The Lone Sheriff by Lynna Banning
Why have a Pinkerton Agent heroine and then make her behave like any random heroine in a romance novel?
Why have a Pinkerton Agent heroine and then make her behave like any random heroine in a romance novel?
Engaged in Sin is quite the cartoon, starring a blind man with the jitters and the prostitute who wants to save the world.
Once the author gets all the misogyny and double standards out of the way, the story is actually readable.
Just when the party is heating up, it’s time to say goodbye to the Edge with a book that hits as much as it misses the mark.
All that glitters aren’t exactly gold in the looting primer Treasure: Fortunes Lost and Found.
Wicked Temptation features main characters who are just too capable to the point that the story lacks compelling suspense.
The romance is fine, the pacing is solid, the premise is good… but the plot! Where’s the suspense?
Is this a standalone story, or a thinly-veiled ad and fanservice for the author’s Lady Julia Grey books?
Any fan of Sarah Brightman has probably heard most of the songs here, so there’s no need to bother. Unless you like Done a lot, that is.
Come savor the best Japan cinema has to offer: disembowelment, gore, vagina-to-mouth skewer attacks and more.