Books On Sale

Fantasy Romance, Farah Heron, & More

  • A Scot to the Heart

    A Scot to the Heart by Caroline Linden

    GUEST RECOMMENDED: A Scot to the Heart by Caroline Linden is $1.99! This one earned a B grade from guest reviewer Morgan:

    A Scot to the Heart is a solid book. The house party alone makes it well worth reading. You’ll likely love these characters as much as I did.

    An Officer and a Scotsman

    Captain Andrew St. James always knew he came from a noble family, but his branch grew far from the wealth and status. Nothing shocks him more than learning that he now stands as heir presumptive to his distant cousin the Duke of Carlyle. There is much for Drew to learn and adjust to—but first he goes home to Edinburgh, to tell his mother and three sisters of their startling good fortune.

    A Lady and a Temptress

    Ilsa Ramsay yearns for some adventure and fun, not another husband. When she discovers the handsome soldier who sweeps her off her feet for a rollicking dance is her friend’s brother, soon to be an English duke, she tells herself he’s not for her, no matter how tempting he is. But one impulsive kiss, then another, and another… says otherwise.

    An Irresistible Attraction

    Drew means to marry a respectable, dignified Englishwoman—a very proper future duchess. The spirited Ilsa is none of that. Still, when she’s caught in a dangerous scandal, he leaps to her aid without hesitation. And neither family duty nor future obligation can make them ignore what’s in both their hearts.

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  • The Chai Factor

    The Chai Factor by Farah Heron

    RECOMMENDED: The Chai Factor by Farah Heron is $1.99! Aarya really loved this one and gave it an A-:

    The Chai Factor is very much a swoonworthy rom-com: it’s funny and sobering, it has witty dialogue and disquieting situations, and it’s sigh-worthy and rage-inducing. I laughed, I cried, and I cheered for Amira and Duncan. The Chai Factor is an essential book for your list of summer reads.

    Amira Khan has no plans to break her no-dating rule.

    Thirty-year-old engineer Amira Khan has set one rule for herself: no dating until her grad-school thesis is done. Nothing can distract her from completing a paper that is so good her boss will give her the promotion she deserves when she returns to work in the city. Amira leaves campus early, planning to work in the quiet basement apartment of her family’s house. But she arrives home to find that her grandmother has rented the basement to . . . a barbershop quartet. Seriously? The living situation is awkward: Amira needs silence; the quartet needs to rehearse for a competition; and Duncan, the small-town baritone with the flannel shirts, is driving her up the wall.

    As Amira and Duncan clash, she is surprised to feel a simmering attraction for him. How can she be interested in someone who doesn’t get her, or her family’s culture? This is not a complication she needs when her future is at stake. But when intolerance rears its ugly head and people who are close to Amira get hurt, she learns that there is more to Duncan than meets the eye. Now she must decide what she is willing to fight for. In the end, it may be that this small-town singer is the only person who sees her at all.

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  • Radiance

    Radiance by Grace Draven

    Radiance by Grace Draven is $1.99! This was a previous book club pick on the site and a fantasy romance. I remember really liking this one, especially the beginning dynamics between the hero and heroine. Have you read it?

    THE PRINCE OF NO VALUE

    Brishen Khaskem, prince of the Kai, has lived content as the nonessential spare heir to a throne secured many times over. A trade and political alliance between the human kingdom of Gaur and the Kai kingdom of Bast-Haradis requires that he marry a Gauri woman to seal the treaty. Always a dutiful son, Brishen agrees to the marriage and discovers his bride is as ugly as he expected and more beautiful than he could have imagined.

    THE NOBLEWOMAN OF NO IMPORTANCE

    Ildiko, niece of the Gauri king, has always known her only worth to the royal family lay in a strategic marriage. Resigned to her fate, she is horrified to learn that her intended groom isn’t just a foreign aristocrat but the younger prince of a people neither familiar nor human. Bound to her new husband, Ildiko will leave behind all she’s known to embrace a man shrouded in darkness but with a soul forged by light.

    Two people brought together by the trappings of duty and politics will discover they are destined for each other, even as the powers of a hostile kingdom scheme to tear them apart.

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  • The Raven Prince

    The Raven Prince by Elizabeth Hoyt

    The Raven Prince by Elizabeth Hoyt is 99c! Readers who love it especially like that the hero and heroine are both a bit unconventional: neither of them is superbly good-looking, a fact that has influenced their lives in several ways, and both are over thirty

    There comes a time in a woman’s life when she must do the unthinkable – and find employment. For the widowed Anna Wren, that means taking a job as female secretary for the Earl of Swartingham.

    Secretaries are always male – never female – as Anna well knows but the real downfall of her career is the realization that she is falling in love with Edward de Raaf – the Earl. But when she realizes that he is going to visit a brothel in London to take care of his ‘manly’ desires, Anna sees red – and decides to take advantage of the opportunity to also take care of her ‘womanly’ desires – with the Earl as her unknowing lover.

