January 19th, 2010 — 3.5 Stars, 4 Stars, ARC, Artist, Bastard, Contemporary, Doctor, J-L, Mistaken Identity, United States of America

Robin Kaye’s second book, Too Hot to Handle is witty and enchanting. Too Hot to Handle is the sequel to Romeo, Romeo. It follows Rosalie Ronaldi’s sister, Annabelle, on her tumultuous journey into love. Luckily for her, she has a sturdy cast of lively friends and a dog there to help her figure it all out. Her journey starts with this humorous first line: Ghosts don’t have sex, do they?
Of course the answer is no, but the distressingly dashing Doctor Mike Flynn looks almost exactly like her late boyfriend Chip Larsen. They could have been twins. Sure, his mouth is a little different, his nose broken and healed could have once been Chip’s nose, his eyes the same shape if different colors and his package is certainly better equipped… but other than that the similarities are shocking.
Annabelle’s past with Chip was rocky at best. Chip was not a very good boyfriend, even his sister thought so, but Annabelle never got the chance to really figure that out on her own. When the cancer came back, Chip refused to go through chemo again despite Annabelle’s and his family’s begging. Despite the heaviness of the emotional issues, this is still a romantic comedy.
Mike Flynn is working at a dead-end practice. His research though thorough wasn’t enough to prepare him for the realities. He’s going to be blackballed for bringing notice to a sloppy ill-informed partner. His only shot is to get out before it becomes common knowledge about his disagreements. Meanwhile his love life is pitiful, he’s tired of seeing the girls that Nick has let go, he wants a girl of his own and believes he struck gold with Annabelle who he met at her sister’s/his best friend’s wedding.
Mike’s background and Annabelle’s history will do their best to keep them apart. Life is messy, but with the help of a domestic god and busybody friends, family, and neighbors can it be cleaned up?
Rating: 3.5 - 4 Stars
Buy: Too Hot to Handle
Originally posted 2009-05-06 05:49:45. Republished by Blog Post Promoter
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January 16th, 2010 — 4 Stars, ARC, Artist, Comedy of Manners, Contemporary, J-L, Teacher, United States of America

Rich Ronaldi got dumped! It’s not the getting dumped that bothers Rich, what bother Rich is the fact his boss and friend, Craig Stewart, wants to meet his “steady stable girlfriend” at a benefit coming up. Not sure which man asked this, Rich goes by the assumption that it is his boss and not his friend. The only way to get Gina (Rosalie’s best friend) back in time is to prove he is willing to change and become a relationship guy… aka a Domestic god!
Recipe for Changing a Selfish Slob Boyfriend into a Domestic God:
- Dump boyfriend and tell him his cooking and cleaning ability will be the basis of any future relationship.
- Add one girl who’s willing to teach him domestic skills live with him.
- Stay clear while he burns food, explodes the dishwasher, and catches laundry on fire.
- Let him simmer for a while and when he finds cleaning cathartic take him off the burner and get ready to enjoy the change.
**Word of caution, watch out for the girl who’s teaching him how to cook and clean! She may just like what she uncovers under the surface.**
Becca Larsen is Annabelle’s best friend and Mike’s half sister from the last domestic god novel, Too Hot to Handle. She’s an artist who works in clay and oils. It is her unfortunate luck that Annabelle rented out the Park Slope apartment to her and her sister Rosalie rented it to their brother Rich. The man is a hopeless slob and very annoying!
As a reader I found Becca annoying. How’s that for irony. There were plenty of moments where she wasn't but in my opinion, Rich carries the novel. He does it so well and he’s just so cute about everything you can’t help but sigh a little over him.
Rating: 4 Stars
Buy: Breakfast in Bed
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October 21st, 2009 — 5 Stars, Book Review, Contemporary, Entrepreneur, Executive, J-L, Mistaken Identity, United States of America

I picked up Romeo, Romeo by Robin Kaye on Monday. This was a mistake because as soon as I started reading I couldn’t put the book down. I didn’t want to and I literally tried to multitask while reading and that didn’t work out so well so I just went back to reading. I took breaks for food, sleep, and unavoidable errands. Reading Romeo, Romeo was like finding a new best friend.
