now live on Amazon. You can also add it to your shelf on Goodreads and see what other people thought about it!

Well, that is all for today, I hope you like this post, hope you enjoy this book as much as I did. Feel free to leave your opinion about it in the comments and I will see you next time! 

Bye sassy people! 

 

  • I know that some comments I make about decent guys on my posts are the bare minimum a guy should do, so no, they don’t deserve to be treated like gods for doing the minimum, but at the same time, I’ve read a lot of sexist books and I appreciate authors who make characters that can serve as role models and examples of how a decent guy acts and what a loving and respectful relationship looks like. I believe we should always encourage these authors and bring attention to the ones that still write sexist characters and stories. 
  • I make a lot of comments about sexism and healthy role models in books, but a lot of times these characteristics don’t make the book a bad book and definitely don’t make the author a bad author. Please never shame these authors and these books for these comments, I simply feel that we need to have awareness of the less than ideal situations some books bring us, and not use the romanticized problem as examples of what a relationship should be. Most of these authors are still amazing, and the content they write doesn’t reflect directly with their personal views and opinions. Always make sure to respect and be kind to everyone, even while criticizing their content. 

Find Me In 

Meet Me

Meet Me

Brazilian architecture student and book lover

One of my goals in analysing my readings was to talk about important topics, like feminist and consent, because literature, art and culture influence us, and I believe we should always encorage authors who talk about this topics.

Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown

The Cock Down the Block by Amy Award – Review

Hello sassy people! Today we’re talking about The C*ck Down the Block by Ay Award.

Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose – Review

Hello sassy people! Today I’m reviewing Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose!

Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins – Review

Today’s post is about Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins!

The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James – Review

Today’s post is about The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James!

Icebreaker by Hannah Grace – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Icebreaker by Hannah Grace!

Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman!

Top books of 2023!!

These are the best books I read in 2023!
It was an amazing year, full of amazing books and I hope 2024 is even better!

2023 Wrap Up

These are the stats for all the books I read in 2023!I post stats every month, but these are the ones I’m always most excited to analyze! It’s so cool to look back at the year and see how much you read, the different genres, authors, tropes, spice levels…These are all...

My Better Life by Sarah Ready and Non-Toxic Masculinity

Hello sassy people! Today we are talking about Non Toxic Masculinity.

Come check out my Goodreads Reading Challenge!

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2020

I read 148 books in 2020, come see them!

Ana en Noir is currently-reading

The Fourth Time Charm


Ana en Noir's favorite books »

2021 Reading Challenge

2021 Reading Challenge
Ana en Noir has read 18 books toward her goal of 100 books.
hide

Adsense

Books Ana en Noir read

The Fourth Time Charm
The Third Best Thing
The Second We Met
The Perfect First
Sidebarred
Appealed
Sustained
Overruled
Master Baker


Ana en Noir's favorite books »
Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates by Emily Bunney – Review

Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates by Emily Bunney – Review

THIS POST MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS!!!! 

This post may contain affiliate links for products and services I recommend. If you make a purchase through these links, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission. 

Hello sassy people! Today I’m gonna talk about my very first ARC!!!!! I had the honor to receive an Advanced Readers Copy from Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates by Emily Bunney!!!!

This series brings us an app, that connects curvy women to their perfect men…

Searching for your soulmate? Welcome to Curve Connection, a brand-new dating app developed by curvy women for curvy women and the men who love them. Whether you’re into executives, sports stars, blue-collar workers, rockstars, or billionaires, we deliver guaranteed happily-ever-afters. Swipe left or right to start searching for your soulmate today.

Curvy Soulmates is a collection of steamy short romances brought to you by 12 of your favorite instalove authors.

Coming November 2021.”

I loved the concept and can’t wait to read the rest of the books in this series!

Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates by Emily Bunney

Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates

(Curvy Soulmates )

by Emily Bunney

When a feisty, curvy school principal moves to a sleepy coastal town for a fresh start, she has no idea she’ll find love in an unexpected way.
Jess
After years in an unhappy marriage, Jess leaves everything behind for a new town and a new job. The only thing missing is a new relationship. Her best friend decides she needs to jump feet first into the dating pool and sets her up a profile on Curve Connection – a dating app for men seeking curvy women. At first, she’s skeptical and some of the messages she receives don’t help. But then she matches with NerdGuy – a sweet sensitive younger man who just gets her. Could this be the new relationship she’s been looking for?
Tate
Starting a tech company with his twin brother was always Tate’s dream, but when times got tough, they took a job refitting the tech in a small Elementary school. He arrives expecting to meet a middle-aged, matronly principal. However, the woman who crashes into him is a curvy, sexy, sassy pain in his ass. As they begin to work together, she fights him at every turn, but he just loves butting heads with her. Tate knows starting a relationship with Principal Jess Vega is not an option, not while they work together. So instead he turns to Curve Connection to see if he can match with another curvy woman to try and take his mind off Jess’s peachy round ass.
Can these two find love online or will it land unexpectantly on their doorstep?

Genre: ARC, Romance

Year: 2021

Tropes: Curvy heroine, Divorced, Female age gap, Latinx character, Neighbor, School principal, Tattooed hero, Twins in Romance, Victim of past abusive relationship

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 🔥 4/5 (steamy)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on my opinion): No trigger warnings 

Main characters: Jessica and Tate

Main conflict: There’s not much conflict, they are simply working together for a period of time and need some personal growth.

Pacing: Fast

Mood: Easy

Plot or character-driven: Character Driven

P.O.V.: Double P.O.V.

Character development: Good (direct)

Diverse Cast: Latinx

Read in: November 2021

My Rate: 3/5

Feminist rate: 5/5 Older heroine (10 years older)!!!! And there is a power unbalance, and it’s on the female side. She is the boss (in the office and also in bed) and I LOVE that. And she also plays very lightly with the school principal kink. Also I see a lot of body positivity, not only because she is a curvy heroine, but she is a heroine that has (and I quote) brown nipples and she is not completly shaved, so I see Emily breaking a lot of the toxic paterns I see in society and in a lot of other romance books and I love that.

Adjectives and general thoughts: Light, funny and positive in all the ways posible. 

Recommend this to people who love easy stories with insta love and a sweet HEA (happily ever after)

This is the story of Jessica, a school principal, and Tate, a tech guy (I don’t really know what to call his profession). Tate is a grumpy guy, who doesn’t know how to socialize much and Jess is a strong-minded woman, who is determined to innovate in her new school. These two don’t have the easiest meet cute, and they’re working together, so that’s kinda hard, but they will see new sides of themselves and of each other through the app Curvy Soulmates.

I have to be honest, I’m not a huge fan of insta love, but it worked in this book, it was insta but it wasn’t rushed, the characters had good development and we understood where they were coming from. But to me, the best parts of this book are the positivity parts. This book deals with a lot of stereotypes that are very harmful but at the same time are still very much incorporated into our society. This heroine is:

  • Latinx (and being one myself I love and appreciate seeing us represented in books)
  • Curvy (and beautiful, strong, intelligent and did I say strong?)
  • Older (she is 38, Tate is 28 and if you know me, you know that I LOVE a female age gap, I live for this stuff)
  • Divorced (it’s 2021, but women are still judged for divorcing their shitty and abusive husbands)
  • Got out of an abusive and toxic relationship (and all over the book we see how strong she is to be able to get out and love herself)
  • She is the BOSS (I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve read an office romance or any other trope where the hero is in a power position towards the heroine and that frustrates me to no end. So I love that the roles are inverted here)

And so much more, these are the things that made me like this book so much. And I sincerely hope you like it too!

Quote from "Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates" by Emily Bunney

And now it’s the part of the post where I use quotes to prove to you guys all the things I just said in my “small” Goodreads review. I believe that this part has no spoiler but be warned that it does have quotes from specific parts of the book if you don’t want to read anything.
This book, to me, is about self-love, more than couples love, is about accepting, appreciating, and loving yourself. Jess is, from the very first chapter, learning to be bold, to love herself, her curves, her personality, she is strong, she imposes herself, she is powerful, has new ideas and she is going to make them a reality.

Quote from "Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates" by Emily Bunney

But being strong doesn’t mean you are not vulnurable sometimes, it doesn’t mean you don’t have fears and reservations, it doesn’t mean you don’t have baggage. Being strong means pushing trough, getting up and facing your fears, and Jess does that here. She gets up, even if her ex put her down, again and again, she gets up and becomes a powerful woman.

Quote from "Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates" by Emily Bunney

And her friend, with the help of this amazing app, gives her the final push, to come out of her comfort zone, and find love, and I love that it is also a way to show her that she is hot, she has a lot of men who love her body type, love her curves and love her.

Quote from "Grading Curve: Curvy Soulmates" by Emily Bunney

And last, but not least, I LOVE that she is older, and even though she has a moment of doubt, it lasts two seconds, and she comes back to the mindset of “I’m hot, I’m beautiful, of course he wants me” and I’m here for that.

If you want to buy this book, it is now live on Amazon and on Kindle Unlimited! You can also add it to your shelf on Goodreads and see what other people thought about it!

Well, that is all for today, I hope you like this post, hope you enjoy this book as much as I did. Feel free to leave your opinion about it in the comments and I will see you next time! 

Bye sassy people! 

 

  • I know that some comments I make about decent guys on my posts are the bare minimum a guy should do, so no, they don’t deserve to be treated like gods for doing the minimum, but at the same time, I’ve read a lot of sexist books and I appreciate authors who make characters that can serve as role models and examples of how a decent guy acts and what a loving and respectful relationship looks like. I believe we should always encourage these authors and bring attention to the ones that still write sexist characters and stories. 
  • I make a lot of comments about sexism and healthy role models in books, but a lot of times these characteristics don’t make the book a bad book and definitely don’t make the author a bad author. Please never shame these authors and these books for these comments, I simply feel that we need to have awareness of the less than ideal situations some books bring us, and not use the romanticized problem as examples of what a relationship should be. Most of these authors are still amazing, and the content they write doesn’t reflect directly with their personal views and opinions. Always make sure to respect and be kind to everyone, even while criticizing their content. 

Find Me In 

Meet Me

Meet Me

Brazilian architecture student and book lover

One of my goals in analysing my readings was to talk about important topics, like feminist and consent, because literature, art and culture influence us, and I believe we should always encorage authors who talk about this topics.

Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown

The Cock Down the Block by Amy Award – Review

Hello sassy people! Today we’re talking about The C*ck Down the Block by Ay Award.

Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose – Review

Hello sassy people! Today I’m reviewing Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose!

Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins – Review

Today’s post is about Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins!

The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James – Review

Today’s post is about The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James!

Icebreaker by Hannah Grace – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Icebreaker by Hannah Grace!

Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman!

Top books of 2023!!

These are the best books I read in 2023!
It was an amazing year, full of amazing books and I hope 2024 is even better!

2023 Wrap Up

These are the stats for all the books I read in 2023!I post stats every month, but these are the ones I’m always most excited to analyze! It’s so cool to look back at the year and see how much you read, the different genres, authors, tropes, spice levels…These are all...

My Better Life by Sarah Ready and Non-Toxic Masculinity

Hello sassy people! Today we are talking about Non Toxic Masculinity.

Come check out my Goodreads Reading Challenge!

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2020

I read 148 books in 2020, come see them!

Ana en Noir is currently-reading

The Fourth Time Charm



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

2021 Reading Challenge

2021 Reading Challenge

Ana en Noir has read 18 books toward her goal of 100 books.

hide

Adsense

Books Ana en Noir read

The Fourth Time Charm

The Third Best Thing

The Second We Met

The Perfect First

Sidebarred

Appealed

Sustained

Overruled

Master Baker



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

Books I read in August 2021

Books I read in August 2021

THIS POST MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS!!!! 

This post may contain affiliate links for products and services I recommend. If you make a purchase through these links, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission. 

Hello sassy people!
Today I’m gonna tell you guys about the books I read in August 2021, and introduce you guys to my new “system” for reviewing.
Before I used to just write down a small text with what I liked about a book, but since I’m an architecture college student, I normally don’t have time or energy to write down my opinions as soon as I finish a book, so when I finally sit to write my reviews I don’t really remember everything from the book. So here is my new system, which is basically the most important information about a book. I’ll make a post detailing it later on, but for now, I’m really happy with the outcome and I believe it is going to make writing easier for me!
But let’s talk about my reads this month! I spent two months reading Penny Reid, and apparently, I don’t want to stop, so I read 5 more books by her.

