Book Promo:
Violet Jordan Rule #1 of being a superhero: No tights.
Dear Diary,
By now you know I'm hardly a normal girl. Last night I woke up naked in an alley after fighting off some werewolves. All in a day's work, I guess. I thought I was dealing pretty well with the whole werepanther thing: the training, the apocalyptic prophecies. And the hot guy following me around, protecting me at every turn, is definitely a bonus. I'm even starting to become accustomed to the bloodshed and the violence—and that's what scares me. What will tomorrow bring…
Ha, I know what you are thinking. She has lost her mind. Where is the book review? That is to follow shortly. Be patient. It’s summer. It’s the weekend, calm down.
I’m disputing this title and thus its promotion. There is no diary to be found within its pages and this is decidedly an Adult Urban Fantasy. Nowhere do I recall Violet saying, she was a superhero, or saying anything about tights for that matter, although towards the end there was a lot of talk about “saving the world.”
Now, to our regularly schedule book review. Back in March I read that Avon was starting a Digital only imprint. Here is the promo from Avon’s website.
“Romance readers know what's hot...in books, in technology, in trends. Among the first to embrace books digitally, they have encouraged publishers to push the envelope editorially, exploring new subgenres and new formats. With the evolved reader in mind, Avon is introducing a digital imprint, Avon Impulse. This format will allow Avon to publish more quickly, with an eye to what's new in fiction and romance, delivering fresh, exciting content directly each month to the digital devices of today's savviest readers.”
When I saw it was an Avon Impulse title, I jumped on it, because I’ve been dying to know how this new venture would turn out.
First of all, as I mentioned above, there is no Diary anywhere. Nada. Zip. It’s first person perspective of a mid to late twenties something woman. She’s busy writing horror films, and hundreds of articles, trying to stay fiscally solvent. What little other time is left, she spends partying with her girlfriends, and drinking coffee with her gay doctor friend. She’s so busy dealing with all her life issues, I doubt this person would have time to write a grocery list, let alone a Diary. If she did, she’d be more of a journal girl.
Secondly, I know this was an ARC. As such, I expect there to be typos. But I haven’t ever received an ARC from an imprint of the caliber of Harper Collins that had spelling, typos, missing words, grammar, and unnecessary word repetition of the amount I had in my ARC. It is possible I got the wrong file. They have three more weeks before release, I really hope they clean this up. This book deserves to be the best it can be, because this author has a lot of talent.
This book and subsequent series has so much potential. Violet Jordon is a fun person to read about. When in situations other characters would feel sorry for themselves, she confronts it with witty banter and a bit of pluck. She isn't beautiful, her best friend is, but she doesn't seem jealous about it and as the book continues, she becomes beautiful, by her choices and actions and by the way she confronts the situations. Also, all that running and protein don't hurt her with losing some lbs. She and the books remind me a lot of Molly Harper’s Jane Jameson Series and the MaryJanice Davidson “Queen Betsey” series.
Violet is a writer of low budget horror films. Having caught her fiancée in bed with another woman, she abdicated L.A., and met her best friend Jessa Feychild in Texas where she is starting her life over. She spends too much time at home writing, but manages to get out a couple times a week to meet the girls for drinks at a local club or a friend for coffee. Violet drinks a lot of coffee. The girls all talk about Jessa’s stalker, a gorgeous guy who has shown up at the club for the last two months watching the girls, after having bought Jessa a drink.
One night Violet thinks she hears the neighbor’s dog tearing into her garbarge, only to find some kind of monster tearing into the neighbor’s dog. She tries to run away but is attacked, and upon coming to a day or two later, finds herself all bandaged up at “Stalker Boy’s” house, where he has been caring for her.
He tries to explain to her that she was attacked by some kind of Were animal and he’s waiting to make sure she doesn’t turn into a monster herself before he can let her go. She and Stalker Boy, whose real name is Chaz, get on each other’s nerves to begin with. She bitches a lot and doesn’t do what she’s told or listen to what he is trying to tell her. She’s got a pretty good case of denial going. It turns out, he hasn’t been watching Jessa all this time, he’s been watching her, because he reports to a “higher power” and they told him Violet was important and to protect her. Evidently someone who happens to be a werebeast got the memo about her importance and got to her first.
After a few days, Chaz lets her go once she acknowledges something is going on. She was mortally wounded and now completely healed up in a matter of days. Violet goes home and tries to pick up the pieces of her life, but she has a newfound desire to run, all the time. She’s craving red meat, and she can smell things she never knew existed. And Chaz is everywhere she turns. At the bar, at the grocery store. She is trying to ignore him, trying to pretend everything is normal however, Chaz keeps insisting she go with him before the full moon to a woman named Iris, who can help her make the transition to whatever it is she is about to become.
That is when the real fun begins. Because Violet was bitten by the resident team evil, the local Panther Were’s, who Chaz has a very personal reason for hating and that kinda leaves Violet in a very odd place to be, because despite herself, she’s falling in love with him. Chaz and Iris are training her and hoping she’ll be strong enough to stand up to the bad guys when they come to collect her. Chaz is fighting his feelings for her, and her best friend who may be the key to the entire thing, isn’t speaking to her.
Violet is a great character, and her romance with Chaz moves slowly and is sweet. There isn’t the massive simmering sexual tension. It is more of a slow build up of love that turns to desire if that makes sense. Chaz is almost a beta really. There is a lot about him we don’t know, and I’m sure we’ll find out more. There is a hilarious scene where Jessa lets Violet know how Chaz pays the bills. I’ll let you find that out for yourself.
Jessa…I’m back and forth on her character, it seemed a bit inconsistent. But then again it turns out that none of these characters are what they seem, so I look forward to reading more to find out what else is going to happen. I’m not even sure I understand where her part of the world building fits in.
I enjoyed the book and read it in one evening, the dialogue is by turns hilarious, snarky, and touching. I just hope Avon Impulse can fix the editing before its release, as a lot of people will be looking at this new digital endeavor and it needs to be as cleanly edited as any of the books that come out in print. This series in particular deserves it, as I can’t wait to read what happens next.