Kaye’s writing style is so engaging you are hooked before you finish the first page. I guarantee you will be as engrossed as I was. Kaye writes romance like Janet Evanovich writes serial mystery comedies. I haven’t been so pleased with a contemporary romance as I was with Romeo, Romeo
in a good long while. I can see why this book won the Golden Heart Award for Best Contemporary Single Title Romance Manuscript in 2007 at RWA. A Golden Heart Award as you know is given out to unpublished authors and manuscripts.
The cast of characters Kaye created are as fabulous and as endearing as any of the Stephanie Plum characters. Rosalie, the heroine can cuss in four languages, but three don’t count in her mind and will give her bonus points with God. Rosalie’s a turn around CFO with a tough as nails assistant named Gina who can also add loyal and kindhearted to her resume. Rosalie is as Italian in her looks as Gina is Latino. The two women are best friends.
Dominick Romeo is the owner of a string of car dealerships. He was a bad boy Morelli type of character in his youth and got into a spot of trouble that turned his life around. He’s now the Italian version of Donald Trump in New York and has surrounded himself with shallow Barbie doll type girls until he got tired of them and of the game.
The meet cute: Dominick has had a terrible weekend. Everything that could go bad in his opinion has. He thinks he’s gotten a double dose of the saying ‘trouble always comes in threes.’ Throwing the towel in on figuring out the mess that was his Viper, Nick grabs the keys to the wrecker and hauls himself home. On the way home he spots number six by the road kicking and cussing at her car.
Rosalie is livid. Her stupid brother took her money and her car and never once put the money to good use. Now she’s stranded without a donut-sized spare let alone the full one she paid her brother to get. Seeing Nick pull over to help, she wonders if the bonus points she’d been earning over the last little while were about to be cashed in for the help she needed. Of course something is weird about Nick. Since when has a wrecker just happened by and pull over-- especially after she's called around and nobody was open or available? And since when has a lowly mechanic had an expensive haircut and dress shoes?
Dominick convinces her to get in the wrecker after proving he’s not some whacked-out psychopath and drives her home. He finds himself incredibly attracted to her and wonders how to get a date. There are only two things wrong with the situation in his mind. One she’s got a boyfriend and he doesn’t poach, even though he thinks the guy is an idiot. Two, Rosalie turned out to be the younger sister of the boy he got in trouble with in his youth which was sure to cause bad blood. What’s a guy to do? Wait for her to dump the first boyfriend that's what, and to speed her along to that end he tantalizes her with almost kisses.
Rating: 5 Stars for Hot, Steamy, and Hilarious!
I am definitely keeping an eye out for Kaye's next novel!
Buy: Romeo, Romeo
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Originally posted 2008-10-22 09:40:22. Republished by Blog Post Promoter
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April 11th, 2009 — 3 Stars, Book Review, Children, Clumsy Heroine, Contemporary, Pregnant, Stephenie Meyer, United States of America, Vampire, Virgin Hero, Virgin Heroine, Werewolf, Young Adult

I was very excited to get my Breaking Dawn in the mail from Amazon. They managed to get it to me one day before they told me that it would arrive on my doorstep and I devoured the novel, all 700+ pages, in two days, which is consistent with how I’ve read the other three that came before.
The novel did many things I did not expect, and one thing in particular that I did expect. This review will contain spoilers, so read at your own risk. Suffice it to say I give Breaking Dawn four stars.
The wedding, surprisingly takes place within the first hundred pages. I thought that it would happen at the end after Jacob did something to delay it so he could win Bella for his own. This is not the case. The wedding is lovely and Bella gets through it just fine and afterwards can’t believe how uptight she was about the whole thing.
On their honeymoon, Bella and Edward make love successfully; unfortunately the scene fades to black, which annoyed me. The morning after Bella stirs and is blissfully happy but sore, Edward is composed and staring blankly at the ceiling and ruins her buzz by killing the mood. He won’t make love to her again, claims that she’s lying when she says she’s feeling fine—no great, all because he can see how rough he was with her. Bella only recalls that he held her tighter when she wanted him to, etc. Edward is sickened by how much of her skin is covered in bruises that match his hands.