Engagement and Espionage

(Solving for Pie: Cletus and Jenn Mysteries #1)

by Penny Reid

 

Jennifer Sylvester made her deal with the devil . . . and now they’re engaged!

But all is not well in Green Valley. A chicken choker is on the loose, 61 dead birds most “fowl” need plucking, and no time remains for Jennifer and her devilish fiancé. Desperate to find a spare moment together, Jenn and Cletus’s attempts to reconnect are thwarted by one seemingly coincidental disaster after another. It’s not long before Cletus and Jenn see a pattern emerge and the truth becomes clear.

Sabotage!

Will an undercover mission unmask the culprit? Or are these love-birds totally plucked?

Genre: Romance

Publisher: Cipher-Naught

Year: 2020

Nº of pages: 351

Goodreads rate: 4,21

Tropes: Contemporary Romance, Mystery, Romance Family, Small Town Romance

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 3/5 (sex on the page)

TRIGGER WARNINGS: Animal Cruelty, Animal Death, Domestic Abuse, Emotional Abuse, Physical Abuse, Sexual Content

 

Main characters: Jenn and Cletus

Main conflict: A series of mysteries stall their relationship and its progress

Plot or character-driven: Mix 

P.O.V.: Double P.O.V. 

Character development: Deep

Diverse Cast: No

Read in: August 2021

My Rate: 5/5 

Feminist rate: 5/5 (The development of Jenn as a strong woman is the main plot point and Cletus is an amazing, very respectful guy)

Adjectives and general thoughts: Lovely mysterious 

Recommend this to People who love mystery and slow burn

Marriage and Murder

(Solving for Pie: Cletus and Jenn Mysteries #2)

by Penny Reid

 

The Devil is in the details . . .

Cletus Byron Winston wishes to marry Jennifer Anne Donner-Sylvester (aka The Banana Cake Queen) posthaste! He’s spent the last year wanting nothing more than for the celebrations to be brief, libations flowing, and BYOB (bring your own blueberries). His future mother-in-law has other plans, plans his intended has been willing to indulge, much to Cletus’s chagrin. Therefore, so must he. To a point. But truth be told, he wouldn’t mind if the meddlesome matriarch disappeared, at least until the nuptials are over.

On the night of Cletus and Jenn’s long-awaited engagement party, just when the surly schemer is of a mind to take matters into his own hands, a shocking event upends everyone’s best laid plans and sends the small hamlet of Green Valley into complete disarray. The final months leading up to Cletus and Jenn’s matrimonial bliss are plagued with chaos and uncertainty. Will Cletus and Jenn finally make it to the altar? Or will murder and mayhem derail their happily-ever-after?

And most importantly, who done it?

Genre: Romance

Publisher: Cipher-Naught 

Year: 2021

Nº of pages: 374

Goodreads rate: 4,40

Tropes: Contemporary Romance, Mystery, Romance Family, Small Town Romance

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 3/5 (sex on the page)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): Murder, Sexual Content

Main characters: Jenn and Cletus 

Main conflict: A murder happens and Cletus + Jenn need to solve it, again derailing their plans for their relationship.

Plot or character-driven: Mix

P.O.V.: Double P.O.V. 

Character development: Deep 

Diverse Cast: No

Read in: August 2021 

My Rate: 5/5 

Feminist rate: 5/5 (Again, the main plot is Jenn, setting boundaries, becoming more and more independent, and dealing with the abusive relationship with her parents.)

Adjectives and general thoughts: Lovely mysterious

Recommend this to People who love mystery

A Beardy Bonus: Bonus and deleted scenes from the Winston Brothers Series

(Winston Brothers #8)

by Penny Reid

All the Winston Brothers bonus scenes and deleted excerpts all in one place! This collection includes:

 

Extra Scene: Billy and Scarlet
A Winston Christmas
Beauty and the Beard
Deleted Scene: Truth or Beard
Deleted Scene: Grin and Beard It
Deleted Scene: Beard in Mind
Duane’s Letter to Beau
Cletus’s Letter to Santa
Duane’s Letter to Jess
Billy’s Letter to Scarlet
Pie in the Beard
Beard in Waiting
A Very Beardy Christmas
Beard and Hen

Genre: Romance

Publisher: Cipher-Naught

Year: 2020

Nº of pages: 141

Goodreads rate: 3,98 

Tropes: Contemporary Romance, Romance Family, Small Town Romance

Smut factor: No smut

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): No content Warnings According to StoryGraph

Main characters: The Winston Brothers and their partners

Main conflict: No conflict, just a lot of cute extra scenes

Plot or character-driven: Character Driven

P.O.V.: Multiple P.O.V.

Character development: Relays on other books

Diverse Cast: Yes (Latinx) 

Read in: August 2021

My Rate: 4/5

Feminist rate: 4/5 (Nothing Remarkable, but nothing bad)

Adjectives and general thoughts: Cute

Recommend this to People who love extra scenes

Just Folking Around

(Good Folk: Modern Folktales #0.5)

by Penny Reid

 

One night? No strings? A sexy game of chess? No problem.

If you’ve never read a Penny Reid book before, this is the place to start! An all new series starter snack from the author of the WINSTON BROTHERS and KNITTING IN THE CITY series. . .

Raquel Ezra loves to fish. With so many fish in the sea, she’s never had a problem baiting the hook or reeling them in. Raquel is a good actress, she can be anyone’s fantasy for a single night as long as they agree to be hers. Which is why she doesn’t think twice about spending an evening in nowhere Tennessee with a smokin’ hot, well-mannered, and intriguing sheriff’s deputy by the name of Jackson James.

Except, when the time comes, Raquel discovers that reality might just be better than any fantasy, and maybe she’s not ready to release this catch.

 

Genre: Romance

Publisher: Cipher-Naught

Year: 2021

Nº of pages: 68

Goodreads rate: 4,24

Tropes: Contemporary Romance, Cop Romance, Movie Star/Actress-Actor Romance, Romance Family, Small Town Romance

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 3/5 (sex on the page)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): Sexual Content

Main characters: Raquel and Jackson

Main conflict: Raquel is afraid of commitment and Jackson needs it, he is tired of the single life and wants to settle down. 

Plot or character-driven: Character Driven

P.O.V.: Double P.O.V.

Character development: Good

Diverse Cast: Yes (Latinx)

Read in: August 2021 

My Rate: 4/5

Feminist rate: 5/5 (Raquel is strong and forward and funny, while Jackson is a cinnamon roll, and both of them have struggles, so I loved it)

Adjectives and general thoughts: Fun and sweet, but also deep. This book is a prequel to Totally Folked, so my thoughts about them are exactly the same

Recommend this to People who love book series

Totally Folked

(Good Folk: Modern Folktales #1)

by Penny Reid

One unforgettable night leads to an unlikely shared connection, and unlikely connections never go unnoticed by the good folks in Green Valley, Tennessee…

Jackson James follows the rules. He has to. He’s a sheriff’s deputy in a super small town with a super big personality. However, strict adherence to the law during the day has been enjoyably balanced by rakish rules at night. Jackson, typically happy to protect and serve (and serve, and serve), starts questioning the value of wayward evenings when getting laid starts to feel more like being waylaid. Could it be that Green Valley’s most eligible—and notorious—bachelor longs for something (and someone) real?

Mega movie star Raquel Ezra follows only one rule: always leave them wanting more. Studio execs, reporters, audiences, fans, lovers—no one can get enough of the smart, savvy, and sexy bombshell. But when “generous offers” begin to feel more like excessive demands, years of always leaving has the elusive starlet longing for something (and perhaps someone) lasting.

When Raquel abruptly returns to the quirky Tennessee hamlet, her path crosses with the delectable deputy with whom she spent one unforgettable night. Unfortunately, scandal and intrigue soon follow. Raquel and Jackson must decide which is more important: following their rules? Or, at long last, finding something real.

 

Genre: Romance

Publisher: Cipher-Naught

Year: 2021

Nº of pages: 444

Goodreads rate: 4,26

Tropes: Contemporary Romance, Cop Romance, Movie Star/Actress-Actor Romance, Romance Family, Small Town Romance

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 3/5 (sex on the page)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): Abandonment, Homophobia, Sexual Content, Toxic Friendship

 

Main characters: Raquel and Jackson

Main conflict: Raquel is afraid of commitment and Jackson needs it, he is tired of the single life and wants to settle down. 

Plot or character-driven: Character Driven

P.O.V.: Double P.O.V.

Character development: Deep

Diverse Cast: Yes (Latinx)

Read in: August 2021 

My Rate: 4/5

Feminist rate: 5/5 (Raquel is strong and forward and funny, while Jackson is a cinnamon roll, and both of them have struggles, so I loved it, also in this book, we get a scene of Jethro and Cletus helping Jackson in a time of need, and forming a friendship that is hard to see in books and society, because of toxic masculinity and the notion that men can’t talk about their feelings, and last but not least, as a Latina, I love seeing other Latinx characters in page) 

Adjectives and general thoughts: Fun and sweet, but also deep

Recommend this to People who love deep romances

Then I was scrolling through bookstagram and saw the blurb of this book and an awesome photo, and I decided to check out…
But I DNFed.

Stripped Down

(Sonoma #1)

by Mae Harden

Olive

Baking is my thing. Bachelorette parties are not. Surprise strippers even less so. But I’m almost positive this guy isn’t really a stripper, and if he is, he’s pretty bad at it.

On the other hand, he’s very, very good at kissing. And maybe I shouldn’t have goaded him into doing it, but it’s not like I’ll ever see him again. At least I’ll have something to fantasize about when I’m baking muffins tomorrow morning.

Brooks

Contractor. Loner. Stripper? Not usually, but I’ll do anything to get the Bachelorette party in the room next door to settle down. All I wanted was a good night’s sleep. I never expected my entire world to shift when she opened the hotel door with her wide green eyes and sweet vanilla scent. Now that I’ve had a taste, I can’t let her go. I just have to find a way to break down her walls.

Genre: Romance

Year: 2020

Nº of pages: 162

Goodreads rate: 4,14

Tropes: Contemporary Romance

Smut factor: Don’t know (DNF)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): No content Warnings According to StoryGraph

Main characters: Olive and Brooks

Main conflict: Almost a one night stand (who stripped in front of you) is now your contractor

Plot or character-driven: Have no idea

P.O.V.: Double P.O.V.

Character development: None

Diverse Cast: No

Read in: August 2021

My Rate: 2/5 DNF

Feminist rate: Don’t have one

Adjectives and general thoughts: Poor writing and no development. This is an insta story, insta love, insta hate, insta lust, no development, and poor writing. 

Recommend this to People who love insta love

Since Stripped Down didn’t work and I was seeing Max Monroe all over the place I decided to read a book with the same plot, but by two authors that I trusted to write a better book.

 The Bet

(Winslow Brothers #1)

by Max Monroe

When it comes to life’s fun and games, always know: The rules. What’s at stake. When to quit.

Wise words from…well…my fortune cookie. But wise words, nonetheless. I just wish the Fortune Cookie People had considered how hard the whole “knowing when to quit” would be to carry out when a woman like me is gambling with her feelings.

Heart-palpitating, vageen-tingling, butterflies-in-my-belly feelings for a noncommittal, hot-as-sin player by the name of Jude Winslow. After a crazy night where we were both pretending to be someone else, I’ve found myself immersed in the fun of the fling. The thrill. The irresistible charm. The pleasure of being with a man like him.

Problem is, I’m positive he’s the exact opposite of husband material, and that is a serious issue for someone who is fixated on finding her happily ever after. I know the rules and I know the stakes, oh wise Fortune Cookie. Now I’d just like to know how close to self-destruction I have to get before I find the will to quit Jude Winslow.

Genre: Romance

Publisher: Max Monroe LLC

Year: 2021

Nº of pages: 386 

Goodreads rate: 4,33

Tropes: Contemporary Romance, Twins in Romance

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 🔥 4/5 (steamy)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): No content Warnings According to StoryGraph

Main characters: Jude and Sophie

Main conflict: Jude is a player (that’s pretty much it)

Plot or character-driven: Character Driven 

P.O.V.: Double P.O.V.

