Review of ‘Landing zone’ by Erin Dutton.
Lauren is a former army pilot forced to retire due to a war injury. When she gets a job as a helicopter pilot for the Nashville police department, she meets training officer Kim. Both women have a common past, a deceased army pilot called Courtney who was Kim’s best friend and Lauren’s ex girlfriend. Courtney […]
Review of ‘Take a chance’ by D. Jackson Leigh.
This book is part of the ‘Pine Cone romance’ series by three different authors: ‘Take my hand’ by Missouri Vaun, ‘Take a chance’ by D. Jackson Leigh and ‘Take your time’ by V.K. Powell. This series follows the lives of three friends: Clay, Trip and Grace in the small town of Pine Cone, Georgia. There […]
Review of ‘Dangerous waters’ by Radclyffe.
This is book number 7 of Radclyffe’s ‘First responders’ series which can be read as a stand alone novel. According to the author, she got inspiration from the tropical storms that caused havoc and devastation in 2017 in South Florida and Texas. Fusing real events with fiction, several stories run parallel and provide different perspectives […]
Review of ‘A more perfect union’ by Carsen Taite.
Carsen Taite is one of my favourite lesfic authors (see my complete list here). She excels in writing legal thrillers by using her own experience as a criminal defense attorney. It’s a pity that lately she abandoned the use of legal issues in her books as they are very realistic and enjoyable. ‘A more perfect […]
Review of ‘Wounded souls’ by RJ Nolan.
I’ve read most of RJ Nolan books and with this, all of the LA Metro series. Even though the book is well written and edited, I didn’t like it as much as the previous two in the series. The characters were well developed and the issues of veterans and body image were handled with respect […]
Review of ‘The road to wings’ by Julie Tizard.
Good debut novel by Julie Tizard that describes the training process of a woman Air Force pilot in the 1990s with a slow-burn romance in the background. The author is a pilot so the book often gets very technical on flying issues and sometimes feels more like a chronicle than a novel, so consider yourself […]
Review of ‘Moment of weakness’ by K.G. MacGregor.
I’ve read a few books by K.G. MacGregor and I find her books a bit hit and miss but I like lesbian military books so I’ve decided to give it a go. The author says in the ‘Acknowledgements’ that she always wanted to write a romantic novel that opened with the couple in conflict. The […]
Review of ‘Ask, tell’ by EJ Noyes
This is a beautiful love story between two US army doctors (one the boss of the other) in times of the Don’t ask don’t tell policy. Written in first person and in present tense, it takes a couple of chapters to get used to but, despite the potential problems of this stylistic choice, the author […]