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* PDF Ebook Love Sick: A Memoir of Searching for Mr. Good Enough, by Frances Kuffel

PDF Ebook Love Sick: A Memoir of Searching for Mr. Good Enough, by Frances Kuffel

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Love Sick: A Memoir of Searching for Mr. Good Enough, by Frances Kuffel

Love Sick: A Memoir of Searching for Mr. Good Enough, by Frances Kuffel



Love Sick: A Memoir of Searching for Mr. Good Enough, by Frances Kuffel

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Love Sick: A Memoir of Searching for Mr. Good Enough, by Frances Kuffel

Frances Kuffel wasn’t a Victoria’s Secret model, but she wasn’t so bad. Why couldn’t she find her Mr. Right? As Shakespeare said, the course of true love never did run smooth, but for Kuffel, it seemed like one pothole after another…

In this sharp and irreverent memoir, Frances Kuffel recalls her quest to replace her on-again, off-again lover with someone new and preferably less unstable. Fifty-three and never married, Frances opens her mind to all possibilities. She goes out with an Orthodox Jew, is almost the victim of a scammer, stays out all night with a man twenty years her junior, encounters feeding fetishes and shoe fetishes, and generally reads a lot of strange emails.

Brazenly honest and insightful, Kuffel comes through the experience with a new understanding of love and realizes that what she wants is not necessarily a knight in shining armor. She’d be perfectly happy with someone who’ll spend hours buying antique teacups with her, thinks two dogs are not enough, and wants to be in her life through the good and the bad. And once she finally figures out what she’s looking for, the only challenge left is to find it…

  • Sales Rank: #1856464 in Books
  • Published on: 2014-06-03
  • Released on: 2014-06-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.20" h x .75" w x 5.50" l, .50 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 272 pages

Review
Praise for Frances Kuffel:

“Inspiring…brazenly intimate…offers a powerful rebuff to anyone who believes that people can’t change.”—USA Today

“[Kuffel’s] writing is as clear and sharp as broken glass…a glorious read.” —The New York Times

“A talented writer.”—The Boston Globe

“Empathy, candor, and courage are abundant.”—Entertainment Weekly

“Rife with snappy anecdotes and mordant humor…as fascinating in its grotesque insight as in its inspirational uplift.”—The Onion

“[A] riveting memoir…grim humor… A hilarious and insightful book.”—Psychology Today

About the Author
Frances Kuffel, author of Passing for Thin and Eating Ice Cream with My Dog, and has been profiled in Time, Salon, More, Chicago Sun-Times, and other media. She has made extensive radio and television appearances, including on CBS’s The Early Show and Good Day Live; has been a guest columnist for the San Diego Reader; and has written and blogged for Psychology Today. Her short stories have appeared in TriQuarterly, the Massachusetts Review, Glimmer Train, the Greensboro Review, and Montana Women Writers: A Geography of the Heart, and her poetry has appeared in the Georgia Review, Prairie Schooner, Southern Poetry Review, and Quarterly West. She holds an MFA from Cornell and lives in New York.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
One

Penguin couples spend their lives apart from each other and meet once a year in late March, after traveling as far as seventy miles inland—on foot or sliding on their bellies—to reach the breeding site.

April

We are in Santa Fe to find a ghost. It is also, as he and I had discussed in a wearying back-and-forth series of phone calls and emails, my audition as Dar’s girlfriend and, seven thousand feet higher than where we started out in Phoenix, we were breathless in all the wrong ways. Instead of canoodling our ghost into rearranging the furniture, I slept fitfully as the television murmured and flickered through a marathon of Sasuke. In the end, our only haunting is that “Need You Now” is on every radio station between Santa Fe and Phoenix, which is annoying but also fitting as we sit in the car outside his house having the Talk.

It is becoming more and more obvious that men are oblivious to what Friends with Benefits can start for a woman.

“I love you,” he begins. “We have a lot in common. You know, the whole lit thing, and dogs, and a general sort of outlook on stuff. But then again, there are things that are important to me that we don’t have in common. I don’t know whether it’s best to be with someone with whom you have everything in common or not. I had a girlfriend like that once, but the minute she came to visit me, I knew it was all wrong . . .

“So I dunno. One thing is that you’re not exactly easygoing. You don’t always relax and go with the flow. I mean, you never know what could happen, I s’pose. I could wake up one day and be in love with you. But I’m not now and I don’t want to do anything that would jeopardize our friendship. That means a lot to me. You know that, right?”

I blow my nose in answer. I want out of his car. I want to get into my car, which is parked in his garage, and I want to drive to my father’s house, get on the plane to New York the next morning, retrieve my dog from my friends Ben and Jean and tell them what didn’t happen and then hold a weepy funeral with the mostly faithful love of Daisy, an ill-behaved, too-smart-for-her-own-good yellow Labrador, in the solitude of the Bat Cave.* Don’t say anything, one part of me warns. Have some dignity.

