Gena Showalter has loads of her paperbacks in Target, and I picked this one up, mostly because the cover featured this guy sort of clawing the air, and his picture was overlaid with that printing shellac that shows up when light is reflected on it. And the blurb on the back had keywords like,
"Dragon: Atlantis: Shapechanger: Vampires: and Portals"....okay, I've loved the concept of Atlantis since I was little girl. Loved dragons, too. So, I skimmed. Interesting premise, didn't seem to overloaded with politics and worldbuilding (though I wouldn't know, since it was only a skim) and my first reaction was, holy cow, there really IS an outlandish paranormal romance for everyone. How unlikely is THIS combination of location and mythical beings? Eh?
No, I didn't buy it, since I've spent too much $$ on other books lately (not to mention Xmas presents) so...it'll have to wait. We'll see.Right now I'm reading Wuthering Heights, and whoa. Talk about complex on every level.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-02 05:51 am (UTC)She's since moved to the underwater theme (Atlantis), male sex driven nymphs, a redo of the Pygmalion story with an alien as the statue...she really seems to like the SF aspect, and uses aliens as the main male protagonists.
The LA system seems to carry only some of the books that I've seen on Amazon. But that's the way it usually is.
Yeah, there were Vampires of some sort in this Atlantis based romance, but I could NOT for the life of me understand what the one had to do with the other, other than her agent or publisher suggested using them because "Vampires--they HUGE right now!" (as the bad guys).
Honest. Makes me think even *I* could write these things (but I know it's probably a lot harder than it looks to write a good book in this genre)
no subject
Date: 2009-01-03 01:31 am (UTC)Sometimes they have a good start, but then decide to write an ongoing series and milk the idea dry long before the series is over.
A good book in any genre is hard to find. The book club I'm in reads mostly romance, but a wide variety of subgenres. We've read young adult, paranormal, Christian romance, erotica, historicals and just about anything else you can name.
Oddly, most of the "big names" are ones we avoid like the plague. What is "comfort food" for some is just too bland for us. I often suspect they're bland on purpose, so as to not offend a wider potential audience.
We've sought out a lot of new authors trying to find something good, but we've had awful luck lately. I don't think we've had a book by a mainstream publisher everyone's liked in over a year. There was one from a small press everyone liked a few months back.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-03 02:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-03 02:22 am (UTC)I didn't get to read that one at the time, as it was during my last bought of not having a co-worker then training a new one, and our meetings are the same night of the week the library stays open.
I've got it in the library collection though (the library buys books for the club at a discount, the club donates a copy back), so I'll get to it eventually.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-03 02:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-03 02:23 am (UTC)