Funny Story

Funny Story by Emily Henry

This is a big, funny, contemporary romance with lots of ups and downs. Daphne has moved to northern Michigan with her fiancé, Peter. She’s a children’s librarian and loves her work, but her salary is rather small. After his bachelor party Peter dumps Daphne for his best friend since childhood, Petra. Also, they want Daphne to please move out of Peter’s house in one week! Where to move on short notice? Conveniently, Petra’s ex-boyfriend, Miles, has a spare bedroom.

A friendship forms and they take fake romantic photos for social media to get back at Peter and Petra. Daphne also makes friends with her coworker Ashleigh, a single mom. About the time Miles’ sister Julia comes to town, sparks flame up between Miles and Daphne. Both have major family issues, Peter with his mom and Daphne with her dad. Then Daphne’s dad comes to visit, with Starfire. Daphne blows off Ashleigh’s birthday and an online interview with a library in Maryland near her mother goes very well. Then it’s time for Daphne’s big library fundraiser for the children’s department, months in the planning, an all-night readathon. In the end, all is well, with almost everyone fairly happy. A compelling read; readalikes include novels by Abbi Waxman, Kate Clayborn, and Sarah Dubb. I enjoyed the northern Michigan setting, including Traverse City, which I just re-visited on vacation.

Brenda

Penric and the Bandit

Penric and the Bandit by Lois McMaster Bujold

In this fun fantasy/adventure novella, Penric kin Jurald is on vacation, searching for an abandoned temple where there might be hidden treasure. Horse thief Roz decides to tag along with Penric to get a share of the treasure, if any. He is trying to escape from his former gang of thieves. Thievery is fine with Roz, but he doesn’t have a stomach for violence.

When Roz’s gang catches up, Penric turns out to be a tougher mark than expected, as he is a sorcerer with a demon, and also a religious scholar. The temple is extremely hard to reach and Roz has plenty of time to consider what his priorities are during a long standoff. Everyone but Penric and his demon Desdemona are disappointed with the treasure, when it’s uncovered.

I enjoyed the journey and how Penric did his best to get out of a very tricky situation. The Penric and Desdemona novellas begins with Penric’s Demon, which is also in a collection called Penric’s Progress.

Brenda

Lies and Weddings

Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan

This is a contemporary family saga that’s all glitz and glamor, with lots of drama. There are over-the-top parties, very exclusive restaurants, and weddings in exotic locales. Arabella, Countess of Greshambury, steals most of her scenes with her awfulness. She screams at her three grown children and attempts to control them. Arabella is Chinese, but dislikes most other Asians, including Dr. Eden Tong, who is friends with all three of Arabella’s children, but is especially close to Rufus, an artist. Eden lives with her father, oncologist Dr. Thomas Tong, in a cottage on the Greshambury estate.

Settings include Hawaii, Venice, hot-air ballooning in Morocco, and a fabulous car collection in Los Angeles. There’s also a billionaire secretly very ill with cancer. Many descriptions of gorgeous gowns and decadent meals are included, but this entertaining novel doesn’t take itself too seriously. It reads like a vintage Judith Krantz novel, only less steamy and more fun. There’s also a fair number of characters dealing with racial and class prejudice, family histories with plenty of secrets, plus some lovely friendships. This is a good reach for the beach or backyard.

Brenda

The City Beyond the Sea

Greenwild: The City Beyond the Sea by Pari Thomson

Iffenwild is a wondrous city, part of the Marin Deep, with blue water magic. It’s only a legend to those in the Greenwild, first introduced in Greenwild: The World Behind the Door. Botanists in Amazeria are in danger, and want the Greenwilders to come with help from Iffenwild.

Daisy, the Prof, and Indigo travel to the Moonmarket and sneak onto the Nautilus, one of four theater ships headed to Iffenwild to perform for the city residents and their duchess. Also on board is Max, who’s been ill most of his life and was recently kidnapped by the Grim Reapers. Max and Daisy clash; they have similar personalities. Daisy’s cat, Napoleon, is a help and a comfort, as is Indigo’s parakeet. Daisy struggles to control her green magic, while Max is recovering his strength and secretly learning how to swim. Max, in disguise, gets a walk on role in the Nautilus company’s play, and spends time in a storeroom with a magical memory tree.

The theater, ships, water horses and the land/sea combination of Iffenwild enchant. While dark in parts, this page turning middle grade fantasy novel is a very satisfying read. The depiction and use of magic here is delightful. Some people have power with plants or water, there are magical animals, and there are magical fruits, seeds, leaves, and vines. Excellent! A sequel, The Forest in the Sky, is expected next summer.

