This Chick Read: Once Smitten, Twice Shy (Wilmot Sisters #3) by Chloe Liese

Once a hopeless romantic, Juliet Wilmot has sworn off love. Burned by her previous relationship she doesn’t trust her heart and doesn’t want to take any more chances with it. Will Orsino knows romance isn’t in his future but for the sake of his family business he knows he needs a partner to help out and he’s open to a marriage of convenience. When they keep running into each other Juliet and will strike up a bargain. They’ll practice with each other to help build up trust to go out into the world and find their person, but what happens when practice makes perfect?

The characters in Chloe Liese’s novels are always so interesting with real life issues that give their story more depth. Will is neuro-divergent and is on the autism scale and Chloe has a debilitating form of joint disease that makes movement painful. As someone who suffers from arthritis I found it really interesting to read about a character who suffers similarly. How does her pain affect her relationship with Will? How do they both help navigate each others problems and emotions? It certainly adds to the story in a very realistic way.

I’ve enjoyed the Wilmot sisters novels because these ladies are straight shooters and don’t take lip from anyone. Juliet seemed to be the most romantic in nature and her heartbreak could’ve caused more than a few small trust issues. Thankfully the author didn’t keep us waiting too long before the characters realized where their emotions were leading them. Maybe because of this there was a little lack in tension which gave the other two novels more of a conclusive feel to the two partners coming together. I think that would be my only criticism for this novel. They were both just so nice and there wasn’t a whole lot of conflict. Other than that it was an enjoyable story! ❤️❤️❤️❤️

I received a copy of this book through NetGalley for an honest review and it was honest.

Click this link to purchase this book!* Once Smitten, Twice Shy

Copyright 2024 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick’s Audio Review: The Sam Quinn series by Seana Kelly

Thanks to my sister who pointed me in the direction of these audiobooks, I spent a few weeks immersed in this really great paranormal fantasy series by Seana Kelly. The heroine, Sam Quinn, runs a bookstore/bar called the Slaughtered Lamb, which caters to the local San Francisco paranormal community. I’m talking fae, werewolves, vampires, mermaids, etc. You name it and that species frequents her bar. Learning about all of these species and the way this author imagined them captured my imagination and held my interest.

There are seven books in the series, the first being ‘The Slaughtered Lamb’ and the seventh ‘The Bloody Ruin’. All are narrated by the very talented Samantha Desz, who imbues the character of Sam Quinn with such humanity, even though she is a werewolf-witch hybrid. There is a ton of humor in these novels and the narrator is spot on with the snarky dialog, accents, and good vs. evil personas. I was hooked from the first chapter and spent all of my time with this fascinating new character- watching her evolve, fight to survive everyone who is trying to kill her, and fall in love with Clive- the Master Vampire of San Francisco. If you are in the mood for a bit of fun, well these books are certainly that.

Each novel has its own mystery of sorts, but there’s a common theme or plot that runs through all of the books. Sam’s werewolf bloodline goes back to the origination of werewolves and her witch line is similarly historic. Those two things mean that she finds herself with some cool physical traits and powers that develop during these stories, but also that other beings find her too dangerous and are always out to kill her. Clive, too, has his own historical storyline, being centuries old, so between the two of them there is never a dull moment in these books and their characters are a constant surprise, revealing hidden depths to their backgrounds and nature. I loved each moment and really found these audiobooks unputdownable. Seriously, they were very addictive so beware.

❤️❤️❤️❤️❣️

Click this link to purchase this book!* The Slaughtered Lamb

Copyright 2025 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: A Language of Dragons by S.F. Williamson

In an alternate London in 1923, one girl accidentally breaks the tenuous truce between dragons and humans in this sweeping debut and epic retelling of Bletchley Park steeped in language, class, and forbidden romance.

When Vivian Featherswallow inadvertently helps break the truce between the dragons and humans she is taken to Bletchley Park where she’s put on a team of codebreakers set to crack the secret dragon language that could help the humans win the war. If she succeeds, she and her family will survive, if she doesn’t they’ll all die. No pressure! As she unravels this new language she discovers corruption in her own government and has to make a decision between the lives of her family and doing what’s right for the world.

