Lesbian contemporary romance. A funny, sexy modern romance about two lonely women who bond over the unexpected and fall in love despite their determination to do the opposite.
Giselle was having a ero week, in fact, she was having a ero life. Her ex had finally copped to the affair she’d been having for months and they’d broken up, Giselle had just watched an idiot get the promotion she wanted at work, and her mother had showed up for lunch with a gigolo she is set to marry.
Life gets even more complicated when, after drowning her sorrows at her local bar, Giselle finds a newborn baby in a dumpster a block from her house and decides to keep it. Two days later, after she’s being calling in sick to work, her best friend Sandy visits, only to discover a fridge full of baby formula and Giselle reading a book on motherhood.
Sandy has to act but she doesn't want to get Giselle in trouble, so she gets in touch with a friend who can deal with the situation, Detective Dale Porter. Dale has heard it all before. Nothing surprises her and she has no problem with the idea of picking up a dumpster baby, no questions asked, from a rescuer who got “carried away.” Only, Giselle seems so distressed when the baby is taken, avowedly single Dale finds herself wanting to make it up to her.
Grace Lennox is the modern romance pen name of best-selling lesbian romance and mystery novels writer Jennifer Knight. She is the prolific author of romance and mystery novels under three pen names — Jennifer Fulton, Rose Beecham, and Grace Lennox. She was first published by the Naiad Press in 1992. Jennifer is a recipient of the Alice B. Reader's award for Lesbian Fiction, multiple Golden Crown Literary Award winner, and Lambda Literary Award finalist for both romance and mystery.
This felt very dated despite being from 2007. There's certain terms and viewpoints which I felt were outdated.
Overall, there's just a very uncomfortable feeling that permeates throughout, especially regarding our MC Giselle... Girl needs some serious therapy! For real! It just feels sad that she is seemingly so easily manipulated by those around her, and a target for predators and assholes, and that no one is on her side.
The romance felt forced and not very in-depth. Lusty - OH and I nearly forgot a passage about a partially intact hymen which made me want to gag.
Overall just a very odd story with a complete lack of emotion and sensitivity.
I'd give this book 4.5 stars, and am rounding it up to 5 because looking back, i can't find anything to point out as a flaw. i didn't LOVE it, but liked it very much and would read it again.
I found the writing to be pleasant and easy to read with no blaring flaws, and intelligent in delivery. The story itself was very different than what i expected from the description and was imaginative and different from most of what you find out there currently. The character development and description was artistic and 'real', which is probably the best part of the book. None of that 'perfect model-beautiful people, with successful business careers that wear skirts all day long and drink wine at every get together.' These characters were REAL people with physical and emotional baggage that has you getting to know them and forming opinions of them as you go. Very good delivery on the character development front. I definitely recommend this book.
I really wanted to like this more than I did. Grace Lennox can most definitely write (with great sentences like "The divine stranger sauntered to the bar like she had a patent on the satisfaction gene") and Chance is very likable. But something started nagging at me as I hit the two thirds point.
What keeps me from giving this four stars (and it's probably just me) is that it seems like the ending is rushed and Chance takes the "love the one you're with" approach.
One of the most compelling characters is Layla, a very troubled and emotionally scarred woman, who should be more integral to the plot and definitely deserves a sequel, with a story all to herself. My heart went out to her so much!
I liked this book very much! There's a tongue-in-the-cheek shrewdness, clever and deep observations, and Giselle is a rare character. It doesn't matter under which name Jennifer writes - she's first class, and always has been! One of my all time favourites!
first of all i think i added this to my kindle like 5000000 years ago because i liked her books about that detective jude and i had literally all the same issues with this book as i had with those, except for the part that jude should have never dated mercy and the two leads in this book didn't have the same issue
but i liked the other books way more because it was like a detective mystery!! that's what i cared about!! i'm not giving this a rating. don't read it. no one ace attorney style interviews a parrot in this so it's a waste
i just got annoyed a lot but wanted to know how all everyone's family drama was going to play out
i misread francesca as "franziska" 50000 times but the person she reminded me most of sure wasn't franziska von karma