Brenda

Birding With Benefits

Birding With Benefits by Sarah T. Dubb

This is such a fun debut romance, and I really appreciate that the couple on the cover are both around 40. Celeste is a middle school language arts teacher. Her daughter Morgan is an amazing artist and a high school senior, though she keeps putting off her college entrance paperwork. Celeste’s ex-husband, Peter, didn’t appreciate her exuberant personality. Her best friend Maria is a brand-new mom. Always trying new hobbies, Celeste meets Chris at a sip and paint event, decorating little teapots.

Chris, who studies snails, connects Celeste with his best friend John, who needs a partner and a fake date for a birding event. The event turns out to be a six-week birding competition in the Tucson area for experienced birders. John would like to start guiding new birders and winning the competition would really help him jumpstart his business. Currently he’s a part-time woodworker. Improbably (but predictably), they agree to partner for the event, and Celeste gradually learns to be a birder. After sparks fly, they decide to be birders with benefits and make out in a closet during a party.

Later on, there are some steamy sex scenes for Celeste and John, but their arrangement is planned to end with the competition. When one of the pair wants a regular relationship, the other one gets cold feet. Celeste also has some parenting issues to cope with, and John worries that he’s not ambitious enough for Celeste.

Sweet, sexy, and funny, with realistic conflicts and characters. The author lives in Tucson, writes under a pen name, and is a birder and librarian. She’s happily under contract for two more books. A readalike author is Emily Henry.

Brenda

A Pair of Cozy Fantasy Novels

Bread and Burglary by Shanna Swendson (Tales of Rydding Village, Book 2)

This is a lovely cozy fantasy novel set in a half-abandoned village. Baker Lucina loves her work and the small village of Rydding, but becomes anxious when the the new smith’s apprentice speaks to her in Tufanan, her native language. Also, Nico was a duke’s guard, and a past relationship with a guard led to Lucina’s fleeing Tufana after an uprising. Wyn makes her tea to help prevent nightmares.

Lucina is hoping to save enough money to send for her Nonna, who raised her and taught her to bake. Some recent thefts in the village have people suspecting Nico, the newest resident. Lucina and the smiths are the only ones not to have been targeted. Does the bread and cream Lucina leaves on her back doorstep every evening help protect her from theft? Her Nonna did the same back in Tufana, as thanks for the magic that makes the bread rise. In this sequel to Tea and Empathy, it’s nice to see the village growing slowly, and for a couple of romance to begin. I look forward to the next Rydding Village tale.

The Baker and the Bard by Fern Haught

This is a graphic novel with colorful and charming illustrations. Juniper works at Mira’s bakery. Hadley plays the flute, makes deliveries for the bakery, has a pink pet snake, and longs for adventure. Neither teen look quite human.

A large rush order for tarts made with glowing mushrooms come in to the bakery. Mira asks Juniper and Hadley to travel to the woods to gether the fungi. Of course, their quest does not go smoothly, but they make friends along the way. This includes a fey named Thistle, who has giant caterpillar friends. This is a sweet and cozy queer fantasy.

Brenda

Haunted Ever After

Haunted Ever After by Jen DeLuca

I loved reading Jen DeLuca’s four romantic comedies set at Renaissance Faires, beginning with Well Met, so I was happy to read her new book.

Set on Florida’s Gulf Coast, Boneyard Key attracts quite a few tourists. Local assume that Cassie, fresh from Orlando, is just another tourist, but she’s hoping to put down roots in the Hawkins House. On her balcony one night Cassie overhears Sophie’s ghost tour, learning that her cottage is said to be haunted by mean old Mrs. Hawkins. Well, really! Cassie absolutely doesn’t believe in ghosts. When her laptop won’t charge and she needs power and wi-fi for a work meeting, she rushes into Haunted Grounds, the local coffee shop, at the last minute. She encounters owner Nick and it is decidedly not a meet-cute scene. The coffee shop and small 2nd floor apartment are said to be haunted by original owner Elmer, who supposedly communicates with Nick by text. Locals also leave an open beer bottle for the usually quiet Beach Bum ghost while they watch the sunset.

Cassie’s gorgeous sunset posts on her group chat with Orlando friends don’t get many comments; all the chat lately seems to be about baby gear. Then the poetry magnets on Cassie’s fridge start moving around, and she starts thinking there may be something to Boneyard Key’s haunted reputation. She develops a friendship with Nick that has potential to become romantic, though Nick wonders if she’ll stay on the island.