Luckily, Bella manages to break him out of his funk through the use of sexy lingerie Alice packed for her and some innocent seduction. The second and third and so on times, Edward manages to ruin furniture instead of Bella’s skin, making him extremely satisfied… Bella too.
Meanwhile, I started to think about how much food Bella was consuming and came to the conclusion before it was revealed that she was pregnant. Her pregnancy is ridiculously accelerated and Edward freaks out. Bella knowing something is up, makes plans of her own to protect the life inside her and calls Rosalie for help, making the female vampire happy for the first time with her decisions.
From here the novel switches from Bella’s point of view to Jacob’s, which made me call up my friend and ask for some spoilers because I just don’t like the werewolf. During this part of the novel we witness Bella’s pregnancy, a break in the werewolf tribe as Jacob takes partial leadership, and Bella becoming very attached to Jacob’s presence.
The pregnancy takes a lot out of Bella until they realize that because the child is part vampire Bella’s diet needs to change from human food to a liquid diet of blood. Drinking blood immediately affects Bella’s health for the better, but also that of the baby’s. Every time the child moves inside Bella it leaves bruises on her skin and potentially breaks a rib in the process.
Edward is seriously going crazy and blames himself at this point and goes as far as offering Bella to Jacob if she really wanted a child as long as she’d be willing to give their child up as it was hurting her so much. Of course Jacob thinks on the idea and manages to bring it up to Bella who denies that its children she wants so much as her and Edward’s child that she wants.
Bella dies during birth, but luckily Edward manages to successfully turn her into a vampire while Jacob does CPR to keep the venomous blood flowing through her veins before it activates. Jacob leaves when he thinks it’s failed and goes downstairs where he intends to kill the child, now in Rosalie’s care. He never does, because once he lays eyes on their baby girl he bonds with her. This ends Jacob’s point of view in the story and switches back to Bella’s viewpoint.
The rest of the story deals with what I thought would happen to postpone the wedding—the Volturi are coming and they plan to execute the Cullen family for their Immortal Child (which is not what Edward and Bella’s child is per se, the term refers to something else). Alice and Jasper leave after Alice gives some very stern instructions to the family. The whole Western hemisphere is being herded together to witness the growth and humanity of the child.
It ends happily and Bella has amazing control on her thirst and on her special gift. I love the last few scenes between her and Edward. I am looking forward to reading the series again from Edward’s point of view, starting with Midnight Sun.
What did you think of the series ending?
Rating: 3 Stars
Originally posted 2008-08-13 05:03:13. Republished by Blog Post Promoter
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March 5th, 2009 — Author Interviews, J-L

I was lucky enough to get an interview with Robin Kaye so soon after her debut. What follows is our transcript! Enjoy and happy reading!
LRP: I just finished reading Romeo, Romeo and it was in two words: simply phenomenal. No wonder you won the Golden Heart in your category. Can you tell me about the process you went through for RWA? How did you feel?
Robin: The process you go through to enter the Golden Heart is pretty easy--the hardest part is making the decision to enter. It was definitely the best $50 I ever spent.
My goal was to score in the top 50%. I never thought I’d final. I sent my entry off and promptly forgot about it. I didn’t pay attention to the date they were to announce the finalist because in my mind, finaling wasn’t a possibility. I thought I’d get my scores when they hit my mailbox. When I got the call telling me I had finaled, I was shocked.
After I arrived at Nationals, Deb Werksman from Sourcebooks, one of the final judges, emailed me and asked if I would meet with her to talk about Romeo, Romeo. Four days before the awards ceremony, she told me an offer would be forthcoming. After I sold Romeo, Romeo, I thought the conference couldn’t get any better. Boy was I wrong. I was just as shocked to win as I’d been to final. It was an amazing conference for me, and it’s going to be a hard one to beat.
LRP: When did the idea for Romeo, Romeo first come to you? How did you get started?
Robin: I was taking an on-line writing class on point of view and the first assignment was to write a scene in first person.