S.F. Williamson does a wonderful job of building a world that feels familiar but is completely different than a world where the reader lives. I loved the different dragon species and Finley’s ability to speak different dragon languages really adds to that global feel of different lands where these dragons lived. Her 1920’s London felt very post world war era appropriate that added to the ambience and set the mood.

The story flowed so well. All of the characters were interesting, added to the story and theme, and helped build Viv up into someone who the reader could like. She didn’t start off that way, but by the end of the book she had a redemption arc that left me wanting to know more about her, this world, and what would happen next. All in all I thought it was a solid fantasy novel, with hints of greatness. I’ll definitely be picking up the next novel when it comes out. ❤️❤️❤️❤️

I received a copy of this book through NetGalley for an honest review and it was honest.

Click this link to purchase this book!* A Language of Dragons

Copyright 2025 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: Better Than Revenge by Kasie West

Finley has only ever had one goal in life, to become a famous podcaster. The first step is to audition and land the job on her high school’s podcast team. She has come up with the perfect pitch but her plans are waylaid when her football obsessed boyfriends decides to try out last minute, uses her idea, and takes her place on the team. Finley and her friends come up with the perfect plan for revenge but needs the help of her ex’s nemesis, Theo, to pull it off. What she doesn’t count on is the connection she starts to build with Theo.

I can always count on Kasie West for great characters, a good story, and a surprising theme. In this novel it was the sweet story that Finley’s grandmother tells about her first love, captured on Finley’s personal podcast. That story provided the heart, while Finley, Theo, and Jensen provided the conflict and resolution. While the story was pretty simple, I thought it was entertaining and provided the warm fuzzies I needed.

The high school story arc was pretty simple, young love, betrayal, and redemption but despite those themes the characters were pretty unique. Finley’s group of friends were diverse and eclectic, Theo was multi-layered, and Finley’s podcasting unique. It was truly only Jensen that fell into that stereotypical obtuse jock, but as he was set up as the villain I wasn’t really bothered by his simplicity. Finley’s future was on podcasting and Theo and those two had more depth and held my interest. The author did a great job of building the tension in the story so that the resolution felt impactful and satisfying. I really liked how this story played out!

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

I received a copy of this book through NetGalley for an honest review and it was honest!

Click this link to purchase this book!* Better Than Revenge

Copyright 2025 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: Dating and Dragons by Kristy Boyce

Quinn Norton knows that making new friends at a brand new high school is almost impossible, especially when it’s the middle of the year but when she’s invited to join a D&D game she’s determined to make this friend group work. Even though they livestream their games and enforce strict rules like no phones and no dating inside the friend group. She’s slightly disappointed in that last rule because when she first meets Logan she thinks they have a great connection but as soon as she joins the group he becomes insufferable and rude. After a while she begins to wonder if his behavior is a smokescreen for hidden feelings?

I had a great time reading this author’s first novel Dungeons and Drama so when I saw this second D&D themed young adult novel I couldn’t resist, even though I don’t fall within the target demo. Dating and Dragons, while not quite as good as the first is a very cute, and very quick read. It’s a simple premise but the author does such a good job making the subject matter easy to grasp for a D&D novice, and the characters were very likable and interesting.

I think we’ve all been the new girl at some point or other so it’s easy to identify with Quinn’s situation- starting a new school and wanting to make friends. As an adult, every time you start a new job you find yourself in similar situations and despite the whole aging process, it sometimes feels like you never left high school and all of those insecurities you had as a teen. I loved how this new group Quinn wants to join reflects the society that we live in today. D&D, in my day, wouldn’t be something you’d admit to playing, but now all kinds of games, hobbies, and different groups of people are not looked at as being different at all. For me, that was one of the things that made this story so refreshing. The easy to read story and likable characters didn’t hurt either!

❤️❤️❤️❤️

I received a copy of this book through NetGalley for an honest review and it was honest!