Character development: Shallow

Diverse Cast: No

Read in: August 2021

 

My Rate: 3/5

Feminist rate: 

Adjectives and general thoughts: Fun and light

Recommend this to People who love Playboys

I discovered this series during a reading challenge and the theme was political romance, and since this was one of the only KU books recently added to my TBR, I decided to give it a shot.

Off the Record

(Record #1)

by K.A. Linde

Liz Dougherty has no idea a single question is about to change her life.

Her first big reporting assignment for her North Carolina college newspaper has her covering a state senator’s impromptu press conference. Brady Maxwell may have everything it takes to be a politician—a winning pedigree, devastating good looks, a body made to wear suits—but his politics rub Liz the wrong way. When Liz’s hard-hitting question catches the upstart senator off-guard, it impresses Hayden Lane, Liz’s editor who feels she’s headed for a promising career as a reporter.

But Liz is also headed into a secret romance with Brady that could destroy both their ambitions. Though he’s a bachelor, potential voters might frown on Brady cozying up to a reporter. And Liz isn’t sure sneaking around is enough for her—especially when things between her and Hayden might be less platonic than she thought.

Sleek, sexy, and smart, Off the Record ventures into a high-stakes campaign and an even higher-stakes affair to answer the question: When politics and love collide, can there ever be a winner?

Genre: Romance

Publisher: Montlake Romance

Year: 2014 

Nº of pages: 445 

Goodreads rate: 4,04 

Tropes: Age Gap Romance, Contemporary Romance, Love Triangle, Political Romance, Reporter Romance

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 🔥 4/5 (steamy)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): No content Warnings According to StoryGraph

Main characters: Liz and Brady 

Main conflict: Brady is a politician, Liz is a college paper reporter in the political division, so their relationship is not the most ethical and it can endanger both of their careers. 

Plot or character-driven: Mix

P.O.V.: Single P.O.V. 

Character development: Shallow

Diverse Cast: No 

Read in: August 2021

My Rate: 4/5

Feminist rate: 3/5 (This relationship has some dangerous power dynamics, no communication, close to a toxic relationship for a minute, but then it gets a bit better, and SPOILER, by the end she finally has a spine to take action into her own hands)

Adjectives and general thoughts: Really interesting

Recommend this to People who love Secret Relationship

On the Record

(Record #2)

by K.A. Linde

 

For political reporter Liz Dougherty, election day—a day of looking toward the future and saying goodbye to the past—seems like a fitting time to start a new relationship. But feelings for her former flame still linger…

The sexy second book in bestselling author K.A. Linde’s Record series decides whether it’s better to pick up the pieces and move on…or to pick up right where you left off.

Genre: Romance

Publisher: Montlake Romance

Year: 2014

Nº of pages: 384

Goodreads rate: 4,15

Tropes: Age Gap Romance, Contemporary Romance, Love Triangle, Political Romance, Reporter Romance

Smut factor: 🔥 🔥 🔥 🔥 4/5 (steamy)

TRIGGER WARNINGS (Based on StoryGraphs): Sexual Abuse/Rape on the page

Main characters: Liz, Brady, and Hayden

Main conflict: Brady is a politician, Liz is a college paper reporter in the political division, so their relationship is not the most ethical and it can endanger both of their careers. Liz is now in another relationship, but she is not over Brady

Plot or character-driven: Mix

P.O.V.: Single P.O.V.

Character development: Shallow

Diverse Cast: No

Read in: August 2021

My Rate: 3/5

Feminist rate: 3/5 (The man in Liz’s life are ridiculous, on many levels, and there is rape on the page)

Adjectives and general thoughts: Slow, but still interesting

Recommend this to People who love Love triangles

These were all the books I read in August! I was really happy with the number of books I read this month, since classes are back, and I believe overall it was a really good month, bookwise! Have you read any of them? Did you like them? Do you agree with me? If not you can tell me so too! 

Well, that is all for today, I hope you like this post, hope you enjoy these books if you decide to read them. Feel free to leave your opinion about it in the comments and I will see you next time! 

Bye sassy people! 

 

  • I know that some comments I make about decent guys on my posts are the bare minimum a guy should do, so no, they don’t deserve to be treated like gods for doing the minimum, but at the same time, I’ve read a lot of sexist books and I appreciate authors who make characters that can serve as role models and examples of how a decent guy acts and what a loving and respectful relationship looks like. I believe we should always encourage these authors and bring attention to the ones that still write sexist characters and stories. 
  • I make a lot of comments about sexism and healthy role models in books, but a lot of times these characteristics don’t make the book a bad book and definitely don’t make the author a bad author. Please never shame these authors and these books for these comments, I simply feel that we need to have awareness of the less than ideal situations some books bring us, and not use the romanticized problem as examples of what a relationship should be. Most of these authors are still amazing, and the content they write doesn’t reflect directly with their personal views and opinions. Always make sure to respect and be kind to everyone, even while criticizing their content. 

Find Me In 

Meet Me

Meet Me

Brazilian architecture student and book lover

One of my goals in analysing my readings was to talk about important topics, like feminist and consent, because literature, art and culture influence us, and I believe we should always encorage authors who talk about this topics.

Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown

The Cock Down the Block by Amy Award – Review

Hello sassy people! Today we’re talking about The C*ck Down the Block by Ay Award.

Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose – Review

Hello sassy people! Today I’m reviewing Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose!

Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins – Review

Today’s post is about Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins!

The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James – Review

Today’s post is about The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James!

Icebreaker by Hannah Grace – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Icebreaker by Hannah Grace!

Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman!

Top books of 2023!!

These are the best books I read in 2023!
It was an amazing year, full of amazing books and I hope 2024 is even better!

2023 Wrap Up

These are the stats for all the books I read in 2023!I post stats every month, but these are the ones I’m always most excited to analyze! It’s so cool to look back at the year and see how much you read, the different genres, authors, tropes, spice levels…These are all...

My Better Life by Sarah Ready and Non-Toxic Masculinity

Hello sassy people! Today we are talking about Non Toxic Masculinity.

Come check out my Goodreads Reading Challenge!

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2020

I read 148 books in 2020, come see them!

Ana en Noir is currently-reading

The Fourth Time Charm



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

2021 Reading Challenge

2021 Reading Challenge

Ana en Noir has read 18 books toward her goal of 100 books.

hide

Adsense

Books Ana en Noir read

The Fourth Time Charm

The Third Best Thing

The Second We Met

The Perfect First

Sidebarred

Appealed

Sustained

Overruled

Master Baker



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

Books I read in July 2021

Books I read in July 2021

THIS POST MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS!!!! 

This post may contain affiliate links for products and services I recommend. If you make a purchase through these links, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission. 

Hello sassy people! Today I’m going to tell you guys about all the books I read in July 2021! I continued on my Penny Reid obsession this month, so get ready to hear a lot about her in the next months…

Beard Necessities

(Winston Brothers #7)

by Penny Reid

 

Billy Winston’s family is going to see him happy and in love if it’s the last thing they do.
No one deserves a happily-ever-after quite as much as the second oldest Winston brother and his lady love, Claire McClure (aka Scarlet St. Claire). Cruelty and circumstance tore them apart almost twenty years ago. Secrecy and bitterness kept them separated.
But you know who’s tired of their separation and stubbornness? Everyone. Especially Billy Winston’s family. And now they’re going to do something about it.
Well-meaning interference means the star-crossed lovers can’t stop tripping over each other in the hills of Tuscany, the catacombs of Rome, and the waterways of Venice. Billy and Claire find themselves thrown together and at the mercy of the Winston siblings’ shenanigans.
But will their forced proximity bring them together? Or push them even further apart?
This second-chance romance brings back the entire Winston gang, playing cupid in one last story of love, hi-jinks, and family collusion.

I have to say that I was waiting for this book for a long time! But I also have to say that it was not what I expected. Billy and Claire’s story was so epic and the suspense about it and the really long wait made it really special, but in the end, it was not my favorite. That is not to say that I didn’t like it, I liked it really much, it was just not all the hype I had in my head and it pales in comparison with other books in this series. Scarlet and Billy are a really cute couple, but they are both stubborn and not so great at communication. They are great at assuming things about the other, punishing themselves, and hiding things to protect the other person’s feelings. And let’s just make it clear that I don’t love 10-year separations, I don’t believe in them and I don’t like them, especially 10 years celibacy.
We have a really cute and emotional story, that at some points it’s really funny (those scenes often include Cletus or another Winston brother) and the ending is the perfect wrap-up for this amazing series.

General grade: 4/5 (Not much happens on the plot, it’s mostly a stubborn couple, on vacation with their mettlesome family and the main conflict is the lack of communication, and I don’t love books where the main problem could have been solved 10 years before in a simple honest conversation)

Feminist grade: 4/5 (The only problem I have with this couple is their dynamic like I said no communication, a lot of blaming, and childish behavior, but also we have a heroine who seeks psychological treatment and that helps a lot with their relationship, so we see a bit of progress, but it takes a long time, and I don’t see major changes, since it was such a simple problem)

Final grade: 8/10 (The story is cute, the characters are amazing and most of the awesome parts feature the family or a really cute moment between the couple, so overall pretty good, but not the best in the series)

Beauty and the Mustache

(Knitting in the City #4)

by Penny Reid

 

There are three things you need to know about Ashley Winston: 1) She has six brothers and they all have beards, 2) She is a reader, and 3) She knows how to knit.
Former beauty queen, Ashley Winston’s preferred coping strategy is escapism. She escaped her Tennessee small town, loathsome father, and six brothers eight years ago. Now she escapes life daily via her one-click addiction. However, when a family tragedy forces her to return home, Ashley can’t escape the notice of Drew Runous—local Game Warden, bear wrestler, philosopher, and everyone’s favorite guy. Drew’s irksome philosophizing in particular makes Ashley want to run for the skyscrapers, especially since he can’t seem to keep his exasperating opinions— or his soulful poetry, steadfast support, and delightful hands— to himself.
Pretty soon the girl who wanted nothing more than the escape of the big city finds she’s lost her heart in small town Tennessee.

I was also anxious about this book, since Ashley and Drew are present in most of the “Winston Brothers” series, and I already knew a bit about their personality and their relationship, but I have to say, this book was not what I was expecting. Drew is a big, quiet guy, he is a man of few words, cute moments with Ashley, and some poetic inspiration. While Ash is just an amazing, strong, opinionated woman. However, I still can’t understand the problem in their relationship. The main problem, your image, would be that she lives in the city, she loves Chicago, while Drew is a countryman, a Game Warden and nature is the place where he belongs. But that is not a major problem up until 60% or something. Before that, they simply don’t like each other, and that is a kind of problem for me, these are two people who are attracted to each other, and the way they deal with it is by antagonizing the other. Now, the situation they are in has a role in it, being that Ash’s mom is sick and Drew has a big role in her family’s dynamics, so that is a problem, but despite all the situation I still can’t understand where all the conflict is coming from. If you put that aside, the book has some amazing scenes, some truly funny and incredibly emotional scenes, all the characters, main or (especially) secondary, are amazing and the friendship and family moments are inspiring. I truly believe that Penny Reid’s biggest talent is building the relationships in her books, that being a romantic relationship, a friendship, or a family dynamic, her characters and their bond are always super developed.

General grade: 4/5 (Really well-developed characters and relationships with secondary characters, but the main relationship lacks that development.)

Feminist grade: 4/5 (Despite the fact that Ash is a super-strong, independent woman, with her own view of the world, I, sometimes, see Drew as a bit sexist, with opinions about females and their role in society and all, and that doesn’t sit well with me. Also, not a lot of communication with this couple, there is no clarity, they are rarely open about their feelings for each other)

Final grade: 8/10 (Cute, with some awesome moments, but again, after all the other books, this one was just not amazing)

Neanderthal Seeks Human

(Knitting in the City #1)

by Penny Reid

 

There are three things you need to know about Janie Morris:
1) She is incapable of engaging in a conversation without volunteering TMTI (Too Much Trivial Information), especially when she is unnerved,
2) No one unnerves her more than Quinn Sullivan, and
3) She doesn’t know how to knit.
After losing her boyfriend, apartment, and job in the same day, Janie Morris can’t help wondering what new torment fate has in store.
To her utter mortification, Quinn Sullivan—aka Sir McHotpants—witnesses it all then keeps turning up like a pair of shoes you lust after but can’t afford. The last thing she expects is for Quinn to make her an offer she can’t refuse.