The author previously lived in Florida and her love of the area shows in the descriptions of the island, and even of Publix supermarket subs. I enjoyed this novel, and look forward to a sequel or two. Readalikes include the Lucky Lexie cozy mysteries by Shanna Swendson, beginning with Interview With a Dead Editor, and Be My Ghost and High Spirits by Carol Perry.

Brenda

About the book jacket photo: Little Bear thought it was time he made another appearance on our blog.

The Comfort of Ghosts

The Comfort of Ghosts by Jacqueline Winspear

The final, nostalgic, Maisie Dobbs mystery is set in England after World War II. The first book was set over 30 years earlier when Maisie was a young teen, beginning work as a maid, then going on to be a nurse in World War I. Now Maisie is married to an American, has a daughter and an Alsatian dog, and works as a psychologist and investigator. Her current case has ties to her youth, and is connected to four teens she finds squatting in a vacant mansion along with a very ill soldier who’s just returned to England from east Asia.

Priscilla, while facing some challenges, is still Maisie’s best friend, and Maisie’s father, stepmother, and former mother-in-law all live nearby. Many connected strands of plot and Maisie’s past need to be untangled, and both Maisie and her long-time coworker Billy have need of advice. I found this to be a very satisfying read. A friend commented that there are too many coincidences in this mystery, and I agree. It feels like the author wanted to connect as many of her characters as she could within the covers of this final book. The first book is titled Maisie Dobbs.

Brenda

A Daughter of Fair Verona

A Daughter of Fair Verona by Christina Dodd

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this historical rom com, set 20 years after the events of Romeo & Juliet. In this version, Romeo and Juliet have a different ending, and are raising a family in Verona. Oldest child Rosaline is almost 20 and still unmarried. She’s had a few fiancés, but has matched them with other young ladies. Then Duke Stephano, widowed multiple times, encounters Rosie and wants to marry her, even without a dowry. Rosie is enamored of fair Lysander, who climbs into the Montague compound with a special ladder, and they have a few humorous encounters. Then there’s the scarred Prince Escalus, who’s raising his young sister, Princess Isabelle. Rosie’s whole family likes Isabelle, and she enjoys their lively and boisterous household, with loving parents. Many women are attracted to Romeo, but he only has eyes for his Juliet, who is pregnant, again. Romeo still has a temper, as does Rosie.

Rosie spends time at the apothecary shop run by Friar Laurence, escorted by her formidable Nurse. They all go to the scene when a young man is poisoned, and later find another apothecary dead. Rosie is soon suspected of murder and needs to clear her name lest she be sent to a nunnery, so she investigates. The investigation makes this novel a mystery, but it’s mostly a family story set in Verona with some romance and quite a lot of humor. I enjoyed the setting and the characters, and look forward to a planned sequel. The recipe for Juliet’s fruit and nut bread is available on the author’s website, here.

Brenda

The Lost Story

The Lost Story by Meg Shaffer

This portal fantasy novel was inspired by C.S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia, but Shanandoah does not feel like Narnia to me. Shanandoah is a magical land that can only be reached through the Red Crow Forest in West Virginia.

Emilie is grieving for her adoptive mother then learns that she has a half-sister, Shannon, who went missing in the Red Crow Forest many years ago. Two teen boys, Jeremy and Rafe, also went missing in the forest but were found several months later. Both adults now, Rafe has no memories of these months while Jeremy searches for missing women and children.

Emilie, Jeremy, and Rafe go into the forest, and predictably, end up in Shanandoah. While delightfully magical, it’s also filled with grave dangers. Rafe learns that he put his memories into a book before leaving Shanandoah, and doesn’t remember that he and Jeremy were in love. Emilie has always found music magical. She talks a lot, especially when she’s nervous, and has a pet rat named Fritz (which I thought was sweet, as I had a pet rat named Rosemary when I was a girl). They find Emilie’s sister, who’s welcoming to everyone, even Fritz.

Shanandoah is not very much like West Virginia, and Emilie never wants to leave. But Rafe’s Mom will miss him if he stays. In this resemblance to Narnia, Rafe and Jeremy learn that if they leave, they can never return to Shanandoah, or at least not unless the storyteller (and narrator) can write them back in a sequel. An engaging and compelling read, but not a cozy fantasy. I also enjoyed the author’s earlier novel, The Wishing Game.

Brenda