Click this link to purchase this book!* Dating and Dragons

Copyright 2024 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the affiliated link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: When Stars Collide (Dallas Stars #9) by Susan Elizabeth Phillips

Dallas Stars backup quarterback Thad Owens and international Opera star Olivia Shore are traveling together to help promote an international luxury watch brand. He has little tolerance for divas and she has little tolerance for lowbrow jocks. When she starts receiving threatening letters and haunting photographs about her ex-fiancé’s death Thad steps in as emotional and physical support. Their month-long journey to help promote a watch brand turns into a supportive friendship that they don’t want to give up when their traveling ends. This emotional journey of a brilliant woman whose career is everything and a talented man who will never happy with second place proves that anything can happen when two stars collide.

What a fun novel! Olivia was a very layered character. The death of her fiancé and the threatening letters about her death has created a psychological issue that may affect her being able to perform. When she meets Thad she is hiding what’s wrong with her so yeah, she definitely looks like a diva. In truth she’s very down to earth and a wonderful person. Thad is also multi-layered. He’s a serial back-up quarterback who helps troubleshoot the issues with the player he’s hoping to replace. He has the eye, skill, and intelligence to excel, yet has a depth perception issue that keeps him from being a superstar himself. Both of these characters are looking to be #1, and don’t have the time or need for someone who can’t be in a supportive role in their relationship. Their issue is how to solve that problem while still remaining together.

I loved how Thad and Olivia’s story evolved. Even though I will never be either a pro quarterback or international opera star, their story connection and problems felt real. The only exception being the mystery of who is trying to hurt Olivia. That part felt a little contrived, but man, I really enjoyed this novel!

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

Click this link to purchase this book!* When Stars Collide

Copyright 2024 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: All Folked Up (Good Folk #3) by Penny Reid

Isaac Sylvester is back in town. Brother of the beloved Banana Queen, Jennifer Sylvester, and once a member of the Iron Wraiths, his return has people talking. Hannah Townsend is retiring as an exotic dancer to become manager of the Pink Pony. When Isaac shows up at her retirement party she figures he’s been gifted to her by the other dancers, after all he’s her “stand in”, the person she imagines as she dances. Isaac isn’t there as a gift, he’s an undercover investigator and he needs her help with an assignment. Hannah isn’t thrilled that she miscalled his intentions but agrees to help and “hires” him to be a bouncer until his investigation is completed.

Isaac has been a side character in quite a few of the novels in both the Good Folk series but also the Winston Bros series. If you’ve read all of Penny Reid’s novels you realize that all is not as it seems with Isaac, but Hannah only knows what she’s heard around town and that information is exactly what Isaac wants known. The start of their working relationship is kind of rocky, but once their misunderstanding is cleaned up their relationship is on another level. Isaac’s undercover story is not who he is at all and as his true intentions are revealed he becomes everything Hannah could ever want.

I thought this was a really sweet story. Hannah was smart and savvy, and Isaac in some ways was socially innocent but also very smart. The two of them together made for a really interesting couple and their story fascinating to read. Penny Reid also filled this novel with great dialogue and side characters, as she does with all of her stories and I enjoyed every moment as I read it.

❤️❤️❤️❤️

Click this link to purchase this book!* All Folked Up

Copyright 2024 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchased this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: How to Hide in Plain Sight by Emma Noyes

Eliot Beck hasn’t seen her family in three years. She adores them but their chaotic, dysfunctional way of dealing with each other was part of her decision to move by herself to Manhattan instead of going to college. When she left her family behind she also left her best friend Manuel behind, never returning a text or phone call. When she arrives in Canada for her brothers wedding the first person she sees is Manuel and she is not ready to face the person who knows her the best.

I don’t usually put trigger alerts in my book reviews because I believe that a story should stand on its own, which includes surprising the reader as a story evolves. However, I feel like the cover of this book portrays an expectation for a light summer beach read, with a hint of romance. Depending upon what you like to read during your vacation the reveals in this book could be a wonderful suprise for you, however, the main character has a severe version of OCD and anxiety that I found to be fascinating, but I also think some people may have trouble reading. That’s the PSA.