I had just made a 20-quart pot of spaghetti sauce, dumped my meatballs in, and had ten minutes until I could stir the pot. I hate waiting those ten minutes. They always seem to last an eternity, so wearing my “The trouble with eating Italian food is 3 days later, you’re hungry again” apron, I ran into my office and wrote a scene with an Italian family around the Sunday dinner table. It was the scene in which my heroine, Rosalie Ronaldi, realized that there was an expiration date on uncommitted relationships. The scene was cut from the final manuscript, but I fell in love with Rosalie and her family, and I knew I had to write her story. It almost killed me to cut that scene, because it was so funny, but it wasn’t wasted. I used it in my blog. That made me feel much better.
LRP: Were you ever afraid or stuck in the writing process?
Robin: I don’t remember getting stuck with Romeo, Romeo. I believe writing books is like giving birth. We tend to forget the pain shortly after it’s over. If we didn’t, we’d probably never go through it again.
I do remember getting stuck when I wrote the second of the Domestic Gods books, Too Hot To Handle, and I remember very vividly being scared to death that I’d never be able to finish it. I was also afraid that Romeo, Romeo was a fluke and everyone would discover I can’t write. Hold on, I’m still afraid of that!
LRP: How did you decide on the characters’ names? Did they come to you at the same time as the novel idea did or did that take some effort?
Robin: I’m terrible with names. I named Aunt Rose first, after my great Aunt, who was one of the strongest women I ever knew. She was loved and feared by all. Then I thought, in the Italian tradition, I’d name the eldest niece after Rose, but not the same name. So I came up with Rosalie. Annabelle was easy—she was tall and beautiful. In Italian, Annabelle means beautiful Anna. It fit. I spent a little more time naming Nick. I knew I wanted him to have a name that could be shortened, so I picked Dominick. In the first chapter or two, I was calling him Dom, but Judi Fennel, my good friend and chapter mate, insisted I change it to Nick. Then I got the idea about a mistaken identity storyline, so the Dominick/Nick name worked well. Thank you, Judi.
I have a hard time remembering names, so when I needed a doctor, I named him after my doctor, Mike (just the first name). I had no idea that Mike would be so much fun to write, that he’d end up being the hero of Too Hot To Handle. Now, when I go into my doctor’s office, all the nurses ask if I really wrote the book with Dr. Mike as the hero. The answer to that is NO! That would be way too icky! Although I do think he gets a kick out of telling his wife he’s a hero in one of my books. LOL He’s a great sport and my go-to guy whenever I need to cure one of my characters. He doesn’t even get too mad at me when I forget to tell him the person I need to cure is fictional.
LRP: I just love your writing style – do you plan to use the same witty style and narrative in future books or do you expect to have to curb or tailor your writing to fit new characters and situations?
Robin: Wow, thanks for the compliment! I don’t think my writing style has changed, but in Too Hot To Handle I dealt with some deeper emotional issues. One of the funniest scenes I ever wrote is in Too Hot To Handle, but it also has a more serious side to it. I still have a snarky best friend, Becca, who I absolutely adore. Ben, my heroine’s boss, was a blast to write, and the family members and Dave the dog are there to lighten things up too.
LRP: What are some challenges you’ve faced while writing romance?
Robin: Other than the blank page? Juggling a busy family along with deadlines is a huge challenge. Too Hot To Handle was the first book I wrote on contract, and I found that to cause a lot of stress. Also, my kids are getting older and more active. One of the three is a pre-professional dancer who is home schooled and dances 25 to 30 hours a week at a school and hour and a half away. There’s never a free minute. However, I get a lot of help from my husband, who’s a true domestic god, and my children are amazing. We’re a team and we all support each other. I’m really proud of my family. It’s not always pretty, but it’s working, for the most part.
LRP: Here’s an easy question: what do you like most about writing romance?
Robin: I love escaping into my characters’ lives and playing God. I love that I get paid to do what I would always do for free. I love the industry and the amazing people I’ve met since I joined RWA. I love that I found people who actually ‘get’ me. All my life I was always in trouble for daydreaming. It was on every report card growing up. I love that with the help of RWA and the fabulous writers in it, I turned my bad habit into a career. When you’re unpublished, people call it daydreaming; when you’re published, people call it plotting. I love that my teachers were wrong. I wasn’t a daydreamer, I was a plotter.
LRP: Okay now comes a tough question: in your own words, what is love?