“Okay.” I hiccup and open the door. “I guess that’s that. I gotta go.”

He hugs me good-bye, an awkward bear hug in which I pat his back as though consoling him.

I’m so sick of this bullshit, I think.

• • •

I should have known, I think as the Midwest skeins me away from Dar. I should have known when I was late meeting him in Phoenix for the drive to New Mexico. I should have known when I found myself biting my lips in an ugly frown against my grinding jaw, that I was too tense, too scared to be girlfriend material.

I had no excuse for not knowing how tension crippled anything soft and fluid in me because I know the difference between scared, solo tension and the tension you admit to and find is as shared and rare as a yellow crocus flowering in the snow.

March

“God, France, I’m so sorry I’m not going to be here,” Grace calls in disappointment on a heavy and cold Sunday afternoon. I am about to leave on my book tour to Seattle and Portland and am excited to see so many people from my past. Grace and I had been good friends in college but we’d lost touch in the last twenty years. I’d looked for her on various networking sites with no success, but her curiosity was equal to mine and she had found me in a two-second Google search. All Grace had to do was email me and we spent most of a Saturday on the phone reestablishing a comfy, happy friendship.

“I have lots of friends and family in Seattle, so I have plenty to do,” I say, “although I really wanted to go to the movies with you.”

She sighs and is about to answer when there is a loud crash and cursing on her end of the line. I wait through some mumbling and then laughter. “Kevin just knocked over the trash,” she says. “He comes over most Sundays and makes brunch for us. But first we have to pick up banana peels and plum pits.”

“And eggshells—ick!” I hear him call.

It’s been thirty years since I’ve heard Kevin’s voice but I could pick it out of Monday morning rush hour. I hadn’t even heard of his sister, Grace, when Kevin Willoughby and I were pals for about five minutes in high school drama club. He’s two years older than I, had dimples you could bury nickels in, dazzling blue eyes, a lovely tenor and he was one the most popular boys in school. He was perpetually jolly and surrounded by people; I was fat, a depressed underachiever, someone who went through friendships like Kleenex. I admired him for being all those things I was not and wasn’t surprised when he got bored with acting. He went off to date the cream of the Joni Mitchell clones and the funniest cheerleaders, take the coolest drugs and ski with the maniacs. We lapsed into jokey hallway hellos and the thrill of having him sign my yearbook.

The ironies are rife. Kevin, gay and closeted, was hiding behind what I should have been learning—how to talk to the opposite sex, going to the prom, falling in love for the first time. But of course his story didn’t end there. After graduating, he came out and cozied up to Jack Daniel’s like the boyfriend high school never gave him. I’d gone on to college and more college, worked in publishing, wrote a book about my dramatic weight loss and then wrote another book about my more mundane regain. I know from Grace that he’s in his fragile first year of sobriety and is starting beauty college; I’m a sometimes–adjunct professor but mostly walk dogs for a living.

So much for our halcyon days. Which is why I am dying to talk to him.

“Put that Kevin on the phone,” I demand. “I need to talk to Kevin Willoughby.”

“How the hell are you?”

I start to laugh.

“Not well, Kevin. Not well at all.”

“What’s wrong, darling?”

“I have new neighbors.”

“Are they partiers? Complainers?”

“No. They’re gay.”

“Uh-huh,” he says cautiously, letting me know he’s waiting to see how this plays out.

“They have the garden my apartment looks out on. Summer’s coming and last night they were listening to Fiddler on the Roof.”

I can hear the hideousness dawn on him. “I see.”

“It’s going to get very . . . brunchy around here in a couple of months. I swear I’ll call the cops if they have Oklahoma! with their mimosas.”

Kevin has a laugh that is as dangerous and infectious as bubonic plague. I hunch-run to the toilet before I wet my pants, and when we catch our breath, he wheezes, “Where have you been all my life, Frances Kuffel, and when does your plane land?”

• • •

By the time we head out to Kevin’s favorite pho noodle shop on East Yesler Way, I am as tense as I would be a month later in Santa Fe.

There is a difference, however. In Santa Fe, I am tight with waiting, wondering, searching for the magic words or slant of light to fill Dar with that love he isn’t sure he doesn’t have for me, a double-negative that is too big to overcome.

Kevin and I, on the other hand, have sat on his small balcony discussing AA and the 12-step program for compulsive overeating I’ve not been attending lately, telling our drunkalogue and fatalogue stories with increasing glee, then a sharp ritenuto into the grim side of addiction, how we avoided everyone and everything in order to eat or drink alone, consuming so much that we passed out only to wake hours later to do the same thing again, our underlying convictions that we are pieces of shit and that addiction is both our punishment and solace. At several points along the way, each of us lost everything and learned nothing. I declared bankruptcy in my thirties because I couldn’t pay the cost of takeout. He was fired from a glamorous, well-paying job. Drunkenly careless, he contracted HIV in his thirties; overburdening my body with fat and hormones, I had emergency surgery to remove a thirty-six-pound ovarian cyst and my gallbladder in my thirties. At 336 pounds, I couldn’t walk for more than ten minutes. He spent the first three days in rehab leaning heavily on a walker.

