Reviewed by: ?wazithinkin
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Approximate word count: 80-85,000 words
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Author:
Stella Deleuze writes in several genres: humor, romance,
literary, and contemporary fiction. Having spent most of her life in Germany , she now lives in London with her pet iguana Zorro. For more
information, please visit her website.
Description:
“Life couldn't get any worse for 32-year-old Celia: single
again and working in two jobs she hates; the last thing she needs is falling
for gorgeous, out-of-her-league, arrogant Tom. Being a
wish-consultant, Tom has to make up for a failed case and is sent to make her
wishes come true without his usual skills. Not easy when she's reluctant to
talk to him. In order to help her become happy, he needs to win her trust and
unexpectedly develops feelings he shouldn't have. When finally everything seems to fall
into place for Celia, she receives a phone call that turns her world upside
down once again.”
Appraisal:
Poor Celia
is down on her luck and nothing is going her way. Tom is also having a bit of
his own bad luck and has been assigned to fulfill her wishes without any of his
normal skills to assist him. This means he is basically human with a few angel
connections and his devastating good looks. There is also a bad force that the Angel
Management can sense but apparently cannot locate or pin down exactly what is
going on. So here is the story, there is obviously something going on around
Celia and an angel is sent to help her without any of his powers to assist? I
found this concept hard to believe and I didn’t buy it.
Tom has to
rely on his charm alone to get to know Celia and her dreams for a happy life.
In the process he falls in love with her and her with him, so now we have two
star-crossed lovers floundering in a sea of bad forces. I think Management is
playing games with these two souls and I think the twist in the plot at the end
of the story proves this and leaves the story open for a sequel to follow.
This story
is told through Tom and Celia with alternating viewpoints that are clearly
marked at the heading of each chapter. Using this style of writing is a good
way to understand what each character understands and feels, but the story can
be repetitive. Somewhere along the way I became disconnected from the
characters. I feel a good round of editing to remove much of the extraneous
mundane details that are repeated from each point of view to focus on the
actual story would do wonders for this book. There is an interesting story
here, it just gets lost in all the words.
FYI:
This book contains British spelling; however, it was not too
difficult to follow the British slang.
Format/Typo Issues:
There were a number of proofing errors as well as copy
editing issues.
Rating: ** Two stars
1 comment:
Cheers, Al.
Just saw this by accident. Sorry you didn't like it; shows you can't win them all. :-)
You have another book of mine lined up, but it's not under my name. I'm interested to see how you rate that. My guess is 2 ** since you don't like omniscient POV. haha
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