Posted in 2018, African-American, Basketball, Black Love, Book Review, Domestic Violence, ebook, Erotica, Family, Friendship

Let Me Hold You by Alexandria House (A Book Review)

Leland McClain is the youngest of the McClain siblings. He is a professional basketball player who also volunteers with a youth basketball camp at a recreational center. Leland has a thing for older women and sets his sights on the center’s director Kim Hampton. He is determined to make Kim Hampton his woman.

Kim Hampton is hard at work, running the center. The center is owned by her son, who is also a professional basketball player. Although she notices Leland and his good looks, she is determined to remain professional.

When a hostile incident occurs at one of the youth’s family home, it brings them even closer professionally. However, sparks begin igniting beneath the surface. Leland is all for it. Kim, not so much. Her troubled past, as well as a dark secret, is preventing her from freely acknowledging their relationship.

I enjoyed the story. Although it was very entertaining and had funny moments, it had a slightly darker tone than the first book. I especially like the updates on Jo and Everett, that was a welcomed surprise.

Leland was affirming and steadfast in his love for Kim. Kim’s strained relationships with her son and mom was a struggle to read. I hated seeing their interactions with Kim. However, I liked how House developed the conflict. Although it was uncomfortable to witness, it felt very real.

They (Kim’s mom and son) made me so mad; I had several “talk back” moments throughout the book. If I had the physical copy of the book, I’m sure I would have thrown it across the room. This is the third book I’ve read from this author. She is officially a mainstay of authors whose work I like. I’m so ready to get to the next installment in this series.

Rating 9/10

Posted in 2022, Betrayal, Book Review, Books, Bullying, Career, Crime, Domestic Violence, Extortion, Family, Marriage, Mental Health, Secrets, Suspense

My Other Husband By Dorothy Koomson (A Book Review)

Cleo Forsum, a novelist, is relatively successful in most aspects of her life. She writes best sellers, turned those best sellers into a successful TV show, and has a loving husband and extended family. So why does she want to abandon it all to start anew? When people close to her start turning up hurt or dead, it is evident that something sinister is lurking in the shadows beckoning her to leave it all behind. These criminal acts are almost identical to the crimes in her best-selling novels, which gives reason to the police to be doubtful of Cleo’s innocence.

Cleo just wants the violence to end. Will her compliance with the demand from a figure from her past be enough to stop the bloodshed?

This book was a slow burn. The story became predictable quite early on. About the halfway mark, the predictability was laid right out in the open only to twist ever so slightly and on to another trajectory making this a beautifully treacherous ride. My only grievance was that the book was a bit too long, it could have been shorter. I will be reading more from Dorothy Koomson though, she has tickled my fancy for her other work.

Rating 8/10

Posted in Betrayal, Book Review, Bullying, Crime, Domestic Violence, Escape, Friendship, Good Story, Identity, Love, Marriage, Mental Health, Motherhood, Murder, Reading, Secrets, Self-awareness, Self-discovery

Hush Delilah by Angie Gallion (A Book Review)

Delilah Reddick is a woman trapped in her own life. She’s in a brutal cycle of abuse at the hands of her husband, Chase. Her best friend Carmen constantly pleads for her to leave, but it’s not so simple.

As Delilah folds into herself and examines her life both present and past, she sees a very small glimpse of a silver lining in the unraveling of the tight grip of the abuse. However, exactly what that silver lining will cost, is a thought that shakes Delilah to her core. There is her son Jackson, who would be collateral damage in it all.

This book delves deep into multiple perspectives of what abuse and the decisions linked to it looks like, depending on what a person’s viewpoint about it is. It explores how an abused person wrestles with vaccillating and ruminating thoughts and the difficulty in deciding weighty matters.

Delilah’s inner guilt leaped through the pages. I felt her guilt of how she found herself in what she viewed as a very pitiful place in her life. It appeared most of her guilt involved what she viewed as a betrayal of her own self.

As a reader, it was important to know the delicacy of the situation and not judge her, but to feel compassion. This book opened my heart and made it sensitive to inner battles that others may have to deal with, sometimes with very arresting characteristics. The author really captured the essence of the whirlwind, the fog, and the ties of a toxic relationship.  It was a great book.

Rating: 10/10

Posted in Audiobooks, Book Love, Book Review, Crime, Domestic Violence, ebook, Escape, Extortion, Faith, Family, Friendship, Good Story, Kindle, Love, Marriage, Mental Health, Motherhood, Murder, Reading, Secrets, Spirituality

The Two Lives of Sara by Catherine Adel West (A Book Review)

Sara King, an expectant mother, appears in Memphis under the cloak of hidden truths to start life anew. She arrives at a boarding house ran by a fiesty but warm matriarch named Mama Sugar. Shortly after Sara arrives, she gives birth to a son she names Lebanon.

They’re embraced as family by Mama Sugar, her husband Mr. Vanellys, their grandson William, the boarders and some of the people in community. Sara’s hard exterior starts to soften. It all but vanishes when she starts a romance with William’s teacher, Jonas.

Sara’s embraces her newfound joy. But when the past collides with the present, it brings with it the possibility of forever altering the future for Sara and the people in her life both now and in the future.