We discover that we have unknowingly dallied in each other’s shit and I am shaking from the intensity of the second conversation we’ve had since high school. I’m not hoping I’ll turn, eyes bright, and give him a private peek at how pretty I can be. I am not waiting for Kevin to realize anything about me.

He already knows. He’s known for years without knowing me. And I am shaking and sweating because I want to dance or scream the loop-de-loop of a roller coaster.

I look up at the soft blue March Seattle day as we walk to my car. Daffodils are out and the pear trees are flowering. Across the street is an old white house that needs rose trellises and hanging pots of begonias.

“Just think what we’d do to that house,” I say as I fish out my keys.

“I know,” he says in that way that says he really does.

April

I should know that Dar’s aloof tolerance is a deal breaker when I beg to make one dash into the St. Francis souvenir shop. I want to buy gifts for my friends who are taking care of my dog. They are Vatican II babies like me who revel in bloodied martyrs and swooning penitents. Such tchotchkes have no charm for Dar, and he’s eager to move on to the art galleries where he can speak seriously with owners about the Mesa museum he volunteers at. I snatch Christmas ornaments of Francis of Assisi and primitive angels, hurrying, embarrassed, not wanting to waste Dar’s time.

When Kevin and I went down to the piers a month earlier, he knelt to pose goofily with a photo of Ivar Haglund at Ivar’s Acres of Clams and solemnly wrapped his arms around a scary arcade clown. He deliberated with me over crab-shaped salt and pepper shakers and pulled a stranger over to photograph us with a plaster fisherman, then dragged me to the Olde Curiosity Shoppe to visit his friends, the petrified remains of a dog and a human who seems to be screaming that Mount Rainier has erupted and swallowed her child.

If I’m honest—or later, when I begin to get honest—I am mystified by Dar’s lack of schlock idolatry. He’s too smart and too funny not to groove on jumping beans and Barack and Michelle Obama Day of the Dead figurines. After all, he’d laughed at the junk in the truck stop we gassed up at, modeled a baseball cap with a propeller on top and stuck a navy blue leather cowboy hat on me.

What happens in a truck stop, I am forced to conclude, stays in the truck stop.

• • •

I am hurt but determined to make the best of it. I breathe deeply for the first few days back in Brooklyn, walking dogs and taking too many pictures of tulips showing their Georgia O’Keeffe to the clement sunshine, but I can’t stop thinking about my conversation with Dar. I laugh crookedly and add to my list of Wrong Things to Say When Saying It’s Over:

I love you, but I’m not in love with you.*

It goes right up there with:

You would like her.*

Let’s get married, but to other people, and then tell each other about it.

And

I owe you an amends for how I treated you when we were together.*

I do like absurdity. In the end I tell myself I’ve come out ahead. Then I turn my attention to Dar and to what went, maybe, right.

• • •

“I want to remember . . .” Dar says, pounding along to “Need You Now” somewhere near Gallup on our way back to Phoenix, and proceeds to rattle off meaningful moments in our thirty-six-hour trip to fine arts purgatory. A few days later I email him from Brooklyn with the precise list:

The smell of pines as we climbed east and up in elevation from Phoenix

The pitcher of ice water with floating tangerine quarters in the lobby of our hotel

The portrait of our ghost, Julia Staab, hanging over our very own fireplace, across from our very own four-poster bed

The pony-hide armchair in the art gallery

The ukulelist and his girlfriend, who sang an affectless “Oh, Susannah” (and their conversation about clawhammer music after)

Ginger-pineapple juice

My entrée of shrimp with a green chili and lemongrass sauce [that he preferred to his plato supremo]; my lavender ice cream [that he preferred to his crème brulée]

The urn of Mexican cocoa in the hotel lobby (the best he’d had since living in Nicaragua)

The massage with oil made of bergamot, lemon, lavender and rosemary

The prayer wheel garden

“Thank you, thank you, thank you,” he wrote back. “I love that you remembered that for me.”

“Love?” I screech to Kevin. He’s taken to calling me a couple of times a week before he has breakfast and goes off to cosmetology school. We talk about living one day at a time and how much we want and don’t know how to be happy-joyous-and-free, as well as about the chittering Vietnamese students who dyed his hair platinum one slow afternoon and my audition in Santa Fe. “He loves my memory but he doesn’t love me?”

“That’s exaggerating, Frances, darling. I know he loves you.”

