4 minute read
ROMANCE
bad girl reputation
have made the opening more engaging, but ultimately, the story pays off for the patient reader.
This dense and subtle political drama will reward attentive readers with an epic tale of love and conquest.
BAD GIRL REPUTATION
Kennedy, Elle St. Martin’s Griffin (320 pp.) $16.99 paper | Oct. 4, 2022 978-1-2507-9675-2
Kennedy returns to Avalon Bay as a reformed bad girl and her bad-boy ex decide if they should follow the rules or chase the rush. When former bad girl Genevieve West returns to Avalon Bay after spending a year in Charleston, she discovers that her mother is dying. Within the week, she’s attending Laurie’s funeral, and her plans to return to her new life are dashed when her father asks her to manage their family stone business while he sets their affairs in order. She soon realizes that not much has changed in the Bay since she left: Her friends still drunkenly party through the night, her five brothers still wreak havoc when they can, and her tattooed ex, Evan Hartley, is still as devastatingly handsome as she remembers. Years of passionate, jealous, and raucous on-and-off dating led them into more trouble than they could count—sometimes even with the law—and although it’s been a year since she left town without saying goodbye, Gen knows she can’t stay away from Evan for long. The problem is, Evan’s hot temper and bad-boy ways, along with looming threats of arrest from Deputy Rusty Randall, threaten to disturb her carefully curated sobriety, reminding her of the real reason she bid farewell to Avalon Bay. But when Evan begins to prove that he’s a changed man, Gen finds the energy between them harder and harder to resist, and she wonders whether she lost herself on the way to becoming good. Kennedy’s Avalon Bay sequel follows Good Girl Complex (2022), which tells the story of Evan’s hardened twin brother, Cooper, and his rich, out-of-towner girlfriend, Mackenzie. Kennedy takes the bad girl–bad boy trope a step further here by exploring what happens when they finally grow up (“I don’t know where my life took a turn off the misspent youth, coming-of-age CW drama and wound up stranded inside a Hallmark movie”), and she ends up with just the right amount of heartfelt and sexy.
A steamy tale of first loves and second chances.
THE DUKE IN QUESTION
Howard, Amalie Sourcebooks Casablanca (384 pp.) $8.99 paper | Nov. 8, 2022 978-1-72826-263-5
A top-secret mission leads to danger and love. Lady Bronwyn Chase may appear to be a spoiled, flirtatious heiress, but it’s a facade to hide the truth: She’s traveling to Philadelphia with sensitive documents that will aid the Northern states in the American Civil War. Her haughty mother thinks Bronwyn’s only aspiration should be to marry someone with wealth and a title, but Bronwyn has a “goal of helping the oppressed to lift the yoke of subjugation.” When she discovers Lord Valentine Medford, the Duke of Thornbury, is also aboard the ship, her ruse becomes riskier. Not only is he a friend of her brother, but he’s also a former British undercover agent. Valentine has his own secret agenda: He’s looking for a rogue operative known as the Kestrel. He does not at all suspect the aggravating and all too attractive Bronwyn and is blindsided when the truth comes out. Even then, she still keeps secrets. Pursued by nefarious men from Philadelphia to Paris to London, the pair may be at odds, but that doesn’t prevent their fiery chemistry. Although an intriguing premise, the plot feels muddled and the characters aren’t developed beyond their archetypes. There are some fun action scenes of both the perilous and sexual varieties, but it fails to coalesce into a captivating whole. Howard succeeds in incorporating elements of racial prejudice and examples of allyship relevant to the modern reader into the historical story, but the core romance is humdrum.
Falls flat.
PARTNERS IN CRIME
Rai, Alisha Avon/HarperCollins (400 pp.) $28.99 | Oct. 18, 2022 978-0-06-321273-2
A staid accountant is swept into a night of adventure after a mysterious inheritance. Mira Patel grew up in a family of low-level Las Vegas grifters. Desperate to leave that part of her life behind, she moved to Los Angeles at 18 and has been on a straight and narrow path ever since. Now 35, Mira is unlucky in love even though she’s a client of the most exclusive Indian matchmaker in the city. After learning of her aunt Rhea’s sudden death, Mira is shocked to discover that her aunt’s lawyer is Naveen Desai, the ex-boyfriend she unceremoniously dumped a few years earlier. Naveen has moved on since Mira, leaving his big corporate job behind to help keep his
grandfather’s small law firm afloat. As part of the will, Mira receives a cryptic note and a familiar key. As she leaves his office, Mira and Naveen are kidnapped at gunpoint and transported to Las Vegas. The bad guys think Mira knows the location of a priceless diamond necklace her father stole. When Naveen and Mira escape and follow the clues from her aunt’s will, they unlock an epic one-night adventure. Naveen has always been bitter about how Mira left him, but as the night goes on, he learns why she was afraid of their intense chemistry. Meanwhile, Mira learns that hiding her real self is preventing her from finding a true partner. Naveen and Mira’s perfunctory romance takes a back seat to their search for the necklace. They eventually drift back into a relationship, but it feels underdeveloped compared to the highenergy escapades that drive the rest of the story.