A Bride in the Bargain by Deeanne Gist

Tuesday, July 21, 2009


A Sweet Romance


In the 1850s, Joe Denton had a wife and planned to settle in Seattle. He acquired a considerable amount of land through a deal with the government. His wife died before she could join him, and the judge in town tells Joe he has to give up half his land due to the stipulation in the deal that he must have a wife. Either produce a death certificate for his dead wife, or produce another wife. That was the order. Joe couldn’t produce a death certificate due to a records fire, so his only other option to save his land – and the last 10 years of his hard work – is to produce a new wife. Asa Mercer is arranging marriages, and Joe Denton begrudgingly signs up to be a groom.

Anna Ivey is tired of working for a letch and living alone in post-Civil War Maine. She decides to travel by sea to Seattle and become a cook. Asa Mercer, her means of travel, allows her to believe she is travelling to take on the job as cook, not as a bride. All is well until Joe and Anna meet and Anna refuses to marry.

A Bride in the Bargain is a captivating historical romance which follows the typical boy meets girl, boy and girl fall in love, boy and girl can’t be together for whatever reason, and all ends well. However, Deeanne Gist is able to create characters that draw you into the tale and invest your emotions in their lives. The secondary characters are just as endearing as the hero and heroine, and there is no surprise that the couple and their friends must stay together in order not to disappoint the reader. The author does break from the traditional mold and adds a little twist, just when you think the story is coming to an end. An unforeseen complication arises and takes hold of the reader until the close of the book. A enjoyable, romantic read which I highly recommend.

And the winner is....

Sunday, July 19, 2009

I recently advertised a book giveaway on FrugalReader to give away my ARC copy of Gloria Mallette's "Sassy", which I loved!

I completed the drawing this morning, and here is my post to the forum over at FrugalReader.


Ok, ladies and gentlemen, the drawing is over...
The list of contestants is (in order of comment):
1. icedream
2. JoanneR
3. dmbuffy
4. mama2skyjax
5. Lenda
6. JDobs

And the winner is.....

True Random Number Generator Min: Max: Result: 3 Powered by RANDOM.ORG


dmbuffy!!! Congratulations Dayna!!

And, to thank everyone for participating in my very first ARC giveaway (which helps me get more ARCs:-), everyone (including ConnieJ) will get to choose either a book from my shelf or a credit from me. Dayna -- choose another book in addition to Sassy, or a credit to go with it.

Thanks again everyone!!

Review: Sassy by Gloria Mallette

Monday, July 6, 2009



Sassy by Gloria Mallette
Published by Gemini Press
May 2009
ISBN: 978-0-9678789-3-5

Romance, Suspense...Whodunnit?



Sassy Davenport writes successful romance novels for a living, but what she writes comes from her imagination, not her experience. Her current relationship is unremarkably bland and unfulfilling. Then, she meets a handsome architect at her latest book signing and her love life begins to take on a more interesting appeal. After falling head over heels, she is forced to ask herself if she has made a horrible mistake – is this wonderful man truly the brutal murderer he is accused of being, or is this a terrible case of mistaken identity?

Gloria Mallette has succeeded in writing a book so captivating this reader didn’t want to put it down. From page one, the author plunges the reader directly into the crux of the story and grabs her attention. On page ten I ask myself rhetorically, “how is this going to play out?” The suspense is constant, and just when you think the author has given herself away, it’s time to think again – or is it?

Ms. Mallette has included a wide range of feelings and emotions in her characters: hate, anger, love, compassion, jealousy. Some of her characters have them, and other characters evoke them. She’s used shock, suspense, romance, mystery, sympathy and even repulsion to draw in the reader to abandon the lukewarm attitude of a moderate novel, to the eager, anticipating climax of an intense story.

 
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