Eliot’s brothers and sisters span a very large age gap. Her oldest brothers were in their in their 20’s or 30’s when she was born, as they were a product of her father’s first marriage. When he married her mother they had three more children, one of whom died as a child. Eliot was closest in age to her brother and when he died her parents and her older brothers and sister all avoided talking about it with her and she was left to handle it on her own, at age 8 or 9. Needless to say, Eliot developed trauma in the form of OCD- not the kind that makes you line up your shoes, but the internal anxiety that causes your internal voice to cycle in circles and never find resolution. On the surface Eliot looked calm and like she was handling everything but in fact she was spiraling out of control. I’ll admit, this was really hard to read, however I kept reading because I wanted, no needed to see her resolve this trauma which she did, but it took the entire book.

While Eliot’s internal monologue might have been disturbing, her reconnection with Manuel was beautiful. This was the boy/man that she grew up with, told all her secrets to, and fell in love with as a young woman. She couldn’t hide from him and their story while difficult in parts, was beautiful in total.

So, needless to say, this is a very hard book to read, and I sobbed at the end. I’m not a big fan of connecting with my inner self, but in this case I was so glad that I read this book and made those connections. There were some storylines that were painful, but in that pain there was also beauty. In looking back at this novel it’s those poignant moments that stick with me and resonate, and is ultimately why I loved this novel so much.

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

Click this link to purchase this book!* Hide In Plain Sight

Copyright 2024 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: Cruel Winter With You (Under the Mistletoe #1) by Ali Hazelwood

I’m always amazed when an author writes a complete story with a beginning, middle, and end, within the confines of a short novella. In this case, 73 pages. It helps that our two main protagonists, Jamie and Marc, already know each other, but the fact that Ali Hazelwood write what felt like a complete story is pretty amazing- after all she did have to fill us in on their backstories, build tension, create conflict and resolve it!

Marc is Jamie’s best friend’s little brother. Jamie was essentially raised in their family and when Marc was born they had a special connection, until their teen years when they didn’t connect at all. Now, Jamie is a brand new pediatrician and Marc is a tech billionaire. They are both in their hometown for the holidays, Jamie to spend time with her father and Marc to watch his parents house while they are out of town. Jamie planned to avoid him but her father needs a pan big enough to fit their turkey and that pan is in the house Marc is watching. When she shows up at his door you feel the immediate tension and when she gets snowed in with him you know that the conflict and resolution is going to happen and it will happen that night. Ali Hazelwood did a great job telling their story and as I always do when a novella is written well… I want a full size novel!

❤️❤️❤️❤️

This novel is part of the Under the Mistletoe collection and can be found on Amazon on Kindle Unlimited and Audible.

Click this link to purchase this book!* Cruel Winter With You

Copyright 2024 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above link I’ll receive a small stipend.

This Chick Read: A Broken Contract (Fractured Conclave #2) by Vanessa Nelson

I’m not sure how an author whom I’d never heard of before a year ago made my “must read” list as soon as one of her new books gets released, but Vanessa Nelson is that author for me. For those of you who’ve followed my blog for awhile you know that I read a mish mash of romance and fantasy novels. If those two genre’s are ever combined I’m all over it. Ms. Nelson’s books lean more towards fantasy than romance, but there’s always that hint of chemistry between two of the characters that make me take the leap and it’s her stories that keep me coming back for more.

The Fractured Conclave is her newest series that follows Hallie, who is a skip tracer. Kind of like a bail bondsman and investigator all rolled into one. She lives in a society that is segmented between the elite and then the lower caste, which she was born into, but somehow, through no fault of her own she has inherited some genes that have turned her from being human, into a member of the higher caste. Something that she’s kept secret but has also made her family disown her. Each of these books finds Hallie and Special Investigator Girard combining their strengths into finding someone or solving a mystery. In A Broken Contract, Girard comes to Hallie and asks for her help because some members of the elite have gone missing. As she investigates, Hallie does help Girard, but she also unveils things about her true nature that helps define her in her new place in the world.

Both books in this series have been really great and if you love great world-building and urban fantasy novels you will love these books. Then, just like I did, you will look up her backlist, become overjoyed with the number of books and series that she has written and you will spend the next few months catching up and then eagerly anticipating more.

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

Click this link to purchase this book!* A Broken Contract

Copyright 2024 The Reading Chick All Rights Reserved

*Amazon Associate- if you purchase this book through the above affiliated link, I’ll receive a small stipend.