new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: J. Saman’s Undeniably Infatuated, book 3 of her Boston’s Irresistible Billionaires ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A-

Tropes: forbidden; brother’s ex; forced proximity; second chance; secret romance; FMC in trouble; grump/sunshine; opposites attract; he falls first

J. Saman’s newest series, Boston’s Irresistible Billionaires, is not disappointing. This next-gen series invites her readers back into her previous book worlds, mixing former characters’ children into love matches. Her newest story, Undeniably Infatuated, I believe is my favorite to date. Saman carefully interweaves some romantic suspense with a spicy, secretive, forbidden relationship with “undeniable” chemistry between her main characters, Stone and Tinsley. From the outset, the big question is…how will Saman handle the complicated relationship between Stone and Tinsley, given that Tinsley is Stone’s brother’s ex-girlfriend, who he’s still obsessed with? I’ll be honest. I was nervous because, if mishandled, the believability of Stone and Tinsley’s relationship would be undermined. It created a complex problem for Saman, and she handled it well because she granted them space and time to process their feelings about it. She also allowed Stone to acknowledge the complication without wasting his opportunity with Tinsley. This situation required a careful balancing act with intentionality and decisive writing, and Saman did this well. 

I love a romance where the gruff playboy of an MMC falls hard for the erstwhile, independent FMC, and Saman crafts this well in Undeniably Infatuated. I loved the tension of their coupling as well as their fire and eventual romantic happy ending. Undeniably Infatuated is exactly what the doctor ordered for a weekend of reading. 

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Vi Keeland and Penelope Ward’s The Rules of Dating a Younger Man, the final book of The Law of Opposites Attract series ✍🏻

Overall Grade: B-

Tropes: age gap; close proximity; cinnamon roll MMC; “forbidden” relationship; he falls first; friends to lovers

Vi Keeland and Penelope Ward’s The Law of Opposites Attract series has come to a close with their final book, The Rules of Dating a Younger Man. Throughout this series, their readers have been gifted with the found family/band of brothers trope that tends to be popular. From Colby to Holden to Owen to Brayden, Keeland and Ward have ingratiated their lives into our lives. Here’s the thing about this series, though. This series started strong with Colby/Billie and Holden/Lala’s stories, but the magic of those books feels lost in Owen and now Brayden’s book. With The Rules of Dating a Younger Man, for me, the highlight is Brayden. In their friend group, Owen and Brayden seem the most level-headed and secure of the bunch, but Brayden, especially, is one of the quietest of the stories going into his book. Keeland and Ward draw him as a wildly handsome, thoughtful, humble, kind man. You have no heart if you leave TRODAYM and don’t love Brayden. It’s impossible to dislike him because he cares so much for his friends, the kids he develops prostheses for, and the project of Ryan’s House. Alex, the FMC, cannot help but fall in love with someone like Brayden. 

The issue with this book is two-fold: Alex’s journey can be challenging to understand. She is not readily likable because she spurns Brayden at every turn. I found it tiring as it continues for 80 percent-ish of the book. The second issue is their chemistry. Keeland and Ward create more tension between Brayden and Alex than they create their love. Yet, these two fall in love after three weeks (weekends only). I struggled with this inconsistency, making it difficult to believe they were indeed in love. As situations play out, Alex readily denies Brayden for much of the book, even though she allegedly loves him. Again, the credibility of their relationship created issues for me. 

Did I love the camaraderie of the friends? Yes.

Did I enjoy their antics and the way they loved each other? Absolutely!

Did I love Alex and Brayden when they finally got where they needed to go? Yep. However, this takes up most of the book and adds a huge helping of frustration. 

Do I think The Rules of Dating a Younger Man a fitting end to this series? I’m not sure. I believe this series began strong and lost its magic in the two later books. 