I have to be honest, I thought about quitting this book at least 4 times. Now, don’t get me wrong, it was not the writing or any problem with Penny Reid, but I just disliked Quinn so much, I wasn’t even excited to read his story anymore. In the beginning, he was quiet, but not in a cute wait, more in a sulky way, and he was always invading Janie’s personal space, had some small problems with consent, and was giving me too many Christian Grey vibes. I couldn’t stop thinking that most of the things he was doing with Janie would not be okay in the real world. He had no explicit consent from her, he did not know if she wanted to be close to him, so if we were not inside Janie’s head, and knew that she liked this guy, I would be accusing him of harassment. The things he did were not sexual, just being too close, touching her without asking, cornering her, taking her (uncontended) to his apartment, and also lying to her, they were all big red flags for me, and also Janie thought in more than one occasion that she was uncomfortable with his closeness but at the same happy about.
For all of those reasons I wanted to stop reading, but I loved other Penny Reid books, and I really wanted to continue reading the “Knitting in the City” series, and I was so excited about this book I decided to push through, and I have to say that I was happy I didn’t DNFed because it got better. We got to know Quinn more, and as he was falling for Janie he became better and better, cutter and cutter, and became an almost cool guy. But what makes up for all of Quinn’s flaws is Janie. She is just amazing, in a quirky, smart, real, and adorable way. She has personality to spare and she, alone, makes this book worth it. Of course, the rest of the book has positives too, but Janie is just precious.

General grade: 4/5 (The plot is not so structured, since is more focused on character’s development and journeys, but it has an honestly unnecessary action plot)

Feminist grade: 4/5 (As I said, a lot of problems with consent and harassment, but also has a really strong and independent female to compensate, so in the end is cool)

Final grade: 8/10 (The book by itself is okay, but Janie makes it special, and in the end, I ended up liking Quinn, so it all turned out okay)

Neanderthal Marries Human

(Knitting in the City #1.5)

by Penny Reid

 

There are three things you should know about Quinn Sullivan: 1) He is madly in love with Janie Morris, 2) He’s not above playing dirty to get what (or who) he wants, and 3) He doesn’t know how to knit.
After just five months of dating Janie, Quinn—former Wendell and unapologetic autocrat—is ready to propose marriage. In fact, he’s more than ready. If it were up to Quinn, he would efficiently propose, marry, and beget Janie with child all in the same day—thereby avoiding the drama and angst that accompanies the four stages of pre-matrimony: engagement, meeting the parents, bachelor/bachelorette party, and overblown, superfluous wedding day traditions.
But Janie, much to Quinn’s dismay, tosses a wrench in his efficacious endeavors and challenges him to prove his devotion by going through the matrimonial motions, no matter how minute and mundane.
Will Quinn last until the wedding day? Or will he yield to his tyrant impulses?

Remember all the bad things I said about Quinn five seconds ago? He made up for it in this book. He is just so cute and adorable, we get to know him more and he loves Janie so much, and since I love Janie so much, I started liking Quinn more too. And you know, Janie is her amazing, frenetic, quirky, smart, adorable self, so all is good in the world.

General grade: 5/5 (I loved the plot and it made for a different wedding planning book, with a lot of character development moments)

Feminist grade: 4/5 (I don’t know if I liked, or approved of the proposal the way it happened, I get that the scene was cute and all, but his desire to find a way for her to not escape was a bit difficult to me, but overall it was good and Quinn was a lot better)

Final grade: 9/10 (Cute, adorable, deep, and happy)

Friends Without Benefits

(Knitting in the City #2)

by Penny Reid

 

There are three things you need to know about Elizabeth Finney: 1) She suffers from severe sarcastic syndrome, especially when she’s unnerved, 2) No one unnerves her like Nico Manganiello, and 3) She knows how to knit.
Elizabeth Finney is almost always right about everything: the musical merits of boy bands are undervalued by society, “benefits” with human Ken dolls are better without friendship, and the sun has set on her once-in-a-lifetime chance for true love. But when Elizabeth’s plans for benefits without friendship are disarmed by the irritatingly charismatic and chauvinistic Nico Manganiello—her former nemesis—she finds herself struggling to maintain the electric fence around her heart while avoiding a Nico charisma-electrocution or, worse, falling in love.

Now, this was an interesting book. I love a female doctors, they are rare in romance and should appear more! I also love a comedian and these two are just amazing. They have a deep story, that affected both of them in really deep ways, a real problem to solve and some amazing scenes, incredible banter, and just the cutest moments. I honestly don’t have much to say, since it was simply great, had a simple but organized plot, we understand everyone’s motivations and emotions and the struggles they are going through, it was simple and lovely.

General grade: 4/5 (As I said, it was simple, it is not a book that will be remembered by its plot or any major conflicts, which is not a bad thing, it is just a really good and easy book)

Feminist grade: 5/5 (I love how strong and independent Elizabeth is and my favorite part of this entire book is Nico, telling her about moving on, saying that he had moved on, that life goes on after you lose someone and you have to go find a new love: “Boy A lost touch with girl A and he thought for a while that she was going to be it. That he was never going to find anyone else and that he was just going to be with girls S through Z and he knew that they were just placeholders, stand-ins for girl A… But then, one day, he met someone else. We’ll call her girl B (…) Boy A met girl B and fell in love with her” “Maybe boy A realized that you have to find happiness when and where you can, that falling in love isn’t a once-in-a-lifetime occurrence. Because, if it was a once in a lifetime thing, then he was doomed to be miserable at seventeen”. These two quotes are already enough to make me love a book, to make me believe in a book. A lot of romance books tell you that if your partner leaves you, you’ll die, and that he was your soulmate and that you are nothing without the other person, you need them, they are the LOVE OF YOUR LIFE, and I just love books that say the opposite, we have to find happiness wherever we can and love is choice made by you, not the universe)

Final grade: 9/10 (Real, magic, cute, lovely, and easy)

 

Love Hacked

(Knitting in the City #3)

by Penny Reid

 

There are three things you need to know about Sandra Fielding: 1) She makes all her first dates cry, 2) She hasn’t been kissed in over two years, and 3) She knows how to knit.
Sandra has difficulty removing her psychotherapist hat. Of her last 30 dates, 29 have ended the same way: the man sobbing uncontrollably. After one such disaster, Sandra gives in to a seemingly harmless encounter with her hot waiter, Alex. Argumentative, secretive, and hostile Alex may be the opposite of everything Sandra knows is right for her. But now, the girl who has spent all her life helping others change for the better, must find a way to cope with falling for someone who refuses to change at all.

I really truly loved and enjoyed this book! If you haven’t noticed yet, I love books that talk about mental issues and therapy, so it was amazing to be in the POV of an actual psychotherapist, see how that affects her life and how she deals with her own emotions. Also, Alex is the cutest, just an amazing man, who is 7 years (if I’m not mistaken) younger than Sandra, which I absolutely love. The Romance genre is full of age gaps, but most of them are Older Male/Younger Female, which, let’s just say, it is not my favorite. But I LOVE Female Age Gaps, and this one was amazing!
Lovable characters, not only the hero and heroine but also the secondary characters on this series (and most of Penny Reid’s books) are just incredible.

General grade: 4/5 (Most of Penny’s books have some kind of external conflict built-in, but in my opinion that is not the most important part of the book, and I also feel like there is a talk to be had about the amount of information put into these books! She calls her book “Smart Romance” and I agree, these characters are geniuses, but I also got lost in all of the Bitcoin conversations, so maybe all those details were not so necessary. However I always walk away from her books with a lot of new knowledge, so I guess we can let that go)

Feminist grade: 5/5 (This is a very feminist book, not only because it features a more healthy relationship (her being a therapist and all of that) but it features a heroine who is older, more successful, and rich than the hero, and that to me is mind-blowing, it is reversing every single stereotype used in romance novels, so I just love and appreciate this book for it)

Final grade: 9/10 (Cute, serious, smart, and feminist! Love love love it)

3- The Deal
Author: Elle Kennedy
Series: Off-Campus #1
Blurb: She’s about to make a deal with the college bad boy…
Hannah Wells has finally found someone who turns her on. But while she might be confident in every other area of her life, she’s carting around a full set of baggage when it comes to sex and seduction. If she wants to get her crush’s attention, she’ll have to step out of her comfort zone and make him take notice… even if it means tutoring the annoying, childish, cocky captain of the hockey team in exchange for a pretend date.
…and it’s going to be oh so good.
All Garrett Graham has ever wanted is to play professional hockey after graduation, but his plummeting GPA is threatening everything he’s worked so hard for. If helping a sarcastic brunette make another guy jealous will help him secure his position on the team, he’s all for it. But when one unexpected kiss leads to the wildest sex of both their lives, it doesn’t take long for Garrett to realize that pretend isn’t going to cut it. Now he just has to convince Hannah that the man she wants looks a lot like him.

I have to say I was disappointed in this book because there was not as much cool content in it as I expected. Of course, it is always amazing to see how the writing process works, but a deleted scene (that is completely different from the reality portrayed in the Penny Reid Universe) it’s sometimes tiring to read. I honestly got tired of seeing these scenes pretty quickly, but I’m sure that for a lot of people they are gold. What I loved about it was Penny talking about how she became a writer, how her process works, and all of that, I think that is a side of the books we don’t see or hear much, so for me, that was super cool.

General grade: 4/5 (Simple and sometimes tiring, it can make us confused about some facts of the story, but at the same time it is cool to see these scenes and processes.)

Feminist grade: 4/5 (Despite not being a book that has a story, some of these deleted scenes had some red flags for some characters that I really loved, so it’s not a perfect book in this category)

Final grade: 8/10 (This book is pretty much a gift for Penny’s fans and it serves that purpose, of giving you just a tiny bit more of that character that you loved, so it is pretty cool, and I admire Penny for doing things like this)

2- The Dugout
Author: Meghan Quinn
Blurb: Let me ask you a question:
If someone is vying for your spot on a team and just so happens to injure you during practice, would you believe it was on purpose?
Word around campus is . . . it was no accident.
That injury has cost me everything; my starting position, my junior year—and the draft. Now, I’m a senior fresh off recovery, struggling to find my groove, until the day I run into a nervous, fidgety, girl with freckles, in the dining hall.
They call Milly Potter The Baseball Whisperer, The Diamond Wizard, and The Epitome of All Knowledge. She believes in baseball. She breathes it. She’s the queen of an infamous dynasty, but no one actually knows who she really is, and she plans to keep it that way.
One mishap in the panini line, one miscommunication in the weight room, and many failed attempts at an apology equal up to one solid truth — Milly Potter never wants to speak to me again — no matter how good my forearms look.
Little do we both know, she’s about to become more than just my fairy ballmother.

This is, no doubt, one of my FAVORITE couples in the series. I love them separately and together. Fiona is just so strong and wise, and I (not to flatter myself) identify a lot with her personality, and I just loved to see their origin story. Greg is amazing, funny, and smart, and let’s admit, arrogant, in a very endearing way, they are the perfect couple!!!

General grade: 4/5 (Penny’s book are not exactly plot-driven, much more character-driven, and this happens much in this book, what directs the story is the changes in the characters opinions and minds, so in that way, this is a very simple, cute and loving story of a couple that we already knew was perfect)

Feminist grade: 5/5 (Like most other Penny Reid’s books, this one has a LOT of smart conversation in it, and I love those topics and those conversations, that a lot of times involve patriarchy and capitalism and a lot of others that are very dear to me, so it could not have a different grade)

Final grade: 9/10 (Amazing, smart, cute, and simple)

3- The Deal
Author: Elle Kennedy
Series: Off-Campus #1
Blurb: She’s about to make a deal with the college bad boy…
Hannah Wells has finally found someone who turns her on. But while she might be confident in every other area of her life, she’s carting around a full set of baggage when it comes to sex and seduction. If she wants to get her crush’s attention, she’ll have to step out of her comfort zone and make him take notice… even if it means tutoring the annoying, childish, cocky captain of the hockey team in exchange for a pretend date.
…and it’s going to be oh so good.
All Garrett Graham has ever wanted is to play professional hockey after graduation, but his plummeting GPA is threatening everything he’s worked so hard for. If helping a sarcastic brunette make another guy jealous will help him secure his position on the team, he’s all for it. But when one unexpected kiss leads to the wildest sex of both their lives, it doesn’t take long for Garrett to realize that pretend isn’t going to cut it. Now he just has to convince Hannah that the man she wants looks a lot like him.

