GUEST POST: “Nightingale” by Aleksandr Voinov
Boys in our Books welcomes Aleksandr Voinov to the blog to celebrate the release of his new book “Nightingale”! Love Story versus Romance I’ve spent a lot of time … Continue reading
REVIEW: “Unnatural” by Joanna Chambers
ABOUT: The heart breaks but does not change. An Enlightenment Story Captain Iain Sinclair. Perfect son, perfect soldier, hero of Waterloo. A man living a lie. The only person who … Continue reading
AUDIOBOOK REVIEW: “Patience & Sarah” by Isabel Miller
ABOUT: Set in the 19th century, Isabel Miller’s classic lesbian novel traces the relationship between Patience White, an educated painter, and Sarah Dowling, a farmer’s daughter, whose romantic bond does … Continue reading
BOOK CLUB AUDIOBOOK REVIEW: “Skybound” by Aleksandr Voinov
ABOUT: Love soars. Germany, 1945. The Third Reich is on its knees as Allied forces bomb Berlin to break the last resistance. Yet on an airfield near Berlin, the battle … Continue reading
REVIEW: “To Love a Traitor” by J.L. Merrow
ABOUT: Wounds of the heart take the longest to heal. When solicitor’s clerk George Johnson moves into a rented London room in the winter of 1920, it’s with a secret … Continue reading
GUEST REVIEW: “A Fashionable Indulgence” by KJ Charles
ABOUT: When he learns that he could be the heir to an unexpected fortune, Harry Vane rejects his past as a Radical fighting for government reform and sets about wooing … Continue reading
REVIEW: “The Affair of The Porcelain Dog” by Jess Faraday
ABOUT: London 1889. For Ira Adler, former rent-boy and present plaything of crime lord Cain Goddard, stealing back the statue from Goddard’s blackmailer should have been a doddle. But inside … Continue reading
REVIEW: “Wrecked” by Deanna Wadsworth
ABOUT: Off the Key West coast, Rief Lawson works as a wrecker, salvaging ships and their cargo. Exiled to the outskirts of society because of his mysterious gift of … Continue reading
REVIEW: “The Secret Casebook of Simon Feximal” by KJ Charles
ABOUT: A story too secret, too terrifying—and too shockingly intimate—for Victorian eyes. A note to the Editor Dear Henry, I have been Simon Feximal’s companion, assistant and chronicler for twenty … Continue reading