As always, however, I adore Vi Keeland and Penelope Ward’s storytelling prowess, and I will continue to read their works. I’m just not sure I loved The Rules of Dating a Younger Man as much as I wanted to.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Review: Jessica Peterson’s Cash, book 1 of the Lucky River Ranch series ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A

Tropes: enemies to lovers; hate to love; cowboy; opposites attract; small town; boss/employee (owner/foreman of the ranch)

Jessica Peterson seemed to have cornered the market on intelligent, spicy romance set in the Carolinas. Whether she writes chefs, romance writers, farmers, lux resort owner siblings, or bonds people, she finds a way to infuse romance tropes with deep issues. When she announced her foray into cowboy romance, this reader was excited because I knew she would put her storytelling stamp on this genre. And she did this beautifully in the first book of her newest series, Lucky River Ranch, Cash. What Jessica Peterson didn’t know, through the scope of Mollie and Cash’s wild journey of hate to love, was her impressive ability to capture the trauma of divorce and death in the lives of the children of divorced couples.  Cash provided an apt mirror of my own story; this capacity for storytelling leaves me wanting more stories from Jessica Peterson. 

Peterson’s newest book, Cash, is spicy, perfectly paced, and engaging. Mollie and Cash’s immediate chemistry is the initial draw to the story. Their meet cute when Cash assumes Mollie’s a spoiled socialite who turned her back on her father, sets up the emotional tether between these two. As Mollie moves between grief and ire and grief and loyalty, you can’t help but champion the coupling of Mollie and Cash. From the start of this story, Peterson held me in the thrall of her story. It’s funny, it’s tear-invoking, and it’s sweet. By the end of Cash, you will be hoping for a short time until the next book of the series, Wyatt, because the other characters in the story are just as compelling and engaging as Mollie and Cash. 

There is so much more to this new series from Jessica Peterson. I love a cowboy romance, but I’m sure she will be one of my favorite authors of this subgenre of romance. 

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Devney Perry’s Rally ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A-/B+

Tropes: one-night stand to more; opposites attract; surprise baby; new adult romance; sports romance; cinnamon roll MMC; down on her luck FMC

Rally, Devney Perry’s third book in her Treasure State Wildcats series, gifts us with the story of Faye and Rush. If you have read the first book of this series, Coach (my favorite of the series to date), you’re familiar with the broad strokes of their story. However, Rally takes us deeper into its beginning, middle, and beautifully written ending. Seriously, Perry’s endings and bonus epilogues are some of my favorites in romancelandia, and Rally exemplifies this gift well. 

Faye and Rush’s story is one of complication. Perry has beautifully penned the trials of Faye becoming pregnant while struggling through life. Thankfully, Perry partners Faye with Rush whose background is less uncomplicated and filled with love so he can learn to love her through her struggles. Rally is a roller coaster ride of emotions as Faye learns to depend on Rush, even though she struggles to become vulnerable and willing to rely on someone. Thankfully, Perry crafts Rush to be uncomplicated and stalwart through Faye’s journey. This adds a sweetness to Rally that feels quintessentially Devney Perry. 

My only issues are the oft-used “we’ll rally” or “need to rally” as it feels a bit “on the nose” in this story. I know it’s the battle cry of their relationship, but it seemed too pedantic for Perry. Secondly, there are moments when Rush’s actions are inconsistent with the overarching sense of his character as a noble, compassionate fellow. He sometimes retreats from Faye when, as the quarterback of a successful college team, that seems contrary to who he is. Beyond these issues, I loved Faye and Rush’s story.

Devney Perry’s Rally and its predecessors continue her tradition fo writing palatable, engaging romance. I love her stories, and given Rally and her story, Crossroads, published earlier in the year, I won’t stop reading her stories anytime soon.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Karla Sorensen’s The Best of All ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A

Tropes: hate to love; enemies to lovers; forced/close proximity; grump/sunshine; slow burn; he falls first; sports romance (football)

I am always thankful when God grants Karla Sorensen the words, story, and characters for her next book. There is something special about her stories that attach themselves to you. When I pick up one of her books, honestly, it’s almost impossible to stop reading it, and, when required to adult, I mourn for my time in her stories. Her newest book, The Best of All, is more of all of this. 

While it borrows a plot point from the 2010 movie, Life As We Know It, starring Katherine Heigl and Josh Duhamel (a movie I adored), Sorensen writes her way through it with her brand of romance. You may ask, what is Sorensen’s brand of romance? Well, recently, her stories showcase grumpy, protective MMCs who love their FMCs hard from afar, hiding their emotions behind walls that reach the heavens; FMCs who are so beguilingly independent and amazing that everyone falls in love with them; and so much slow burn that you don’t know if they will ever find their way into each other (wink wink!). Seriously, Sorensen knows exactly how to craft a slow burn which doesn’t lead you to want to send her DMs, cursing her for keeping her MMC and FMC apart. Instead, she inches them closer at a pace that feels organic to her characters’ story. At least, that’s my impression, although 73% for a first touch was eye-opening. 