This was AMAZING, I love marriage in trouble books, love love love love, because it is the story after de HEA (Happily Ever After), it is the story about a couple that is in love and is already committed to each other, but you know, love does not always fix everything, and relationships are hard work, and these kinds of books remind us of that.
So in Happily Ever Ninja, we get to know more about Fiona, a mom, and wife, and friend who is pretty much a superheroine, she does everything for everyone, never asking for help and she is always there for whoever needs her. Greg is most of the time working abroad, which means that he is mostly not there for Fiona and their children. Also, Greg has a lot of ideas, a lot of very specific ideas about how to raise their children, which is awesome, but sometimes also tiring for Fiona and the kids, I absolutely loved it.
Like most of Penny’s books, there is external conflict, but I’m not going to talk a lot about it, just that for me, this is the conflict that was indispensable for the story, unlike some of her other books. But focussing on their relationship, Fiona is a bit upset, because they had goals and ideas about their lives, and how it was going to be, but she was living them all alone. So for me, this is a book and a couple of goals.

General grade: 5/5 (A perfect mix of internal and external conflict, without both of them, there is no story. Great character development and great participation of secondary lovable characters)

Feminist grade: 5/5 (A lot of the ideals for child-raising and relationships are super feminist, and against patriarchy. This book has an incredibly strong heroine and a great example of couple and relationships)

Final grade: 10/10 (This is exactly the type of book I need more of)

2- The Dugout
Author: Meghan Quinn
Blurb: Let me ask you a question:
If someone is vying for your spot on a team and just so happens to injure you during practice, would you believe it was on purpose?
Word around campus is . . . it was no accident.
That injury has cost me everything; my starting position, my junior year—and the draft. Now, I’m a senior fresh off recovery, struggling to find my groove, until the day I run into a nervous, fidgety, girl with freckles, in the dining hall.
They call Milly Potter The Baseball Whisperer, The Diamond Wizard, and The Epitome of All Knowledge. She believes in baseball. She breathes it. She’s the queen of an infamous dynasty, but no one actually knows who she really is, and she plans to keep it that way.
One mishap in the panini line, one miscommunication in the weight room, and many failed attempts at an apology equal up to one solid truth — Milly Potter never wants to speak to me again — no matter how good my forearms look.
Little do we both know, she’s about to become more than just my fairy ballmother.

This book was so CUTE. I love how quirky it is, how nerdy it is, and also I love the amount of information I learned in this book. Every chapter has the definition of a different AI and I just loved that. (My boyfriend studies computer science, so this was also an incredibly interesting topic to talk about with him). But leaving all of that aside, I love how independent and driven Marie is, she just knows what she is doing and she gets what she wants. At the same time, I love geek and nerdy characters, and Matt is just perfect, shy and cute, but so lovable and we know there is a tiny bit of alpha in him. So it was just a cute, adorable, and simple story, with a LOT of interesting tidbits.

General grade: 4/5 (Like a lot of others, it is more character-driven, not a lot of structure in the plot, but a lot of character development and growth)

Feminist grade: 5/5 (Let’s face it, intelligent, independent heroine, who gives up men, to seek fulfillment in other ways, this is just gold, really)

Final grade: 9/10 (Quirky, super smart, and so cute!!!)

 

3- The Deal
Author: Elle Kennedy
Series: Off-Campus #1
Blurb: She’s about to make a deal with the college bad boy…
Hannah Wells has finally found someone who turns her on. But while she might be confident in every other area of her life, she’s carting around a full set of baggage when it comes to sex and seduction. If she wants to get her crush’s attention, she’ll have to step out of her comfort zone and make him take notice… even if it means tutoring the annoying, childish, cocky captain of the hockey team in exchange for a pretend date.
…and it’s going to be oh so good.
All Garrett Graham has ever wanted is to play professional hockey after graduation, but his plummeting GPA is threatening everything he’s worked so hard for. If helping a sarcastic brunette make another guy jealous will help him secure his position on the team, he’s all for it. But when one unexpected kiss leads to the wildest sex of both their lives, it doesn’t take long for Garrett to realize that pretend isn’t going to cut it. Now he just has to convince Hannah that the man she wants looks a lot like him.

I was waiting for this for so long!!! And in this particular book, I have to say that I was disappointed. Their meet-cute is not amazing, it is fairly simple and their morning after of Vegas is also not all the hype I had in my mind. It is not bad, but I had a lot of expectations.

General grade: 4/5 (Simple, and short, it hurts to say that it has nothing truly special)

Feminist grade: 4/5 (The morning after in Vegas gives us some insight into Kat’s mind and that, for me, is the only great part of the book, the rest is okay)

Final grade: 8/10 (As a very short prequel, that, for me, could be a prologue, it is okay, as a separate book, that promises more, in my mind, it’s too simple)

2- The Dugout
Author: Meghan Quinn
Blurb: Let me ask you a question:
If someone is vying for your spot on a team and just so happens to injure you during practice, would you believe it was on purpose?
Word around campus is . . . it was no accident.
That injury has cost me everything; my starting position, my junior year—and the draft. Now, I’m a senior fresh off recovery, struggling to find my groove, until the day I run into a nervous, fidgety, girl with freckles, in the dining hall.
They call Milly Potter The Baseball Whisperer, The Diamond Wizard, and The Epitome of All Knowledge. She believes in baseball. She breathes it. She’s the queen of an infamous dynasty, but no one actually knows who she really is, and she plans to keep it that way.
One mishap in the panini line, one miscommunication in the weight room, and many failed attempts at an apology equal up to one solid truth — Milly Potter never wants to speak to me again — no matter how good my forearms look.
Little do we both know, she’s about to become more than just my fairy ballmother.

I love a good fake relationship book and this put together this awesome trope with mental and emotional troubles, a woman who is richer and more successful than her partner, a female CEO, and some amazing character development and analysis of the past.
Kat is just super strong, and she is driven, she is determined and just the perfect CEO heroine. She is filthy rich but compassionate and lovable, and she has attitudes that would get her to be called a bitch in the office, but she is just so lovable and adorable, that is impossible. She and Dan are just the cutest, and they have a good, honest relationship, I love how quick it is, for them to be open about their feelings and their intentions with one another.

General grade: 4/5 (This is another one, where the external conflict is important for the plot of the book since it is a fake engagement kind of trope, but it is still very much character-driven, with a lot of very interesting character development)

Feminist grade: 5/5 (This book deals with mental and emotional baggage in a really deep and interesting way, in both characters, while also bringing up a strong, powerful, successful woman, who is besides a man who admires her and brings up, not down)

Final grade: 9/10 (It’s impressive how Kat can be strong and soft at the same time and this is the feeling that I had when I read this book)

These were all the books I read in July! Because of vacation, I managed to read a lot of books, so I really enjoyed this month. Have you read any of them? Did you like them? Do you agree with me? If not you can tell me so too! 

Well, that is all for today, I hope you like this post, hope you enjoy these books if you decide to read them. Feel free to leave your opinion about it in the comments and I will see you next time! 

Bye sassy people! 

 

  • I know that some comments I make about decent guys on my posts are the bare minimum a guy should do, so no, they don’t deserve to be treated like gods for doing the minimum, but at the same time, I’ve read a lot of sexist books and I appreciate authors who make characters that can serve as role models and examples of how a decent guy acts and what a loving and respectful relationship looks like. I believe we should always encourage these authors and bring attention to the ones that still write sexist characters and stories. 
  • I make a lot of comments about sexism and healthy role models in books, but a lot of times these characteristics don’t make the book a bad book and definitely don’t make the author a bad author. Please never shame these authors and these books for these comments, I simply feel that we need to have awareness of the less than ideal situations some books bring us, and not use the romanticized problem as examples of what a relationship should be. Most of these authors are still amazing, and the content they write doesn’t reflect directly with their personal views and opinions. Always make sure to respect and be kind to everyone, even while criticizing their content. 

Find Me In 

Meet Me

Meet Me

Brazilian architecture student and book lover

One of my goals in analysing my readings was to talk about important topics, like feminist and consent, because literature, art and culture influence us, and I believe we should always encorage authors who talk about this topics.

Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown

The Cock Down the Block by Amy Award – Review

Hello sassy people! Today we’re talking about The C*ck Down the Block by Ay Award.

Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose – Review

Hello sassy people! Today I’m reviewing Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose!

Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins – Review

Today’s post is about Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins!

The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James – Review

Today’s post is about The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James!

Icebreaker by Hannah Grace – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Icebreaker by Hannah Grace!

Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman!

Top books of 2023!!

These are the best books I read in 2023!
It was an amazing year, full of amazing books and I hope 2024 is even better!

2023 Wrap Up

These are the stats for all the books I read in 2023!I post stats every month, but these are the ones I’m always most excited to analyze! It’s so cool to look back at the year and see how much you read, the different genres, authors, tropes, spice levels…These are all...

My Better Life by Sarah Ready and Non-Toxic Masculinity

Hello sassy people! Today we are talking about Non Toxic Masculinity.

Come check out my Goodreads Reading Challenge!

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2020

I read 148 books in 2020, come see them!

Ana en Noir is currently-reading

The Fourth Time Charm



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

2021 Reading Challenge

2021 Reading Challenge

Ana en Noir has read 18 books toward her goal of 100 books.

hide

Adsense

Books Ana en Noir read

The Fourth Time Charm

The Third Best Thing

The Second We Met

The Perfect First

Sidebarred

Appealed

Sustained

Overruled

Master Baker



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

Books I read in June 2021

Books I read in June 2021

THIS POST MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS!!!! 

This post may contain affiliate links for products and services I recommend. If you make a purchase through these links, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission. 

Hello sassy people! Today I’m going to tell you guys about all the books I read in May 2021! Another Emma Chase series and I discovered a new author that I’m now obsessed with: Penny Reid!

Royally Screwed

(Royally #1)

by Emma Chase 

Nicholas Arthur Frederick Edward Pembrook, Crowned Prince of Wessco, aka His Royal Hotness, is wickedly charming, devastatingly handsome, and unabashedly arrogant; hard not to be when people are constantly bowing down to you.
Then, one snowy night in Manhattan, the prince meets a dark haired beauty who doesn’t bow down. Instead, she throws a pie in his face.
Nicholas wants to find out if she tastes as good as her pie, and this heir apparent is used to getting what he wants.
Dating a prince isn’t what waitress Olivia Hammond ever imagined it would be.
There’s a disapproving queen, a wildly inappropriate spare heir, relentless paparazzi, and brutal public scrutiny. While they’ve traded in horse drawn carriages for Rolls Royces, and haven’t chopped anyone’s head off lately, the royals are far from accepting of this commoner.
But to Olivia, Nicholas is worth it.
Nicholas grew up with the whole world watching, and now Marriage Watch is in full force. In the end, Nicholas has to decide who he is and, more importantly, who he wants to be: a King… or the man who gets to love Olivia forever.

I absolutely loved this series, it’s a mixture of fairy tale and real life that just makes us fall in love. I think the most interesting thing about this book is that being a royal is a reality that very few people live, and we only get to see the luxurious side of it, so I think Emma did an amazing work describing these characters’ personalities, struggles, and minds.

I am not a fan of the British family, don’t follow them, but we got to admit there is this magical element in Royals that wins us over, and Emma Chase did this amazingly.

General grade: 5/5 (Structured plot, with a well-developed plot twist, great writing, and really nice character development, with experiences that are unknown to most of the population of the world)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (This gets a 5 for the ending alone, that I will not spoil to you, and also it gets a 5 for talking about the pressure on Olivia and how she has to learn to fight for the things that she wants and are better for her and not her family)
Final grade: 10/10 (Made me want to read more Royals, it did an amazing job in creating something magical, but also realistic)

Royally Matched

(Royally #2)

by Emma Chase

 

Some men are born responsible, some men have responsibility thrust upon them. Henry John Edgar Thomas Pembrook, Prince of Wessco, just got the motherlode of all responsibility dumped in his regal lap.
He’s not handling it well.
Hoping to help her grandson to rise to the occasion, Queen Lenora agrees to give him “space”—but while the Queen’s away, the Prince will play. After a chance meeting with an American television producer, Henry finally makes a decision all on his own:
Welcome to Matched: Royal Edition.
A reality TV dating game show featuring twenty of the world’s most beautiful blue bloods gathered in the same castle. Only one will win the diamond tiara, only one will capture the handsome prince’s heart.
While Henry revels in the sexy, raunchy antics of the contestants as they fight, literally, for his affection, it’s the quiet, bespectacled girl in the corner—with the voice of an angel and a body that would tempt a saint—who catches his eye.
The more Henry gets to know Sarah Mirabelle Zinnia Von Titebottum, the more enamored he becomes of her simple beauty, her strength, her kind spirit… and her naughty sense of humor.
But Rome wasn’t built in a day—and irresponsible royals aren’t reformed overnight.
As he endeavors to right his wrongs, old words take on whole new meanings for the dashing Prince. Words like, Duty, Honor and most of all—Love.

This book, despite being in the same scenario and the same family, hits us different than Royally Screwed because Olivia was a normal girl, she had nothing royal about her, so theoretically we identify with her more, however, I identify with Sarah more, not because she is a royal, but because of her personality, her bookish ways, her shyness but at the same time she is incredibly strong. And I just love Henry, I love how he steps up to his responsibilities, it just takes him a moment to get the motivation for it, I love his development, I love how cute he is and how he interacts with Sarah, it is just adorable…

General grade: 5/5 (Really well-developted characters, with realistic problems, quirky personalities, and just overall adorable interactions)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (I just love a book that brings strong women forward, and this is one of them, not just Sarah, but also a lot of secondary characters are super strong. And also a hero that is non-sexist and a hero that adapts to the heroine’s needs and personality)
Final grade: 10/10 (Cute, funny while also bringing serious topics, I just loved it)

Royally Endowed

(Royally #3)

by Emma Chase

Logan St. James is a smoldering, sexy beast. Sure, he can be a little broody at times—but Ellie Hammond’s willing to overlook that. Because, have you seen him??
Sexy. As. Hell.
And Ellie’s perky enough for both of them.
For years, she’s had a crush on the intense, gorgeous royal security guard—but she doesn’t think he ever saw her, not really.
To Logan, Ellie was just part of the job—a relative of the royal family he’d sworn to protect. Now, at 22 years old and fresh out of college, she’s determined to put aside her X-rated dreams of pat-downs and pillow talk, and find a real life happily ever after.
The Queen of Wessco encourages Ellie to follow in her sister’s footsteps and settle down with a prince of her own. Or a duke, a marquis…a viscount would also do nicely.
But in the pursuit of a fairy tale ending, Ellie learns that the sweetest crushes can be the hardest to let go.
***
Logan St. James grew up on the wrong side of the tracks, in a family on the wrong side of the law. But these days, he covers his tattoos and scars with a respectable suit. He’s handsome, loyal, brave, skilled with his hands and…other body parts.
Any woman would be proud to call him hers.
But there’s only one woman he wants.
For years he’s watched over her, protected her, held her hair back when she was sick, taught her how to throw a punch, and spot a liar.
He dreams of her. Would lay down his life for her.
But beautiful Ellie Hammond’s off-limits.
Everybody knows the bodyguard rules: Never lose focus, never let them out of your sight, and never, ever fall in love.

This book is so different from the other two (actually none of these look even a little bit like the other) because none of the lead characters are royals, Logan is the security guard, and she is Olivia’s sister, so none of them have that pressure we saw before, however, they both suffer the effects of being a part of the royal world. What I thought was really interesting was the development of their relationship. They met when Ellie was still in high school, so I loved how Logan slowly, very very slowly made a connection with her, without ever being creepy or being attracted to a 17-year-old. I also love that Ellie, even though she always had a huge crush on Logan moved on with her life for a while, she wasn’t hung up on this unattainable guy forever. But, we already know “fate” brings them together, and I have to say, I love books that you can’t predict the end, and this was one of them. Logan is so dedicated to his job, and he tells us during the book how it changed his life, so when being with Ellie puts his job at risk, we don’t really know how he’ll solve it.

General grade: 5/5 (I love the slow burn, I love the characters, I love their development and I really enjoyed the plot)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (Ellie is a strong female lead, who can literally do anything she wants with her life, I love the self-defense parts and the small but significant mention of abuse by her ex-boyfriend)
Final grade: 10/10 (There is action, there is cuteness, there is women power, and also a lot of love)

Royally Raised

(Royally #4.5)

by Emma Chase

“He’s a joy to us. They all are. When they’re not busy giving us migraines.” ~King Henry
No one ever said raising children was easy…but raising a future monarch? That’s another story all-together. Get a glimpse into the happily ever after of Wessco’s irresistible royals in Royally Raised – a sweet, sexy, heartwarming short story set twenty years after Royally Matched.

This is a very short novella that tells the future of the royal family, we see Henry and Sarah’s kids, they have a bunch of them and their relationship after 20 years (I don’t know the exact number, but is more than 20), it also makes us want a book about their daughter.

General grade: 4/5 (It is tiny and only left me wanting more)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (Shows how amazing and healthy is Sarah and Henry’s relationship)
Final grade: 9/10 (Super cute and lovely, but it left me frustrated, wanting more)

Royally Yours

(Royally #4)

by Emma Chase

Princess Lenora Celeste Beatrice Arabella Pembrook had an unusual childhood. She was raised to be a Queen—the first Queen of Wessco.
It’s a big deal.
When she’s crowned at just nineteen, the beautiful young monarch is prepared to rule. She’s charming, clever, confident and cunning.
What she isn’t… is married.
It’s her advising council’s first priority. It’s what Parliament is demanding, and what her people want.
Lenora has no desire to tie herself to a man—particularly one who only wants her for her crown. But compromises must be made and royals must do their duty.
Even Queens. Especially them.
**
Years ago, Edward Langdon Richard Dorian Rourke, walked away from his title and country. Now he’s an adventurer—climbing mountains, exploring jungles, going wherever he wants, when he wants—until family devotion brings him home.
And a sacred promise keeps him there.
To Edward, the haughty, guarded little Queen is intriguing, infuriating…and utterly captivating. Wanting her just might drive him mad—or become his greatest adventure.
**
Within the cold, stone walls of the royal palace—mistrust threatens, wills clash, and an undeniable, passionate love will change the future of the monarchy forever.
Every dynasty has a beginning. Every legend starts with a story.
This is theirs.

Now, this is a book that surprised me! This is the story of Nicholas and Henry’s grandparents, and to be honest, during their books, and especially during “Royally Endowed”, I thought she was a b****. She was fixated on traditions and made Olivia miserable, she was cold and distant and like I said, a royal B****. 

However, her book is now my favorite of the series! Her journey reminds me a lot of “The Crown” (Netflix series based on Queen Elizabeth’s life) but with a bit more freedom of imagination. Lenora grew up to be a Queen, but she lost her mother very soon, a few years later her father, and then she had to become Queen, at the mere age of 18. She is a strong woman, ready to rule, ready to change the way of things, ready to use her power to make her country and maybe even the world a better place. During her book, she does revolutionary things, breaks traditions, and allows huge changes, on the country and on herself, and Edward is always there, by her side, supporting her, never mad, or frustrated by her power. Going into this book I braced myself for Edward’s frustration on the invention of roles, where he is the least powerful, where he walks behind her, and bows for her, and she is the Queen, while he is not the king, but he does not, because he is dreamy like that, respectful and supportive and amazing. 

General grade: 5/5 (Surprising, but amazing! Super structured plot, with such interesting plot twists (I didn’t read the synopsis) and deep character development)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (This book is pretty much about women’s power, that’s all I have to say. Also, Edward is just amazing, no toxic masculinity in this one!)
Final grade: 10/10 (Loved everything about it)

Truth or Beard

(Winston Brothers #1)

by Penny Reid 

Beards, brothers, and bikers! Oh my!
Identical twins Beau and Duane Winston might share the same devastatingly handsome face, but where Beau is outgoing and sociable, Duane is broody and reserved. This is why Jessica James, recent college graduate and perpetual level-headed good girl, has been in naïve and unhealthy infatuation with Beau Winston for most of her life.
His friendly smiles make her tongue-tied and weak-kneed, and she’s never been able to move beyond her childhood crush. Whereas Duane and Jessica have always been adversaries. She can’t stand him, and she’s pretty sure he can’t stand the sight of her…
But after a case of mistaken identity, Jessica finds herself in a massive confusion kerfuffle. Jessica James has spent her whole life paralyzed by the fantasy of Beau and her assumptions of Duane’s disdain; therefore she’s unprepared for the reality that is Duane’s insatiable interest, as well as his hot hands and hot mouth and hotter looks. Not helping Jessica’s muddled mind and good girl sensibilities, Duane seems to have gotten himself in trouble with the local biker gang, the Iron Order.
Certainly, Beau’s magic spell is broken. Yet when Jessica finds herself drawn to the man who was always her adversary, now more dangerous than ever, how much of her level-head heart is she willing to risk?

I was in a reading slump when I finished Emma Chase’s series, so I got into my Goodreads TBR and I saw this series, that I heard a lot about and was planning to read for a while but had never got to it. This book took me out of a slump and is about to put me in a deeper one (presently I’m finishing my third Penny Reid series, having spent two months reading these characters, and I just don’t want it to end). I laughed so much reading this book, it is just funny and light-hearted and lovely. Jessica is a character that speaks whatever comes to her mind, and I get some “second-hand shame” (this is the only way I know how to translate the Brazilian term I want to use), but it is just so good.

Like I said before, I love a book where I can’t, for the life of me, predict how they are going to solve their problem, and this is one of them. I just love their dilemmas and personalities and their family, and this book made me realize I actually love a small-town romance.

Honestly, the thing with the Iron Order (which, in the next books, is called Iron Wraiths) is dispensable, if they were not there, it wouldn’t make any difference to the story (it affects the other books, introduces us to Cletus who is just my FAVORITE character of this series, and the bikers, who participate later, on all books) but in this particular one, it didn’t make a lot of sense to me, it felt like an unnecessary addition, but it doesn’t ruin the book, it had too many positive aspects, to begin with.

General grade: 4/5 (Loved the characters, but the action plot was unnecessary)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (Love how Jess knows what she wants, and she is going after it, no matter the man or relationship is in her way, and I love how Duane wants her to follow her dreams, even if it costs him)
Final grade: 9/10 (cute, funny, real, and one of those books that you don’t really know how they are going to figure things out, and I live for this kind of book, so I approve of this)

Grin and Beard It

(Winston Brothers #2)

by Penny Reid

Sienna Diaz is everyone’s favorite “fat” funny lady. The movie studio executives can’t explain it, but her films are out-grossing all the fit and trim headliners and Hollywood’s most beautiful elite. The simple truth is, everyone loves plus-sized Sienna.
But she has a problem, she can’t read maps and her sense of direction is almost as bad as her comedic timing is stellar. Therefore, when Sienna’s latest starring role takes her to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park she finds herself continually lost while trying to navigate the backroads of Green Valley, Tennessee. Much to her consternation, Sienna’s most frequent savior is a ridiculously handsome, charming, and cheeky Park Ranger by the name of Jethro Winston.
Sienna is accustomed to high levels of man-handsome, so it’s not Jethro’s chiseled features or his perfect physique that make Sienna stutter. It’s his southern charm. And gentlemanly manners. And habit of looking at her too long and too often.
Sienna has successfully navigated the labyrinth of Hollywood heart-throbs. But can she traverse the tenuous trails of Tennessee without losing her head? Or worse, her heart?

This one was super cute and Sienna is one of my favorites, but I gotta say, this was not my favorite of the series, as it was simpler than the others. However, just as lovely. Sienna is a workaholic, she reached fame, she is America’s sweetheart, she is the example for generations of girls who are Latinas and plus-size, so she feels it is her duty to all these women that she does her best, but that is tiring. Jethro is a former biker club member (former criminal) and a reformed man, but he carries a lot of guilt, and he has learned his lessons. I have to say, One thing I love about this book, besides Sienna and all her awesomeness, is their honesty! In none of Penny’s books a couple gets into a misunderstanding, their problems are way more developed than that, and all the couples are always honest from the begging, so we connect so much with them, and this is the case in Grin and Beard It, we see a lie, and we immediately think, “yep, she is going to hide this from him the entire book and at 70/80% he is going to find out, and they are going to split and blablabla” but that does not happen!!!! And I just love that! I’m all for honest communication in a book!

Despite all that, this book is super funny, has some deepness, has good relationship role models, Sienna is just the perfect funny, sassy, strong female lead that all books should have, and it’s just so cute!

General grade: 4/5 (Deep character development, slow burn, amazing secondary characters, great plot, but more character-focused)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (Sienna is now on my “powerful, strong women, role model” list because she is the embodiment of a strong, powerful, brilliant woman. And Jethro is an amazing example of non-toxic masculinity male, he is the perfect balance between an alpha male and a cinnamon roll, and they have a strong, communicative relationship, it is just perfect)
Final grade: 9/10 (Amazing characters and world, not a really structured plot)

Beard Science

(Solving for Pie: Cletus and Jenn Mysteries #0)

by Penny Reid

 

Make a deal with the devil and you might get what you want, but will it be what you need?
Jennifer Sylvester wants one thing, and that one thing is NOT to be Tennessee’s reigning Banana Cake Queen. Ever the perpetual good girl and obedient daughter, Jennifer is buckling under the weight of her social media celebrity, her mother’s ambitions, and her father’s puritanical mandates. Jennifer is officially desperate.
And desperate times call for Cletus Winston.
Cletus Winston is a puzzle wrapped in a mystery covered in conundrum sauce, and now he’s in a pickle. Despite being convinced of his own omniscience, extortion by the exalted Banana Cake Queen of Green Valley has taken him completely by surprise. So… what’s a maniacal mastermind to do?
Likely, the last thing you expect.

If you’ve seen my Instagram this past month, I feel like all I’ve talked about was Jenn and Cletus, but I just love them so MUCH. These characters have so much development and such deep stories (and we learn about them in the other books too, so they just have so much development, (read “Beard with Me” to know more about Cletus and their own series, Solving for pie, to know even more about them). Jenn is a shy, quirky girl, whose life is completely controlled by her parents. Cletus is a genius, disguised as the town simpleton, who never gave Jenn a second look, figuring she was just the Banana Cake Queen and not as Cletus says (and I love it) “Astute woman is . . . very astute”. I just love how they are weird but smarter than everyone, they know about everything from everyone, both have their past and their baggage, and they have to learn how to deal with it, together, they are PERFECT for each other.

General grade: 5/5 (Great plot, incredible, unforgettable characters, really developed, amazing secondary characters, just amazing amazing amazing)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (Jenn is strong, and she is learning how to take control over her life, it shines a great light on the subtle abuse of parents over their children and how that shapes your future, your actions, and sometimes your personality, and Cletus is just so weirdly amazing, I also love how they are both misunderstood by people, while also being geniuses.)
Final grade: 10/10 (10, 10, 10, 10, no question)

Beard in Waiting

(Winston Brothers #3.5)

by Penny Reid

A Long scene/short story featuring two unlikely characters from the Winston Brothers series.

This is a very short story, but it gives us a glimpse of a story that is going to appear in Solving for Pie later, so it is an amazing little add, to see the POV of Diane and how her romance starts.

General grade: 4/5 (Cool, but too short)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (Narrates a woman, who lived in an abusive relationship and how she is taking control over her own life, and we know I’m gonna always love that)
Final grade: 9/10 (Again, really cool, but too short)

Beard in Mind

(Winston Brothers #4)

by Penny Reid

All is fair in love and auto maintenance.
Beau Winston is the nicest, most accommodating guy in the world. Usually.
Handsome as the devil and twice as charismatic, Beau lives a charmed life as everyone’s favorite Winston Brother. But since his twin decided to leave town, and his other brother hired a stunning human-porcupine hybrid as a replacement mechanic for their auto shop, Beau Winston’s charmed life has gone to hell in a handbasket.
Shelly Sullivan is not nice and is never accommodating. Ever.
She mumbles to herself, but won’t respond when asked a question. She glares at everyone, especially babies. She won’t shake hands with or touch another person, but has no problems cuddling with a dog. And her damn parrot speaks only in curse words. Beau wants her gone. He wants her out of his auto shop, out of Tennessee, and out of his life.
The only problem is, learning why this porcupine wears her coat of spikes opens a Pandora’s box of complexity—exquisite, tempting, heartbreaking complexity—and Beau Winston soon discovers being nice and accommodating might mean losing what matters most.

This book is a close second favorite! I have said here before that I love books with a psychological side, I love books with characters who have a different experience than mine and Shelly was just a delight to read, not only because she is amazing, but she showed me a side of OCD I never knew and had never thought about.

I also love that she is a strong woman, so freaking strong, advocating for her own mental health and working in a job that we normally don’t see women working in. Furthermore, I just love all sides of her and this journey she enters with Beau is beautiful, while also being complicated and extremely interesting.

Beau is just the cutest, we get to see how he reacts to his twin brother leaving, and to some news about his life, he has the softest heart, and he is struggling with all the change.

I just love all sides of this story!

General grade: 5/5 (amazing plot, amazing characters, amazing story, amazing everything)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (I love books that depiction mental health issues and this one do this so so well, and also shows the hero’s response to all of that, and Beau is just the cutest)
Final grade: 10/10 (love, love, love, love)

Dr. Strange Beard

(Winston Brothers #5)

by Penny Reid 

Hunches, horse races, and heartbreak
Ten years after Simone Payton broke his heart, all Roscoe Winston wants is a doughnut. He’d also like to forget her entirely, but that’s never going to happen. Roscoe remembers everything—every look, every word, every single unrequited second—and the last thing he needs is another memory of Simone.
Unfortunately, after one chance encounter, Simone keeps popping up everywhere he happens to be . . .
Ten years after Roscoe Winston dropped out of her life, all Simone Payton wants is to exploit him. She’d also like some answers from her former best friend about why he ghosted her, but if she never gets those answers, that’s a-okay. Simone let go of the past a long time ago. Seriously, she has. She totally, totally has. She is definitely not still thinking about Roscoe. Nope. She’s more than happy to forget he exists.
But first, she needs just one teeny-tiny favor . . .
Dr. Strange Beard is a full-length romantic comedy novel, can be read as a stand-alone, and is the fifth book in the USA TODAY bestselling Winston Brothers series.

Just like Shelly, Simone is a character with experiences I will never go through. It is sad to say, but Simone was only the second or maybe third black character that I’ve read in romance, and in a very subtle way, this book also shares a little bit of the struggles this population suffers through.

Simone is a strong woman, with a strong and badass job, she has some baggage, she has learned some things from her family, and she is never going to put her heart in harm’s way.

Roscoe is just the cutest, he, like some of his brothers, has the gift of being super charming, and one of his favorite things to do is flirt. Now, this is the part that I don’t really buy, (SPOILER ALERT) Roscoe flirts with everybody, but he has been so hung up on Simone, he never acts on his flirting, he never seals the deal. All Penny’s characters in this town are boy scouts, and I’m not saying its impossible, but staying 10 years without s*x because of your high school crush sounds a bit too much.

But anyway…. He is the cutest, and his situation puts Simone in a place I love to see women, in the place of dominant and more experienced people. I just love love love that.

This book has a bit of action, which is cool, and it is just super cute.

 

General grade: 5/5 (action, unrequited love, childhood friends to lovers, character development, super cool plot)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (Female power, racial awareness, virgin guy, this is self-explanatory)
Final grade: 10/10 (A weird mix that works soooo well)

Beard with Me

(Winston Brothers #6)

by Penny Reid

‘Beard With Me’ is the origin story of Billy Winston and Scarlet St. Claire (aka Claire McClure) and is just the beginning of their epic love story.
No one is better at surviving than Scarlet St. Claire and making the best out of circumstances beyond her control is Scarlet’s specialty. In an apocalyptic situation, she’d be the last person on earth, hermitting like a pro, singing along to her CD Walkman, and dancing like no one is watching.
Scarlet is clever, Scarlet is careful, and Scarlet is smart . . . except when it comes to Billy Winston.
No one is better at fighting than Billy Winston and raging against his circumstances—because nothing is beyond his control—is Billy’s specialty. In an apocalyptic situation, he’d be the first person on earth to lead others to safety, overcome catastrophe, or die trying.
Billy is fearless, Billy is disciplined, and Billy is honorable . . . except when it comes to Scarlet St. Claire.

Now, for this book, you’re gonna need tissues cause there are waterworks coming. Penny warns us in the beginning, this is not a happy book, and it has TRIGGER WARNINGS (Physical abuse, violence, blood, child abuse, animal cruelty, animal death) but I decided to read it anyway, and it was more than worth it. This cannot be read as a standalone, because it tells us the story of not just Billy and Scarlet, but also of all the brothers, we see Duane and Jessica as 12 year-olds, we see Roscoe and Simone as 8 year-olds, we see Jethro while still a part of the Iron Wraiths, we see the “origin story” of Cletus, we see their mother and all the hard work she put into this family and also all the sacrifices and the weight in Billy’s 17-year-old shoulders. I won’t tell much, but this book is beautiful and sad, and emotional, heartwarming and heartbreaking, it has Easter Eggs about the future and explains so much about the others. It is amazing. 

General grade: 5/5 (this book broke me and put me back together, I don’t think I’ve seen a more developed set of characters than this, amazing plot, amazing everything)
Feminist grade: 5/5 (Strong women, strong men, abuse survival, it’s even hard to explain all the little factors that go into loving this book)
Final grade: 10/10 (perfect, but sad, but perfect)

These were all the books I read in June! It was a very productive month and I loved the books I read (if you haven’t noticed by their grades). Have you read any of them? Did you like them? Do you agree with me? If not you can tell me so too! 

Well, that is all for today, I hope you like this post, hope you enjoy these books if you decide to read them. Feel free to leave your opinion about it in the comments and I will see you next time! 

Bye sassy people! 

 

  • I know that some comments I make about decent guys on my posts are the bare minimum a guy should do, so no, they don’t deserve to be treated like gods for doing the minimum, but at the same time, I’ve read a lot of sexist books and I appreciate authors who make characters that can serve as role models and examples of how a decent guy acts and what a loving and respectful relationship looks like. I believe we should always encourage these authors and bring attention to the ones that still write sexist characters and stories. 
  • I make a lot of comments about sexism and healthy role models in books, but a lot of times these characteristics don’t make the book a bad book and definitely don’t make the author a bad author. Please never shame these authors and these books for these comments, I simply feel that we need to have awareness of the less than ideal situations some books bring us, and not use the romanticized problem as examples of what a relationship should be. Most of these authors are still amazing, and the content they write doesn’t reflect directly with their personal views and opinions. Always make sure to respect and be kind to everyone, even while criticizing their content. 

Find Me In 

Meet Me

Meet Me

Brazilian architecture student and book lover

One of my goals in analysing my readings was to talk about important topics, like feminist and consent, because literature, art and culture influence us, and I believe we should always encorage authors who talk about this topics.

Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown

The Cock Down the Block by Amy Award – Review

Hello sassy people! Today we’re talking about The C*ck Down the Block by Ay Award.

Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose – Review

Hello sassy people! Today I’m reviewing Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose!

Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins – Review

Today’s post is about Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins!

The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James – Review

Today’s post is about The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James!

Icebreaker by Hannah Grace – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Icebreaker by Hannah Grace!

Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman!

Top books of 2023!!

These are the best books I read in 2023!
It was an amazing year, full of amazing books and I hope 2024 is even better!

2023 Wrap Up

These are the stats for all the books I read in 2023!I post stats every month, but these are the ones I’m always most excited to analyze! It’s so cool to look back at the year and see how much you read, the different genres, authors, tropes, spice levels…These are all...

My Better Life by Sarah Ready and Non-Toxic Masculinity

Hello sassy people! Today we are talking about Non Toxic Masculinity.

Come check out my Goodreads Reading Challenge!

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2020

I read 148 books in 2020, come see them!

Ana en Noir is currently-reading

The Fourth Time Charm



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

2021 Reading Challenge

2021 Reading Challenge

Ana en Noir has read 18 books toward her goal of 100 books.

hide

Adsense

Books Ana en Noir read

The Fourth Time Charm

The Third Best Thing

The Second We Met

The Perfect First

Sidebarred

Appealed

Sustained

Overruled

Master Baker



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

Books I read in May 2021

Books I read in May 2021

THIS POST MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS!!!! 

