Tag Archives: Adrienne Wilder

Christmas 2021 short story banner

2021 Reading challenge: Short Stories (<100 pages)

When I set out to clear my shelves of lingering Christmas themed books I didn’t realize how many short stories I’d gathered over the years. This is a  little surprising, since I’m not a huge fan of short stories. What I am, however, is a collector. If I’m putting a series together I want ALL of it, including the shorts. As a result, I had lots of little extras lingering about on my kindle cloud.

Today I’m going to review several as the first post of my 2021 Christmas reading challenge (other than that initial set-the-challenge post). This is the list I started with:

2021 less than 100 pages christmas


Over all, I was more pleased with the bunch than I would have expected. There were very few total flops for me. I admit that I loved equally as few. But most were pleasant enough, which is all I really ask of a holiday short.

I decided to skip Careened (by Bey Deckard), Illicit Activity (by J.R. Gray), The Greatest Gift (by Felice Stevens), and Family (by Brigham Vaughn) since they were later in series that I’ve not caught up with and don’t stand alone. I didn’t have the time or inclination to read several full books before getting to the point where the short fit in, at least not during the time I set aside for this reading challenge. Hopefully I’ll get to them in the future.

That left 14 stories read, which is still a significant haul. Here, I made a little slide show of them as I read them, after which you can find the individual reviews.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CW8e5xUgrk4/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

 

reviews

Haunted by the Holidays, Kathryn Blanche

Bonus stories for series are always a little chancy. Should they be read first, as an introduction to the series, at some point between books, or after the series to avoid spoilers? The way Haunted by the Holidays is labeled I wasn’t able to do more than guess. I chose to read it, even though I’ve not read the rest of the series. I wouldn’t advice this for others. I still don’t know if it needs to be read at the end of the series, or just after a certain point in the series. But I definitely think you need to know the characters to get the most out of their little holiday interlude.

The writing is pedestrian, but readable and the story is sweet. I especially appreciated that it references Christmas, the Solstice and Hanukah. So, it’s fairly agnostic on which Holiday is being haunted.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

A Private Miscellany, by K.J. Charles

Not much to make this Christmasy excerpt one or two references in letters between parties. But oh well. Mostly I was utterly confused. I’d mistakenly thought this was part of the Charm of Magpie series (which I’ve read), but it isn’t. It’s part of the Society of Gentleman series (which I have, but haven’t yet read). So, little of it made sense to me. So, no real review at this time. I’ll just mark it as read and move SoG up my TBR, thank you very much.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

Chasing Christmas Past, by Melanie Karsak

Enjoyable enough, though a little hard to connect to as I didn’t know any of the characters. This is a ‘prequel’ but I do wonder if it’s not meant to be read after the series so you know everyone. All the same, I liked the steampunk elements and the peak at what seems like a fun crew.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

The Eighth Night, by Jenna Kendrick

I thought this was really sweet and well written. That things moved as quickly as they did stretched credulity a little bit. But it is a short story.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

Christmas at the Wellands, by Liz Jacobs

This was pretty marvelous. There’s enough to it to develop a sense of setting, plot and character. And, oh, what characters! I don’t think it would be possible to not love Kev, Andrew, and the kiddos. There was a sense of predictability to it all, but generally enjoyable.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

A Wizard for Christmas, by Dorothy McFalls

Meh, ok for a little Christmas short. There was nothing overly objectionably about it, but nothing I loved either. The set up was fun but the villain was defeated with unbelievable ease and the romance was rushed and cheesy. Could do with another round of edits, especially to look for missing words. But all in all, not bad.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

The Christmas Prince, by Liv Rancourt

I liked this quite a lot. It’s admittedly been 4+ years since I read The Clockwork Monk, so Trevor was almost a new character to me. But I enjoyed him, his sisters (well, sister and sister’s BFF), the world and the romance. Though that last one was a tad rushed. It is a short story after all and quite a lot is squeezed in. As always, I’d have preferred a full length story, but I’ll take what I can get.

God Rest Ye Merry Vampires, by Liv Rancourt

I liked this a lot. As always, I wish it was longer. I’d love to see this as a full length novel or maybe a full length novel following after it’s events. But I think one of my favorite Rancourt shorts I’ve read.

The Santa Drag, by Liv Rancourt

I think this might have actually been a reread. When I opened it on my Kindle it was at the end and as I read it it was all vaguely familiar. Oh well. It was sweet, if a little insubstantial and unbelievable, with a cute little twist at the end to bring it all together.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

The Ugliest Sweater, by Gillian St. Kevern

Two things you need to know about me. One: I absolutely believe some things can be so ugly that they transcend into glory. Two: I anthropomorphize inanimate objects and then try to rescue them from obscurity or destruction. So, buying and wearing an excessively ugly sweater because no one else would is exactly the kind of thing I would do. So, I could absolutely relate to Dan here. (I also have a Christmas and Christmas decorating obsessed friend who I would say fits Jake almost to a T. But considering all the sex in the story that assertion might be a little awkward.)