What I loved the most about The Best of All (and having fallen deep for the predecessor book to this one, The Best Laid Plans – I loved this book more) is Liam. Oh how I loved Liam. He’s so emotionally buttoned up, denying himself of his heart’s desire for much of the book that you cannot help but fall in love with him because he is protective and intentional even when it’s misguided. Through Liam, Sorensen showcases the power of therapy to find the words for feelings. His journey is the foundation of this book even though Zoe has her own important Zoe. For me, though, what drew me to him a bit more over Zoe is the way he loves her to his bones. He hides it behind acrimony and derision, but it’s all an act meant to turn her away. I have found that this brand of MMC is my favorite by far. My therapist had a bit to say about the reasons for this, but we agreed that, in fiction, MMCs such as Liam make for swoon-worthy romances. And that is definitely the case. 

Once again, Karla Sorensen showcases her ability and passion for writing romance in The Best of All. I loved every page of this book, and it’s been one of my fastest reads in recent months. The ending felt poetic and beautiful, and it receives the highest marks from this reader.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Karla Sorensen’s Promise Me This ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A

Tropes: best friends to lovers; roommates; grump/sunshine; single mom; very slow burn

Karla Sorensen is a good picker. You might question my choice of words to grab your attention for this review. You may be thinking, “of what, her nose?” Maybe, maybe not. That’s a personal choice. I suggest that Sorensen’s capacity to make the best choices in her romances is the draw to them. Her ability to create realistic characters (save for the always handsome, well-built men) and the story arcs keep readers such as myself returning to her books with an almost rabid hunger. The Wilder Family or the Ward Family or the Washington Wolves Family aren’t interchangeable. Yes, they have her voice stamped into their books, but they are distinct. They tug at our experiences because they think and feel like us. They might be professional football players, but Sorensen humanizes them in a way that makes us believe we could be their friends. Over and over again, I find this trait in her writing, and it compels me to read every book she writes. 

With her newest book, Promise Me This, Sorensen has a challenge. I’ve heard in many a reader group that the “friends to lovers” trope can be a difficult sell. I’ve even heard authors state this explicitly as their least favorite trope. They struggle with finding the tipping point: what compels two people who have been friends for a long time to finally realize they are attracted to or in love with each other. I’ve read it numerous times, and I will say right here: Sorensen has written it well. When I tell you the why behind that, you’ll understand, but I have to imagine that she struggled to get this “right,” and her “choices” are the compelling reasons why she has done it well. 

  • It’s the time between the last time her characters saw each other and their present. The intentionality of keeping them apart for seventeen years, many of those years without contact, is important. In that time, Ian and Harlow maintain the character traits that make them beloved, but they mature into different people. Ian can still feel protective of Harlow in the present, but Harlow, as a single mother living in New York City, has also learned to care for herself. The present-day protectiveness becomes less a habit and more a gift, something to be attracted to versus a survival mechanism. The decidedness of Sorensen’s choice to keep them apart allows for her best friends to become attracted to each other and eventually become forever in a way that makes it believable. This is important to the success of this trope in Promise Me This.
  • It’s the slow burn. For readers of smut, this book, quite frankly, might not be for you. Promise Me This is a SERIOUS slow burn (80ish% in for the deed). I’m a personal fan of slow burn as I need the space for the attraction and chemistry to burn. And Sorensen does this well. It never felt manipulative or egregious; it felt necessary as Harlow and Ian MUST understand the change in their relationship and be ready to accept the consequences. Had she been haphazard in their physicality, it would have reduced their story, and their story holds so much power as it speaks to the capacity to love a person beyond the nostalgia of friendship. Sorensen took the space of her story to guide her characters into the truth about their love for each other; that it transcends friendship. The slow burn of Ian and Harlow is my favorite part of this story

Another compelling choice of Sorensen’s in this book is the magnification of relationships within time. The juxtaposition of Ian and Harlow’s long-time friendship and the familiarity of it against Harlow’s relationship with her parents and their routine of living is compelling. As Ian and Harlow try to find equilibrium as their feelings progress, and Harlow recognizes the rigidity of her parents’ routine and way of life, you can see the importance of embracing change. Without that realization, Harlow and Ian can never take the leap into loving each other as more than friends. Instead, if one can imagine it, their friendship might become as staid and comfortable as her parents’ way of life. This entire book underscores the necessity of remaining flexible and open, to allow something bigger and better, and to be both retrospective and introspective in the present. 

