Book Review Club: Launch Windows by @DebraCaldwyl

Launch Windows coverLaunch Windows
by Debra Caldwyl
Young Adult Romance

Book Blurb:

Ysabela Mayorga McLain is the 17-year-old reigning “Math Queen” and food cart entrepreneur of Mesa High School’s junior class. Sharp-tongued with a razor-keen intellect, her spiky exterior hides a soft heart and nagging worry about her family and future. All the popcorn in the world can’t pay for college.

Omar de la Vega is the scion of the realty powerhouse DLV Enterprises, Los Arcos’ hottest real estate development firm. His family owns half of Los Arcos. But the ASB Vice President would give it all up for a chance to explore uncharted stars.

When a scholarship contest offers an opportunity to “Reach for the Stars,” sparks fly between the two rivals as they fight for the chance to overcome their own personal gravity wells. Can they escape the weight of financial and family expectations that hold them down?

Everyone needs a launch window.

Review:

First a disclaimer: Debra is the daughter of my friend, Barbara Clark, but I wouldn’t be reviewing this book if I hadn’t really liked it. I bought the Kindle version for my iPad.

Ysa and Omar are both sympathetic characters. Ysa is smart, really smart in math and science, but her potential exceeds her aspirations. Coming from a relatively poor family in an upscale California beach town colors her perceptions. After school, she mans her nana’s food cart, and makes plans with her best friend to expand the business after attending a state college. When the “find a planet” contest is announced, she has to adjust her schedule and get up earlier in the morning to find time on the school computers.

Omar, her intellectual match and nemesis, is always there, competing for all he’s worth, despite the fact that his father can afford to pay his attention. Barbs and sparks fly between the two science nerds, but Omar is dating mean girl Gloria, the queen bee of the school and another pain in Ysa’s behind.

Caldwyl is a teacher, so knows what she’s writing about. In an Author’s Note, she notes that the planet contest was inspired by Zooniverse.org‘s Planet Hunters Project, though her version of the contest “differs wildly from the real thing”.

I liked the fact that the characters reflect the ethnic diversity in Southern California. The romance is sweet and believable, and the reader roots for Ysa to succeed despite the odds. And the ending is very romantic. A well-written, enjoyable debut novel, recommended for fans of young adult romance.

As always, click on the graphic below for more great reviews in the Barrie Summy Book Review Club. This month, I have promised myself that I will get to everyone’s reviews.

What have you been reading? Feel free to share in the comment area.

Linda

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@Barrie Summy

A Victorian Meal from Sherlock’s Scandal by Suz deMello #MFRWAuthor #Sherlock

Suz deMello stops by to share a Victorian meal from her erotic fan-fic romance, Sherlock’s Scandal, published by Ellora’s Cave.

Sherlock's Scandal coverIn Sherlock’s Scandal, Sherlock and Irene dine on roulades of salmon on braised greens, followed by a syllabub, and drank Champagne. Did I imagine a realistic meal?

The Champagne, certainly. Wine has been made in the Champagne region of France since the country was known as Gaul—i.e., since the Roman era. However, the development of the bubbly drink we now prize came rather later. The monk Dom Perignon, whose name still adorns bottles of the finest Champagne, lived from 1638-1715. But according to Wikipedia, his main focus was ridding the wine of the bubbles, which are the natural result of the fermentation process. The drink we know today was developed in the nineteenth century by the house of Veuve Cliquot, which was joined by Krug (1843), Pommery (1858) and Bollinger (1829).

The fish, also. The Billingsgate market alone sold 136,000 tons of fish annually ) including salmon. The salmon would likely have come from “the firths and bays of Scotland,” that country having been long famed for its fine salmon. The greens upon which the roulades were served may have come from Covent Garden, “the great vegetable market of the metropolis.”

The dessert, syllabub, had been known in England at least from the sixteenth century. It’s a pudding of various consistencies—I’ve seen it thick enough to eat with a spoon, or a thinner concoction poured over fruit or cake.

If they had enough money, the average Londoner ate well even though food inspections were intermittent. However, some of the grub they fancied are somewhat foreign to our palates.

Bloaters by Van GoghA few examples: Bloaters, a street food, was a cold, smoked herring that was eaten whole, gills and eyes included. (Pictured above as painted by Van Gogh.) Calves’ foot jelly—a dish my British mother made until we all rose up in protest—was also popular. Some of the tastier dishes available on the street include meat pies—pasties, which you might want to wash down with ginger beer, a perennial favorite that’s still available.

Here’s a little about Sherlock’s Scandal:

A bored Sherlock is a dangerous Sherlock. His twin vices of cocaine and sex could prove his undoing, until he meets his match in elusive, enigmatic Irene Adler. Hiding her heart, Irene deserts Sherlock in the midst of their affair. He schemes to win her back, but the lady won’t come easily to hand. Instead, she forces him to compete for honor, glory and love.

Find it here: Ellora’s Cave: http://www.ellorascave.com/sherlock-s-scandal.html
Amazon: http://amzn.com/B00M85BER8

Suz deMello About the author:

Best-selling, award-winning author Suz deMello, a.k.a Sue Swift, has written seventeen romance novels in several subgenres, including erotica, comedy, historical, paranormal, mystery and suspense, plus a number of short stories and non-fiction articles on writing. A freelance editor, she’s held the positions of managing editor and senior editor, working for such firms Total-E-Bound, Liquid Silver Books and Ai Press. She also takes private clients.

Her books have been favorably reviewed in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus and Booklist, won a contest or two, attained the finals of the RITA and hit several bestseller lists.

A former trial attorney, her passion is world travel. She’s left the US over a dozen times, including lengthy stints working overseas. She’s now writing a vampire tale and planning her next trip.

find Suzie’s books at Ellora’s Cave and Amazon: Suz deMello,Sue Swift.

Thanks for the interesting post, Suz, though I think I’ll pass on the bloaters and calves’ foot jelly. Salmon and champagne sounds so much better, LOL.

Who’s your favorite screen or TV Sherlock? Robert Downey, Jr. or Jonnie Lee Miller? Leave a comment or question for Suz to be entered in my August monthly drawing for a $15 Starbucks gift card.

Linda aka Lyndi