|

Buried Treasures of 2009

BT01 At one point, pretty much every reader has that moment of finding a wonderful, delightful book that doesn’t seem to be getting any love anywhere. It’s not flying off shelves at the bookstore, it’s not getting buzz all over the internet, it just doesn’t make sense. And that’s what our Buried Treasure column is for – it’s our time to mention the books that we really liked this year that just didn’t seem to get nearly as much attention as we thought they deserved. These may be books by midlist or small-press authors who should be better known or they may be lesser-known books by authors readers are more familar with. Either way, these books just haven’t gotten the attention we feel they deserve.

As in recent years, paranormals have been big and several of our staffers had good paranormal and alternate reality reads that they thought deserved more attention. Senior Editor Ellen Micheletti has really enjoyed Molly Harper’s Nice Girls Don’t series of which she reviewed Nice Girls Don’t Have Fangs and Nice Girls Don’t Date Dead Men in 2009. Of the books, she says, “The books are so funny, I can’t read them
in public for laughing out loud. They are chock full of humorous characters and the writing is smooth and assured.”

bt02 Senior Reviewer and Pollster LinnieGayl Kimmel enjoyed Tekgrrl by A. J. Menden, a novel about superheroes with a “fascinating, intelligent heroine with some great super-power skills.” And Senior Reviewer Heather Brooks also found a paranormal to love in Midnight’s Master by Cynthia Eden, a demon romance with a powerful, standout hero and steamy sexual tension.

bt03 Normally I gravitate toward historicals and suspense, but I did find some really good paranormal reads myself this year, including one from a series that I think deserves a lot more buzz than I’ve seen it getting online. Doomsday Can Wait by Lori Handeland is the second in her Phoenix Chronicles series, featuring a heroine who must use her powers to fight against evil and stop demons bent on destroying humanity.

bt04a Continuing with the theme, my other buried treasure of the year was a historical but had a definite paranormal plot twist. For the Earl’s Pleasure is by Anne Mallory, a historical romance author with several books to her backlist. Her latest was a charming, even poignant read and I think it deserved more attention than it got.

bt04 Another of our publishers, Blythe Barnhill, also found a historical deserving of more attention. She describes Emma Wildes’ An Indecent Proposition as “innovative and different.” Rounding out the list of buried treasures with a historical setting was the regency trad/Jane Austen sequel The Other Mr. Darcy by Monica Fairview, which also garnered DIK status here at AAR when it was reviewed. Senior Reviewer Rike Horstmann described the author’s work using the point of view of “a difficult and too conventional heroine” as “amazing.”

bt05 Moving into the romantic suspense and thriller reads, we have the only buried treasure book this year to have been nominated more than once. Pollster Lee Brewer and Reviewer Jean Wan agreed that Dangerous Lies by Anna Louise Lucia was something special. Lee noted that she was so impressed that she went back and bought the author’s other novel, and Jean said of this book that she “was blown away by the assured prose and character depth.” In addition, this book also earned a DIK review here at AAR.

bt06 Jill Sorensen’s Set the Dark on Fire got favorable mentions on several internet sites, but still doesn’t seem to have gotten quite the amount of attention Rike Horstmann thought it deserved. She enjoyed both the setting and the characters in this one. And switching from romantic suspense to thrillers, Anne Marble really liked The Shimmer by David Morrell. When trying to guess why this book didn’t get as much buzz as others by the author, she noted that it was not quite like his usual work and was published by a different publisher as well. No matter what this reason, this was still a book in need of more attention!

bt10 Also on the suspense front, Bessie Makris wishes more readers knew about the Phryne Fisher series by Kerry Greenwood, of which Queen of the Flowers, Murder in the Dark and Murder on a Midsummer Night were published in 2009. Set in the 1920s, this mystery series follows the adventures the glamorous Phryne Fisher, a heroine who grew up poor in Australia and who then came into great wealth as her father inherited following the deaths of more distant relatives in the Great War. Bored by society life, Phryne has become an ultraglamorous investigator. Bessie describes the books by saying, “The setting gives Greenwood the opportunity to write about women’s lives in the 1920’s (including topics like birth control, abusive marriages, prostution, drug abuse. Phryne is also very glamorous with incredible clothes, a red Hispano-Suizo automobile, and an airplane. And to bring it all back to the romance genre, she doesn’t lack for male companionship.”

bt07 A few of the staff here had some contemporary romance picks as well. Our Message Board Moderator Lea Hensley thought Practice Makes Perfect by Julie James belonged up there with the blockbusters. Of this book, she said, “I am impressed with her classy writing style and ability to deliver a contemporary romance that seems realistic, sensibly sexy, and totally character driven.” Publisher Sandy Coleman rounded out the contemporary picks with Too Hot to Handle by Robin Kaye. Sandy admired Kaye’s writing voice and stated that she “writes romances about ordinary people that are refreshing to someone who’s tired of the Billionaire Next Door. Which I am. Completely.”

bt08 Rounding out our buried treasures we have a work of women’s fiction, a series title and a male/male romance. Pollster Lee Brewer greatly enjoyed Henry’s Sisters by Cathy Lamb, a novel about the lives of three sisters who are united by their love for their mentally handicapped brother Henry. Senior Reviewer and Pollster LinnieGayl Kimmel thought First Come Twins by Helen Brenna, which received a DIK review, deserved more buzz as it was, “a wonderful category romance filled with complex characters and an interesting island setting.” Last but not least, Reviewer Katie Mack wanted to bring attention to Gobsmacked by L.B. Gregg which she described as “plain fun to read.” This novel features the humorous voice of a first-person narrator and has led Katie to glom the rest of the series. bt09

So, if you’re looking for something a little off the beaten path, these buried treasure picks for 2009 are a few we found to enjoy. What buried treasures did you discover this year?

-Lynn Spencer

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

11 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments