Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts

Thursday, June 7, 2012

The Turks Series by Liz Crowe-Reviews


In honor of Liz Crowe's release tomorrow of The Diplomat's Daughter, I thought I would share my reviews of the Deniz children stories that were published last year.  This series was the best series I read last year and Blue Cruise was in my top 5 books of last year.  I have reprinted this from Harlie's Book Blog from last December.  


Congratulations to Liz on The Diplomat's Daughter release tomorrow.  I've waited impatiently for this release and the final installment, too.  


Sure are pretty covers, huh?  Well, underneath those covers are some of the best books that I have read all year.  I have decided to review the whole series instead of individually.  There is a reason for that I will get to that later.  


Turkish Delights is a story about an American woman, Elle, that is has been living in Turkey for the past couple of years.  Elle finds herself falling in love with a Turkish man, Emre, fifteen years her junior. When she decides to contract to Madame Eve’s dating service for a night, she has no idea what she is store for and the delights that wait for her.  I adored this book from the start.  Elle is a strong woman that has fallen for Emre and thinks that it would never work between them.  Emre has one shot with Elle before she leaves and believes that a relationship between them is destiny.   You can feel the intensity that Elle and Emre have for one another and the lengths that they go to be with each other.  Age is just a number and it doesn’t care if two people love each other.  This is a multi-cultural story actually set in Turkey.  The richness in Liz’s writing shows the depth of her love for the country and the people.  I can still smell the spice bazaar as I type.  While the sex is hot from the beginning, what sets it apart is the emotional depth and intensity that Liz has created between Elle and Emre.  Elle and Emre set the tone for the entire series and it is best that you read the books in order.



Blue Cruise was a rare book for me to read for a couple of reasons.  I laughed, I fell in love, I cried buckets and I sighed.  This is only my second m/m read so I wasn’t sure what to expect.  Caleb and Tarkan were destined from the start.  We pick up their story after being together for a couple of years.  Caleb is Elle’s personal assistant and instrumental in talking some sense into Elle’s head about Emre.  Tarkan and Emre are twins and couldn’t be more different.  Tarkan’s culture sees their relationship as wrong and his father has made the decision that he does his stint in the military.  Much to horror of Caleb, Elle and Tarkan’s family, his station is attacked.  Caleb is numb with grief and has a hard time being around Emre because of it.  Elle decides that the only way for Caleb to deal with his grief is to contact Madame Eve and set up a Blue Cruise for him.  Deciding that Elle is right, Caleb goes back to Turkey and finally starts to heal the pain that has had a hold on him for the past couple of years.  Adem is perfect for Caleb.  He doesn’t rush Caleb into a relationship and he listens to Caleb.  The communication between Caleb and Adem was open, honest and done with a deft hand.  Again, the emotional intensity between Elle, Emre, Tarkan, Caleb and Adem is layered and believable. 

I will admit that Tulip Princess was a hard read for me.  It is the final book in the trilogy of the Deniz siblings.  Lale is wild and doesn’t seem to want to settle down anytime soon.    Her parents are at their wit’s end and decide that she needs to go live with Elle and Emre.  While she is there, she helps them with her niece and finds that she doesn’t need that lifestyle anymore.  When Elle decides that Lale needs a night out, she sets her up with Madame Eve and Emre is livid.  The intense dialogue between Lale, Emre and Elle is beautifully written and handled with humor (yes, you will chuckle at Elle) and honesty.    While I liked Lale very much, I didn’t like Andreas in the beginning.  It wasn’t until the end of the book that I finally made a connection with him.  Lale and Andreas were too much alike and it took them to fall apart before they realized that they were perfect for each other. 

As a whole, the series was one of the best trilogies that I have ever read.  The writing, pacing, plots and dialogue were beautifully done.  Each book delivered on the emotional scale for me, too.  With Elle/Emre, I was laughing and sighing.  With Tarkan/Caleb/Adem, it was crying and joys in Caleb’s healing.  Lale/Andreas it was frustration and then belief that they would make it as a couple.  If you have put off buying the series because its multicultural or that some of the subject matter that Liz brings to the surface is not for you…think again.  It is a series that should be read, discussed and re-read again.  A word of caution though…okay, a couple…bring tissues, carve out a couple of hours and please, please read them in order.  You can read them as stand alones but reading them order only enhances each book.

Overall rating:  5 Harlies and a recommend read

Saturday, November 12, 2011

If You Don't Like Erotic Romance...

...then why in the hell are you reading it?




Better still, why do you feel compelled to comment on how bad you think it is because of all the sex?

Just recently I stumbled onto a review site that delights in tearing apart authors in its reviews, especially erotic romance authors. I found the site because I was looking up an erotic contemporary from an author I really love. Damn, did the review tear her latest book apart. And the comments after the review reminded me of teenaged girls in high school. Seriously nasty. Some were downright personal and cruel.

Which brings me to why I'm writing this blog. I'm mystified by reviewers or readers who say they started the book and were horrified by the steamy scenes or multiple partners or BDSM. Huh? What did they expect in an erotic romance that's clearly marked as a menage or one with some kink? A handshake? A kiss on the cheek? Longing, yearning gazes?

Erotic romance has sex - most times, lots of sex - hot, steamy, lusty sex - time to face the truth.

Many times these individuals complain that there's absolutely no romance, only the sex. All right, I'll admit that happens sometimes, and authors who make that mistake don't reach many fans because erotic romance is about the physical and emotional journey of the characters. On occasion, someone bitches about the storyline being so fantastic that no normal woman would want to do that with the guy (or guys). Granted, that may be true, but this is fiction, ladies. If we wrote about what we did during an ordinary day with ordinary guys our readers would die from boredom.

If you don't like the genre, don't read it. No one is holding a gun to your head. If you want realism, then read non-fiction, there's plenty out there.

Just don't think your opinion is the be all and end all. The author who was torn apart in the review is a national bestseller. Apparently many, including me, believe her work to be spot on.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Reviews by Stephanie Julian

A good review can make your day.

A bad review can ruin your week.

But what about the mediocre review? The reader liked it but had problems. The characters were superficial or the plot had holes.The story just didn't do it for them.

Those are the ones that make you doubt.

Are they right? Could I have done something differently? Did I make the right choices?

A good review validates your ability. A bad review you can write off. But those mediocre reviews... They gnaw at your brain and make you question.

I do read all my reviews, good and bad. I like to know what readers are saying. Of course, I love the great ones and most of the bad ones I can brush off as the reader having a bad day. But when a reader takes the time to write 20 inches about why she just couldn't get into my story, you have to stop and think. And when a few readers say the same thing, well then maybe, just maybe, I should have given that story more thought.

Then again, maybe not. Because for me, for as many mediocre reviews I get, there are an equal number of good reviews. And occasionally, a few really great ones.

I take a great deal of pride in writing the best story I can and to create characters who the reader can identify and fall in love with.Not everyone's going to be on the same page with me all the time.

And that's okay.

There are days I'm just happy someone is taking the time to read my stories.