This post may contain affiliate links for products and services I recommend. If you make a purchase through these links, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission. 

Hello sassy people! Today I’m gonna tell you guys about all the books I read in May 2021! I finished the Kings of Rittenhouse Series by Maya Hughes and started another series by Emma Chase! 

Fearless King

(Kings of Rittenhouse #4)

by Maya Hughes

 

My first crush. My first heartbreak. My brother’s best friend.
The butterflies in my stomach turned into full blown eagles the second our lips touched. A kiss under the stars that changed our relationship forever.
After a lifetime of wishing, I stared up into Ford’s eyes with his fingers caressing my cheek and my heart racing.
The evening ended with my heart bleeding on the ballroom floor.
He destroyed my heart two years ago…but now he wants back in my life.
This time I won’t fall under his spell. I’ll resist his sexy, scruffy beard, and panty-melting smirk.
I thought I was over him. Hell, I fully planned to wave to him through my rearview mirror…but with one text, in the middle of the night, I know I’m in over my head.
Ford: I need you.

 

I was waiting for this book for a while because I met Olive and Ford in the Fulton U series and I really wanted to see their story. I already knew some of the things that happened in this book, but it managed to surprise me. I really liked this couple, and I really understood both their reasoning and their troubles.

Olive has always lived through her parents’ expectations and after their death, her overprotective brother continues the pressure. That is why Olive is killing herself in medical school and ignoring her dreams. Meanwhile, Ford, who is a professional hockey player, does everything to avoid his best friend’s sister, who he realizes, has grown up. His friendship with Colm is one of the most important in his life, and he would do pretty much anything to save it. These two had to overcome their personal issues before been together, but they never stopped caring for each other, and that shows through the whole book. Super cute, some deep problems solving, and a lot of fighting for what you want.

General grade: 4/5 (Really well writen story, that managed to surprise me even tough I knew a lot of what happened, however not the most memorable one of the series) 
Feminist grade: 5/5 (I love how Olive is strong and I love how Maya describes the pressure and all the mental turmoil that goes on with this character) 
Final grade: 8/10 (I like this couple really much, their story is cute and hard, so I really liked it) 

Heartless King

(Kings of Rittenhouse #5)

by Maya Hughes

 

Two blue lines. That means not pregnant, right? Right? Oh, sh*t.
Five years ago, Colm Frost asked me to marry him and I ran. I ran from my painful past too raw and fresh to escape. He was the only one who looked at me like I wasn’t broken and made me believe it. He made me feel it.
Now, he’s the hot, angry, hockey player on the mend. 
I’m the physiotherapist who’s supposed to get him back on his feet. 
I don’t think our night together was what his doctor prescribed, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t dreamt of him every time I close my eyes. I woke up beside him with my body still singing from the way he fanned the flames of my desire, but I couldn’t stay.
His lips on my neck. His hands wrapped around my waist. His impressive…ahem, touch leaving me breathless.
One moment of wild inhibition and it’s come back to bite me in the butt. Kind of like he did that night.
But a baby? Our night was supposed to be a one time thing, closing a door on the future I couldn’t handle. 
Will this new bump in the road be everything we needed to find our forever?
Heartless King is a standalone friends to enemies to lovers, accidental pregnancy romance that brings all the laugh out loud, angsty feels!

Okay, I gotta be honest, I was not super excited about this book, because in previous books Colm sounded like a moron. However, reading his point of view, he is just a broken guy, who has been trough so much and just doesn’t know how, or just doesn’t want to deal with things. He grew up with neglectful parents, both doctors who didn’t give him or his sister the attention and care they needed, since little he took care of his sister in a search to help and make his parents proud. His parents died and he got severely injured twice. His life is a mess, and he is buried deep in depression. That is when Imogen comes back into his life, carrying her own baggage and her own traumas, and we get to watch while they work trough them together.

Amazing read, amazing characters with the most interesting and deep stories!

General grade: 4/5 (The beginning is a little slow, and it relies on some information from other books of the series, but overall really well written) 
Feminist grade: 4/5 (Colm is a bit rude sometimes, but I just love how Maya describes his mental state and Imogen’s too, super deep and incredibly interesting) 
Final grade: 8/10 (Cute and deep and I love surprise baby stories so…) 

Tangled

(Tangled #1)

by Emma Chase

 

Drew Evans is a winner. Handsome and arrogant, he makes multimillion dollar business deals and seduces New York’s most beautiful women with just a smile. He has loyal friends and an indulgent family. So why has he been shuttered in his apartment for seven days, miserable and depressed?
He’ll tell you he has the flu.
But we all know that’s not really true.
Katherine Brooks is brilliant, beautiful and ambitious. She refuses to let anything – or anyone – derail her path to success. When Kate is hired as the new associate at Drew’s father’s investment banking firm, every aspect of the dashing playboy’s life is thrown into a tailspin. The professional competition she brings is unnerving, his attraction to her is distracting, his failure to entice her into his bed is exasperating.
Then, just when Drew is on the cusp of having everything he wants, his overblown confidence threatens to ruin it all. Will he be able untangle his feelings of lust and tenderness, frustration and fulfillment? Will he rise to the most important challenge of his life?
Can Drew Evans win at love?
Tangled is not your mother’s romance novel. It is an outrageous, passionate, witty narrative about a man who knows a lot about women…just not as much as he thinks he knows. As he tells his story, Drew learns the one thing he never wanted in life, is the only thing he can’t live without.

Okay, so I’ve read Emma Chases’ books before, and I absolutely love her and I heard a lot about Drew Evans, so let’s say I was excited about this book. I absolutely loved Drew, not for his almost (and sometimes fully) sexist comments, but the narration of this book is perfection, Drew is charming and sassy, smart, and he just wins you over the page, I truly loved the way she wrote this book, and we end up forgiving all the shit he says because we just love him so much. And Katherine is so strong, and she gives as strong as she gets, so I just love them both so much.

This is a book that does not deal so much with deep issues, it has some, but is not the main point of the book, so it is light and easy to read and easier to fall in love.

General grade: 5/5 (Amazing narration, hilarious and charming and captivating way to write, loved it) 
Feminist grade: 4/5 (Drew is sexist and a little pushy, but he is so charming it almost makes me want to give this book a 10, almost) 
Final grade: 9/10 (Great, if you don’t count the sexism, it was AMAZING) 

Twisted

(Tangled #2)

by Emma Chase

 

There are two kinds of people in the world. The ones who look first, and the ones who leap. I’ve always been more of a looker. Cautious. A planner. That changed after I met Drew Evans. He was so persistent. So sure of himself – and of me.
But not all love stories end happily ever after. Did you think Drew and I were going to ride off into the sunset? Join the club. Now I have to make a choice, the most important of my life. Drew already made his –in fact, he tried to decide for the both of us. But you know that’s just not my style. So I came back to Greenville. Alone. Well, sort of alone….
What I’ve come to realize is that old habits die hard and sometimes you have to go back to where you began, before you can move ahead.
TWISTED picks up two years after Tangled’s end, and is told from Kate’s POV.

 

I gotta say, I was excited about this book, and it let me down. “Tangled” was just so amazing, I had high standards for this book, and it did not reach them. This book is a series of silly misunderstandings that lead to more and more silly heartbreak, that if they just had one, ONE, honest conversation, none of it would have happened. It is also a series of preposterous assumptions about the other person and never saying your real thoughts out loud. Just a massive, MASSIVE, lack of trust and communication that left me tired. Disappointed. There are more books in this series that feature this couple, but this book made me give up on them, like I said before, it got me tired. Maybe one day I will finish it, but now I don’t have that kind of motivation. 

General grade: 3/5 (Highly unprovable plot, most of the time silly reasons, all depending only on miscommunication and honestly dumbness) 
Feminist grade: 3/5 (This couple should never be taken as an example for reasons I already described above, but just almost ridiculous in the communication department) 
Final grade: 6/10 (Disappointed me and made me give up on the other books of the series, so I don’t have many positives to say, the author is amazing, but this book is definitely not) 

Tamed

(Tangled #3)

by Emma Chase

 

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: girl meets player, they fall in love, player changes his ways.
It’s a good story. But it’s not our story. Ours is a lot more colorful.
When I met Dee I knew right away that she was special. When she met me, she thought I was anything but special–I was exactly like every other guy who’d screwed her over and let her down. It took some time to convince her otherwise, but turns out I can make a convincing argument when sex is at stake.
You might know where this story’s headed. But the best part isn’t where we ended up.
It’s how we got there.
Tamed goes back in time to the Tangled days. But this time around, it’s not Drew dishing out the advice and opinions – it’s his best friend Matthew, who of course is dealing with Dee Dee.

 

I got into this one with low expectations, and in the end, I actually liked it. They were a super cute couple, so honest with themselves and unapologetic and I loved the characters, their personality, their relationship, and their story. 

General grade: 3/5 (Great book, great couple, hilarious and enjoyable, but not super memorable (since I’m writing this, months later, and I couldn’t remember a lot of it before writing this post)) 
Feminist grade: 5/5 (I loved their honesty with themselves and their unapologetic way, Dee Dee is such a strong female, I love her) 
Final grade: 8/10 (Cute and interesting story, especially with the nun jokes and all, just not amazing) 

These were all the books I read in May! Have you read any of them? Did you like them? Do you agree with me? If not you can tell me so too! 

Well, that is all for today, I hope you like this post, hope you enjoy these books if you decide to read them. Feel free to leave your opinion about it in the comments and I will see you next time! 

Bye sassy people! 

 

  • I know that some comments I make about decent guys on my posts are the bare minimum a guy should do, so no, they don’t deserve to be treated like gods for doing the minimum, but at the same time, I’ve read a lot of sexist books and I appreciate authors who make characters that can serve as role models and examples of how a decent guy acts and what a loving and respectful relationship looks like. I believe we should always encourage these authors and bring attention to the ones that still write sexist characters and stories. 
  • I make a lot of comments about sexism and healthy role models in books, but a lot of times these characteristics don’t make the book a bad book and definitely don’t make the author a bad author. Please never shame these authors and these books for these comments, I simply feel that we need to have awareness of the less than ideal situations some books bring us, and not use the romanticized problem as examples of what a relationship should be. Most of these authors are still amazing and the content they write doesn’t reflect directly with their personal views and opinions. Always make sure to respect and be kind to everyone, even while criticizing their content. 

Find Me In 

Meet Me

Meet Me

Brazilian architecture student and book lover

One of my goals in analysing my readings was to talk about important topics, like feminist and consent, because literature, art and culture influence us, and I believe we should always encorage authors who talk about this topics.

Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda J. Brown

The Cock Down the Block by Amy Award – Review

Hello sassy people! Today we’re talking about The C*ck Down the Block by Ay Award.

Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose – Review

Hello sassy people! Today I’m reviewing Catch and Cradle by Katia Rose!

Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins – Review

Today’s post is about Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins!

The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James – Review

Today’s post is about The Irresponsible Puckboy by Eden Finley and Saxon James!

Icebreaker by Hannah Grace – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Icebreaker by Hannah Grace!

Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman – Review

Hello sassy people! Today’s post is about Only One Coffin by A.J. Truman!

Top books of 2023!!

These are the best books I read in 2023!
It was an amazing year, full of amazing books and I hope 2024 is even better!

2023 Wrap Up

These are the stats for all the books I read in 2023!I post stats every month, but these are the ones I’m always most excited to analyze! It’s so cool to look back at the year and see how much you read, the different genres, authors, tropes, spice levels…These are all...

My Better Life by Sarah Ready and Non-Toxic Masculinity

Hello sassy people! Today we are talking about Non Toxic Masculinity.

Come check out my Goodreads Reading Challenge!

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2020

I read 148 books in 2020, come see them!

Ana en Noir is currently-reading

The Fourth Time Charm



Ana en Noir's favorite books »

2021 Reading Challenge

2021 Reading Challenge

Ana en Noir has read 18 books toward her goal of 100 books.

hide

Adsense

Books Ana en Noir read

The Fourth Time Charm

The Third Best Thing

The Second We Met

The Perfect First

Sidebarred

Appealed

Sustained

Overruled

Master Baker



Ana en Noir's favorite books »