I thought the two men and their insecurities were cute together and it was a sweet, easily readable story in general. I’ll be giving St. Kevern another go in the future.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

Fred and Ginger, by Isobel Starling

Meh, it was fine I guess (other than some rough editing). And it’s appreciable being about a gay baker/bakery after the American fracas of a gay couple being denied a wedding cake. But I just found I didn’t particularly care for the characters or the plot. Even as short as it was, I eventually started skimming. I think this is a ‘it’s me, not the story’ situation. Not overly christimasy either, which is only relevant since I read it as part of this Christmas themed reading challenge.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

The Winter Spirit, by Indra Vaughn

I enjoyed this. I liked Nathaniel and Gabriel a lot and I liked them together. I appreciated the emotional complexity of the returning crush and how Nathaniel dealt with it. The whole thing is nicely written and enjoyable to read. I did wish it was a bit more bulked up so that it had enough pages to explain Gabriel’s situation more. The existence of a redemptive task with objectives and rules also suggests the existence of a judiciary. I wanted to know how that worked. All in all, however, I’m pleased with the read.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

Twist of the Magi, by Caren J. Werlinger

This was very sweet. I found it a little predictable and clumsy at time, especially around the Candice character. And the making of Penny’s dream could be argued as the result of nepotism, instead of earned in earnest. Though I imagine that’s not how readers are meant to take it. But generally it was more sweet than anything else. All in all, I enjoyed it.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay

63 Days Later, by Adrienne Wilder

This took a drastically different tone than the full length novel that precedes it (Wild). But it was still nice to catch up with the guys and Daisy. I mean how could you dislike a short story full of puppies?! I did think the POVs were inconsistent and I had a little trouble knowing who was speaking sometimes, but sweet over all.

snowflake-Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay


Ok, that’s a wrap. I’m thrilled to have gotten some these stories read and off my TBR. The oldest I picked up way back in something like 2013!

Come back tomorrow to catch day two of my reading challenge when I review Holiday Haunts, by Imogen Markwell-Tweed & Wendy Dalrymple. How about you, anyone else reading Christmas books?

wild banner

Book Review: Wild, by Adrienne Wilder

I purchased copy of Adrienne Wilder‘s Wild back in 2018. It’s been waiting patiently for attention. But since one of the short stories I included in my Christmas Reading Challenge is a sequel to it, I decided it was time to dive in.
Wild, by Adrienne Wilder

August Vallory had it all. A modeling career, a man he loved, and the extended family he’d acquired in the business. Then the world he knew was torn away when the plane he was on crashed en route to a photo shoot.

Lost in the Alaskan wilderness, August doesn’t stand a chance.

No sane man would choose to live in the Alaskan bush unless he had something to hide. And Keegan Brooks has secrets darker than night, more dangerous than wolves, more brutal than an Alaskan winter.

Every day was a fight for his life until he stumbled upon a downed plane with a lone survivor. Now it’s no longer just Keegan’s life teetering on the edge of survival.

It’s his heart.

my review

In general, I enjoyed this. To be a little more nuanced, I liked the beginning, thought the middle dragged, and then the story picked back up for an exciting ending that then tapered off to a sweet happy ending.

I especially appreciated how bitchy August could sometimes be. I know that sounds like an odd thing to compliment, but I felt like—being in the midst of such a traumatic event—his temper made him relatable. I thought Keegan’s desperate love was emotionally effective and ticked a lot of boxes for me. But I also felt like he and August hadn’t gotten to actually know one another enough for it. The addition of Daisy was marvelous, though she seemed a little too smart to be believed. The villains were admirably villainous, but I predicted exactly how their role in the book would end far before they even showed up. So, no surprises.

The whole thing was well written and easy to read. I caught the occasional editing mishap, but not many and none I thought particularly grievous. I’ll be picking up future Wilder books, for sure.

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Other Reviews:

Book Review: WILD by Adrienne Wilder

https://literaturesandmovies.com/2018/02/02/book-review-wild-by-adrienne-wilder/

nox

Book Review of NoX, by Adrienne Wilder

Cover of Nox, by Adrienne Wilder

I borrowed the audio version of Nox, by Adrienne Wilder through Hoopla.

Description from Goodreads:

A nude man invades Luca Suarez’s home and protects him from creatures who cannot exist. Creatures hunting him. 

The stranger can’t tell Luca why. He can’t even tell Luca his name. He remembers nothing until the moment he sees Luca. The only hint Luca has to the stranger’s identity is a tattoo on his wrist: “N o X”. 

Nox doesn’t know who he is, but he’s sure of three things, his memory loss is temporary, the monsters chasing Luca are called Anubis, and his Alpha, Koda, sent Nox to protect him. There’s just one problem…. Koda is Luca’s brother who was murdered five years ago. 

With each passing hour, Nox fills in the pieces painting an impossible truth. And with each passing hour, both men find themselves inexplicably attracted to each other. Something Luca is willing to embrace because he has nothing left to lose. And one Nox can’t let happen because it could get Luca killed.

Review:

Objectively, I can say this book has flaws. It drags at times. There are several scenes I thought funny, but I also thought weren’t really needed. And the villain was disappointing; both in the sense of his motive being boring and his defeat anti-climatically easy. It felt rushed. However, subjectively, I enjoyed it enough for a 5 star rating. (The narrator, Kirt Graves, may have contributed to this. He did a great job.) At the end of the day that’s what matters. I liked both Nox and Luca and I thought the Anubis an interesting shifter style. Reece and the colonel stole the show for me though. I loved their banter.