And finally, Harlow’s daughter, Sage, along with the Wilder family, continues to remind us of the love of family to support us during the best and most difficult of times. As I entered Promise Me This, I grieved the loss of Tim. His heart-to-heart talks with his children and their love interests have been some of my favorite moments of this series. However, Tim is not lost in Promise Me This. He is stamped into the hearts and minds of his children, so we continue to receive Tim Wilder-isms throughout the book. Even more, Sorensen gifts us with Sage-isms and Sheila-isms throughout her romance. Sorensen’s “choice” to write a family as foundational as the Wilders tethers this series. 

Karla Sorensen simply knows how to choose words, phrases, sentences, characters, and plot lines/devices, creating stories that don’t let go of your heart. I will say it right here: Promise Me This is my favorite book of the series. That’s a difficult choice, but 65 highlights of prose later and a heart so full of Harlow, Ian, and Sage tells the truth. This book absolutely stole my heart. And the extended epilogue is pure emotional perfection.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Kilby Blades’s Young Buck, a Green Valley Heroes romance ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A-/B+

Tropes: close proximity/neighbors; age gap; small town; he falls first; grump/sunshine; golden retriever MMC; girl squad

Kilby Blades’s contributions are among the best things that have happened to Smartypants Romance. Don’t get me wrong; I have a lot of authors whom I love writing in this world, but Kilby Blades has a way of bringing more to her romances, and it brings added layers to this world. In Young Buck, Blades introduces us to neighbors, Buck Rogers (a nice throwback to one of my favorite 80s shows) and Loretta. These two have a wild meet-cute that makes you laugh and feel bad for Buck. As the story progresses, Blades gifts us with Loretta’s capacity as an independent, intelligent woman who transcends a traumatic background to succeed in her present day. She wraps Loretta’s story in the genuine adoration of Buck, who falls first. The PR machine behind this book considers Buck the sunshine of the tale and Loretta the grump, but I think the reality is a golden retriever/black cat trope. Loretta, as a PI of cheating spouses, has seen the worst of relationships while also living through it. It isn’t that she’s grumpy; she’s careful and decisive about relationships. With his privilege, Buck has been less thoughtful about it, but a situation in his life allows him an understanding of Loretta’s past. Buck must also navigate a new job in leadership at the Green Valley Fire Department, which brings tension. Blades challenges him throughout this story, and it adds gravity to his “golden retriever” vibe. 

Throughout all of this is an underlying story about Buck’s family that surprises him and the reader. This plotline drives the story forward and keeps the readers engaged. As Buck and Loretta grow closer, their romance becomes the sweet essence of the book. It’s also here where my one criticism of the story lies. Blades makes a choice about Buck that threatens his relationship with Loretta, and I understand its need to create tension in their relationship. However, given how Blades develops Buck’s character, it is “out of character” for him and seems inconsistent. 

With Young Buck, Kilby Blades shows us why we should read her more. She crafts entertaining characters and draws us into her romantic stories. The ending of Young Buck is precisely what is needed to put a smile on your face for the day, the weekend, or your week. Smartypants Romance is better for having her on their author list.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Lexi Blake’s The Accidental Siren, book 1 of her Texas Sirens: Legacy series ✍🏻

Overall Grade: B

Tropes: MFM; who did this to you; dom/sub; small town romance; found family

Lexi Blake’s The Accidental Siren, the next generation of her Texas Sirens/Nights in Bliss series, is everything you love about those series. The MFM drama, two of the throuple needing the steadiness of the alpha, some romantic suspense, and the healing nature of the found family trope are wrapped up in spicy, curl-your-toes romance. Blake isn’t trying to rewrite her MFM romances; instead, she’s welcoming us into another generation of throuples surrounded by people who love and protect them. In this book, much like the others of this ilk, Blake plays with the societal dilemma of a throuple in a small town filled with people who accept the three, narrow-minded people, and people who use religion to reduce the autonomy and authority of others. She magnifies the double standards of ‘acceptable’ behavior for men and women, as well. Blake wraps these heavier messages in the $exual yearnings of, in this book, Jared “Grim”, Josh, and Nicole, while weaving in characters from several of her series. She loves to remind us that Big Tag is only a call away, but there are a plethora of Blake universe characters in this story. I oftentimes have to remind myself of them because her prolific book list keeps her readers on their toes. 