    But the Earl has another reason for going to London. He is formalising his betrothal and trying (with little success) to forget about a secretary that has no right being female. Unhandsome, he knows that no woman wants him.

    Except for the mysterious lady with whom he spent two unforgettable nights at Aphrodite’s Grotto, the most scandalous brothel in London. But when Anna’s plan is revealed, a bit of blackmail is thrown into the mix, a proposal is rejected and even the Earl himself will be unprepared for the intrigues that ensnare them.

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Comments are Closed

  1. Bunnifur says:

    For Lois McMaster Bujold lovers, and those who want to read about a thoroughly nice man get into and out of all sorts of trouble with the assistance of a female demon living in his head, Penric’s Demon, Penric and the Shaman, Penric’s Fox, The Orphans of Raspay, and the Physicians of Vilnoc are each $1.99 on Amazon US. I’ve read all of these, love them, and grabbed the first three myself since I had previously only borrowed them from my library.

  2. Ren Benton/Lena Brassard says:

    ‘Tis the season for Terry Pratchett’s HOGFATHER to be $1.99. (Don’t balk at it being Book 20 in a series. I’ve been reading them at random when they go on sale, and though I’m sometimes aware there’s a joke only longtime readers will get, they otherwise stand on their own.)

    Also $1.99 is Nalo Hopkinson’s MIDNIGHT ROBBER.

  3. SandyH says:

    If you have not read Grace Draven’s novel, Radiance, do yourself a favor and pick up this book. It is just so beautiful. P.S. There are several other books written in this world.

  4. Quinn Wilde says:

    Thanks to one of the reviews I scanned for the Hoyt novel, I just downloaded Duke of Sin, which one of the reviewers said was one of her favorite romances of all time.

  5. FashionablyEvil says:

    @Quinn Wilde: I just want to say that ALL the content warnings apply to DUKE OF SIN. Here’s my list: child abuse, sexual assault, murder of animals (yes, animals plural; part of the child abuse), jokes about pedophilia (which is actually happening off page), violent kidnapping x2, racism/Islamophobia, failure to take any of the sexual assault seriously—apparently you just get over it. The hero cuts the throat of a footman in front of the heroine because it spares the footman the indignity of prison and hanging. And to top it all off, there is use of the phrase “yearning spunk.”

    Definitely proceed with caution.

  6. Lizzy says:

    @FashionablyEvil yes to all of this. I actually really loved Elizabeth Hoyt although I thought the Maiden Lane series went on a bit too long. The Duke of Sin came out and just turned me really far off. Val, the “hero” absolutely is a psychopath. That’s not an attractive quality. Murdering the footman in front of the heroine was so incredibly disturbing I hoped she’d board a ship and move to the colonies and change her name.

  7. FashionablyEvil says:

    @Lizzy—I know! Hoyt writes really briskly, so I didn’t DNF it, but I also haven’t picked up another of her books since I read that one. (It really made me wonder what happened in her life that Val could be an appealing hero.)

  8. Varian Ross says:

    The Chai Factor is a wonderful book. It’s so good it helped me forget my desperate need to pee while waiting for a pelvic ultrasound!

  9. Quinn Wilde says:

    Wow, now I am bracing myself! I took it out from the library, so no money out of the book fund. I admit I’m interested given the book has elicted such strong reactions (positive and negative) in its readers and I have a fairly strong stomach, though I have no problem DNF-ing a book if it’s gratuitously offensive.

  10. LAURA ANN KLEIN says:

    @fashionablyEvil @Lizzy move over on that bench, I tried Duke of Sin and was so upset that I won’t read another Hoyt ever.

  11. DonnaMarie says:

    I’m with @SandyH, Radiance is a beautiful book.

  12. Kareni says:

    Another vote for Radiance. I read and enjoyed The Raven Prince some years ago; the details of the book though have not stayed with me.

  13. Susan/DC says:

    I read The Raven Prince when it was first published, then immediately turned back to page 1 and reread it (I often reread but not right away; the only book I’ve done that with recently is Jacqueline Woodson’s Red at the Bone). I think Hoyt’s Prince trilogy is my favorite of her series. The Serpent Prince (the 3rd book) had moments that broke my heart, but it was beautifully romantic and had such a lovely hero and heroine. I also liked that they didn’t have sex until they were married — a rarity, even in historical today.

  14. Mary says:

    The Raven Prince is one of my all time favorites. I think it was Hoyt’s first book and it is lovely, and funny in some parts.

  15. Magpie says:

    I also really liked the Chai Factor (and Heron’s other stories). One clicked Radiance, I can’t believe it’s taken me so long to read this, I’ve enjoyed Grace Draven’s short stories.

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