Robin: Love is a decision. It’s a verb. It’s what you do. Love isn’t a feeling – that’s lust. Love means loving someone even when you don’t feel like it, because believe me, there are times in every relationship when you’re not going to be ‘feeling’ the love.
LRP: And another toughie: what do you think makes a great bedroom scene?
Robin: Chemistry between the hero and heroine, a build-up of sexual tension, humor, and I really believe a love scene has to move the plot forward. The characters have to change or be changed by it in order for it to work.
LRP: Could you provide a picture of your workspace? I would love to see how and where you work!
Robin: First of all, I have to say how much I love my office. My husband and I are remodeling our 100 year-old Victorian and my office was the first room we finished. My husband actually raised the roof on this part of the house (don’t ask me how, since he did it all himself) so I have a vaulted ceiling that goes up 13 feet at its peak. He even ragged the walls so it has the look of parchment that I love. The rest of the house might be falling apart, but my office and both bathrooms are beautiful. Here are a few pics:




LRP: Fill in the blank. If you aren’t writing you’re ________.
Robin: Driving, cooking, eating, or sleeping.
LRP: Is there anything else you’d like to share with the readers of Love Romance Passion?
Robin: I’d like to thank you all for having me here. I hope you enjoy Romeo, Romeo. I’m always amazed at how generous readers are. My book has been out less than a week and I’ve already gotten several lovely notes from people telling me how much they enjoyed my book. You can’t imagine how much that means to me. Writing is such a solitary activity. Having someone tell me they like what I’ve written is a wonderful and humbling experience. So I thank you all.
LRP: Thanks for joining us Robin!
If you have a question for Robin, drop us a comment and we'll forward them to Robin.
Robin is also part of a collective blog for Casablanca Sourcebooks Authors.
Originally posted 2008-11-04 14:57:29. Republished by Blog Post Promoter
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January 4th, 2009 — Gifts, News, Paranormal, Stephenie Meyer, Vampire
Now available for purchase is the scent that drives Edward Cullen to distraction... that irresistibly forbidden fruit... the scent that is his own personal brand of heroin. He compares Bella's scent to freesia and lavender in the first book on page 306. Freesia appears several times throughout the series; the more memorable moments being when he gifts her with freesia for her prom corsage (in the out takes) and as part of her wedding bouquet. If you haven't read the scenes I've provided them below:
"Just because I'm resisting the win doesn't mean I can't appreciate the bouquet," he whispered. "You have a very floral smell, like lavender...or freesia," he noted. "It's mouthwatering."
"Yeah, it's an off day when I don't get somebody telling me how edible I smell."
© 2007 Stephenie Meyer
and
“Alice, Rosalie…thank you,” he breathed without looking away from me. I heard Alice chuckle in pleasure.
He stepped forward, cupping one cold hand under my jaw, and stooping to press his lips to my throat.
“It is you,” he murmured against my skin. He pulled away, and there were white flowers in his other hand.
“Freesia,” he informed me as he pinned them into my curls. “Completely redundant, as far as fragrance is concerned, of course.” He leaned back, looking me over again. He smiled his heart-stopping smile. “You are absurdly beautiful.”
© 2007 Stephenie Meyer
and
“Charlie, would you grab the flowers, please?”
...
Charlie returned with the two frothy white bouquets. The scent of roses, and orange blossom and freesia enveloped me in a soft mist.
© 2007 Stephenie Meyer
Did you know that nearly all flowers have a meaning associated with them? It comes from before the Medieval times, but was popularized in the Victorian times. Freesia, I have found, symbolizes innocence and trust. A more perfect flower could not be chosen to represent the pair. Edward put much importance on Bella’s innocence and trust in him. He especially did not want to corrupt her, in any fashion, with the demon inside him. It is therefore poetic that freesia also represents him--his innocence and trust in the newly formed bond between them, a love so strong it could withstand the trials of time.
The bottle reads: The forbidden fruit tastes the sweetest!
Size of Bottle: 2.7 fluid oz
Notes: I would be interested in getting the notes for this perfume. All I know is from the packaging which says it's a combination of freesia and lavender. If you happen to know the specific notes please share!
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