I enjoyed the easiness of Lexi Blake’s The Accidental Siren. It wrings emotions from you as Grim and Nicole struggle to accept the found family of the Barnes-Fleetwoods. Once they accept their fate to be loved, it’s a no-holds-barred tale of spicy love-making and happily ever afters.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: Jewel E. Ann’s I Thought of You ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A

“It’s okay that love is messy and complicated. If loving too much or too many people is my biggest offense, I’ll die with no regrets.”

“We have a beautiful life. I don’t know how long it will last. We lie a day at a time, grateful for each miraculous moment.”

Since 2020, I have lost three important people in my life, one of those being my dad. Each of them left this world in a different way, but they left it nonetheless. I also serve as a director of Guest Services at my large church of over 5000 people, and I’m surrounded by life, love, and loss on any given weekend. I have a volunteer staff of 160 people, and my current prayer request list is filled with 20 people needing prayer, most of them for situations closely related to death and dying. What I know, what is promised in our time, is that our lives are but a vapor. And how we live our lives between birth and death falls on us. 

Jewel E. Ann’s I Thought of You transcends the labels of romance or love story or women’s fiction or fiction. It’s a beautifully written, emotionally evocative manifesto on the fragility of life and the need to be present in it. It’s full of big emotions, deftly written prose (my highlights number 107), and a story that scores your heart and soul. 

Usually, I write longer reviews, but I won’t for Scottie and Price and Koen. They are purely types inhabiting the three-act structure of Jewel E. Ann’s story. What bleeds between her words, sentences, and pages is about life. It made me sob because it reminded me of some harsh truths of my own life that I’ve been wrestling with, and it challenged me to consider being brave amid my fear. To do so might bring bigger dividends than the comfortable, controlled, but sadly lonely life I lead today. 

This book has left an indelible mark on my soul, resonating with my personal journey and experiences.

In love and romance,

Professor A

new release, Review

✍🏻 Professor Romance’s Reviews: J. Saman’s Undeniably Convenient ✍🏻

Overall Grade: A-/B+

Tropes: second chances; age gap; boss/employee; forced proximity; grump/sunshine; workplace romance

J. Saman’s newest story, Undeniably Convenient, invites us into the next generation of characters from some of her beloved series: Boston’s Billionaire Bachelors and Irresistibly Yours. Nothing excites me more than diving into the kids’ lives and loves of past characters. And this newest book doesn’t disappoint. 

Undeniably Convenient is one of J. Saman’s most intense and passionate stories yet. The characters, Katy (Callan’s niece from Irresisibly Wild) and Bennett ignite the pages with their fiery attraction. Their building chemistry and the complex situation that leads to a baby contract drive the story forward at every turn. Their inability to keep their hands off each other and Bennett’s alpha-male tendencies, especially in the bedroom, make for a captivating, explosive narrative.

Adding some of the other next-generation characters ignites an interest in future stories in this new series. We are granted access to the “bachelors” and the “irresistibly yours” series which grounds us in Saman’s universe. I love it when authors create universes to inhabit because we continue to get glimpses of some of our favorite characters. Saman has shown a penchant for this strategy, and I’m all in. 

Above it all, though, is a complicated storyline in Undeniably Convenient that is tricky as Katy and Bennett reconcile and realize they can have a child together. All of this is fraught with some past villains who threaten their future and a denial of their mounting emotions, holding its readers enthralled. At least, I was engrossed in Katy and Bennett’s rollercoaster of a journey.

I will say that there are a few inconsistencies throughout the story that pulled my attention way. There was simply so much going on with this story because J. Saman’s book packs it all in. 

I am ready for more of this new series. J. Saman knows exactly how to entice her audience, and Undeniably Convenient does not disappoint.

In love and romance,

Professor A