There were so many profound moments in this story. The writing was impeccable and poignant. This story will stay with me always. Some of the quotes that both moved me and gave me pause were as follows:

“Well, what’s done is done but I found out when people go through hard places, they don’t need tough’ an they don’t need coddling. They need mercy.” ~Mr. Vanellys

“Friendships are strange evolving collections of laughter and fights and secrets, this rarified brew of humanity you choose to share with another person. And I want that again. To feel close to someone. To share with someone.” ~Sara

“So if you struggle or see someone struggling, seek understanding. You don’t know the wars people fight on the inside. No one save the Lord knows about those inside battles.” ~ Sara’s mother.

“No one likes to own the harm they did to others, it makes them hurt in a forever kind of way.” ~ Sara

“Everything we go through reshapes us, makes us new.”~ Cora

Rating: 10/10

Posted in Audiobooks, Betrayal, Book Review, Crime, Domestic Violence, Extortion, Family, Friendship, Good Story, Identity, Love, Marriage, Motherhood, Murder, Reading, Secrets, Spirituality, Suicide, Suspense

Mrs. Wiggins by Mary Monroe (A Book Review)

Maggie Franklin grew up in a family of ill-repute. Her mother was a former prostitute, while her father was the town drunk. She becomes really fast friends with Hubert Wiggins. Hubert, comes from a prominent family in their community of Lexington, Alabama. Both Maggie and Hubert knows deep things about each other that solidifies their friendship.

As they grow up, Hubert becomes one of the most eligible bachelors in their town. Maggie, on the other hand is not so lucky. Both of their parents however, are pressuring them to get married. Neither of them are interested in marriage at the time. However, in an attempt to stop the parental pressure, they make a pact to marry one another. Their family is complete when their son Claude is born.

The Wiggins become the most revered family in Lexington. Maggie now has a charmed life. She’s the daughter-in-law of a pastor, her husband runs the family funeral business and works part-time at the turpentine mill, and she’s the doting mother to a wonderful son.

All is going great until her son grows up and becomes involved with a young woman named Daisy. Daisy proves to be a very challenging person. Claude’s relationship with Daisy sets a domino effect of events in Mrs. Wiggins life that threatens all that is good in it.

I enjoyed this story a lot. It showed how life can turn out, depending on how the person living it perceives the circumstances that they’re faced with. It was a story loaded with life lessons. I was hooked from start to finish.

Rating 9/10

Posted in Art, Betrayal, Book Review, Crime, Domestic Violence, Escape, Family, Friendship, Good Story, Identity, Love, Marriage, Motherhood, Purpose, Secrets, Uncategorized

Memphis by Tara M. Stringfellow(A Book Review)

Escaping the shattered home life she shared with her parents, ten-year old Joan relocates to Memphis with her younger sister, Mya and their mother, Miriam. Memphis is quite the experience and wide-eyed, Joan takes it all in, this magical, colorful place.

When they all arrive in Miriam’s childhood home, a home built by love, Joan feels the weight of a thing in this very safe haven they’ve escaped to. Her artwork is her balm for the powerful weight she’s carrying from years ago.

Joan melts into the fabric of her community, which includes people like her sassy aunt August and the ever present elders Miss Dawn and Miss Jade. She is surrounded by love, secrets, and wisdom. It ushers her into an understanding of both her family’s past and her own identity and purpose.

I absolutely loved reading this story. I especially appreciated the lyrical language the author used. It was a well written and poignant story about fierce women and their life choices and journeys. It was a refreshing experience to be overtaken by such a rich story.

Rating: 10/10

Posted in Domestic Violence, ebook, Family, Friendship, Kindle, Mental Health, Reading, Spirituality

Saving Ruby King by Catherine Adel West (A Book Review)

Saving Ruby King By Catherine Adel West

Ruby and Layla’s lives are woven intricately together by destiny. The fabric of their friendship begins to tatter when Ruby’s mother Alice is murdered in her own home. The murder sets off a chain of events where fierce loyalty intersects with underestimation between two friends. Layla goes into protector mode to save Ruby from what she believes is the beginning of a downward spiral. Ruby is internally fighting to stay alive. Mired in the destiny of generational strongholds, will they walk on the path of the past? Or will a newness spring forth and change the course that they are on? Will a freedom unknown abound?

What impressed me most about this book is the beautiful and artful way West grafted subtext into the story. I identified with both Layla and Ruby at times. In a moment of weakness, Layla comes to Ruby’s rescue. As a result of that, Layla holds Ruby so tight that she underestimates Ruby’s ability to make sound decisions for her own life. Layla’s tenacity and Ruby’s struggle to be understood was the driving force behind the story. But this story has a depth that offers so much more.

Outside of Ruby and Layla, the other characters were fleshed out really well. I could feel and see the characters’ hearts. I felt sympathy for Jackson who was simply existing while holding his breath for what seemed like his entire life. When Jackson declares ” I can’t fake normal anymore”, that statement alone brings a lot of things into focus. Lebanon was complex and layered. His friendship with Jackson mirrored that of Ruby and Layla at times but with a unique twist. Sara had a unique perspective on how she operated in the world with the cards life dealt her.

This is a dynamic debut novel written with painstaking intensity. It is peppered with just the right amount of nuance that captures the human spirit in all of its splendor.

Rating: 10/10