“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” I singsong back at him. The rest of that sentence doesn’t need finishing.

“If I’m not easygoing, why did I let him eat my dinner? Why did I smile and go study paintings while he talked to street musicians and gallery owners?”

“What do you want to remember from the trip?”

I’m stumped. I liked my shrimp and the lavender ice cream but an overeater has a hard time remembering tastes. A massage is a massage. The prayer wheels in the cool daffodil light will stay with me, though. “I liked the storm drain covers,” I say. “They had the city’s coat of arms on them.”

“That’s hilarious! Seattle has special drains, too.”

“I know! I took pictures of them. They’re walking squids or something, right?”

“I’m not sure. So if you liked the drains, what would he repeat back as the things you wouldn’t want to forget?”

“Probably the same things he loved,” I say. His mother gave him the trip for graduation—he had finished yet another bachelor’s degree, this time in social work. He’d earned that trip. Having earned the trip, it became a star turn, the Lone Ranger joined by Tonto so that he’d have someone to talk to and be admired by.

“When you’re . . . uncomfortable,” Kevin says, either searching for words or trying not to offend me, “you get all, you know, arms crossed and frowny-eyed and your voice gets kinda high-pitched. Did you do that?”

“You mean diffident? You saw the pictures he took of me. I’d give the Phantom of the Opera a shot at homecoming prince.”

“How much did you apologize?”

“For how I looked?”

“Partly. But for the waiter not bringing water on time or the cost of gas or for him ordering the wrong meal?”

“Or for him not burning CDs to play in the car? Yeah, that was my fault, too.”

• • •

The words “you never know what could happen” are still so alive in me that I rattle off Dar’s pleasures in the trip as that last shred of hope that I’m too smart to grasp at very often. Memory and sentiment have always been my province. I’m the one who has family stories from generations back, insists on holiday traditions and cried when the seam of a leather jewelry box my mother gave me forty years ago finally ripped. Maybe it’s being adopted or maybe it’s not having kids of my own, but I worry that my little pod of Kuffels will fade a little around the edges if one of us doesn’t know how to make my grandmother’s sugar cookies or that my great-great-grandfather died walking north from Andersonville when the Civil War ended.

All that remembering of other people’s stories makes me a sometimes-brilliant gift-giver. Such talents can make me less than easygoing, I suppose, but they are talents, fonts of generosity. Exactly what woman is going to remember bergamot and rosemary when she buys massage oil for Dar? Who will send him a perfect bouquet of daisies for graduation and give him a cotton candy maker for Christmas?

Do I buy love?

There has been a succession of such gifts that are so apt that the only thing I can top them with is to go away and leave my friend/crush/lover alone to enjoy them. That solemn teddy bear we named Étienne, the Irish print of the crofter’s cottage, the Grover Washington CD, the book of World War II maps . . . ?

Or do such gifts demand too much gratitude?

Dar may find me high-strung, but it’s not like I email him every week or even call him every month or confide my loneliness, depression and agoraphobia in him. In fact, he turns me into an insouciant ingénue. I tend to forget to turn the oven on when he comes to dinner at my father’s house and not be able to make up my mind as to what kind of cheese we should buy: Is this what being un-easygoing is?

Does he remember how we met, for God’s sake?

August 2005

Because of the heat wave stretching from coast to coast that prohibited dogs from flying, I had to leave Daisy, my boon companion, with my brother in Montana when I was due to go back to New York. Daisy is not an easy dog, but she’d been my blessed bane for the past two years. She is ageist and racist, and highly suspicious of wheelchairs, canes, crutches and walkers. Walking the broad length of the Promenade at night, she will sniff out and want to take down the drunks, drug addicts and mentally disabled from four blocks away. She comments on these people in a manner not dissimilar to Sandra Bernhard. For the last two years, I’d spent a couple of hours every day in the dog run lobbing balls while she shrieked “throw-the-ball-throw-the-ball-throw-the-ball” in a voice that disintegrated glass.

Finding myself alone was disorienting. My bed was too big. If the buzzer went off, there was no torrent of protest. I didn’t have dirt in my shoes and mud stains on my shorts. I cleaned my apartment and threw out bags of dog hair and grit and it didn’t stack up again by suppertime. I was forced to find something to do as I watched the weather reports in Missoula, Minneapolis and New York, and I decided to take advantage of my bachelorettehood.

What better statement of liberation could I make, then, than posting on craigslist? In the two years I’d had Daisy, I had had one sort-of boyfriend. In the few months before I got her, I’d gone through a mildly slutty period, but in my momentary independence I went, shall we say, a little over the top.*

I could have paid for any number of useful things—teeth whitening, having my apartment painted, a plane ticket to Milan, taxes—with what I spent on corsets, high heels, push-up bras, hose and garter belts in the summer of 2005. I got some good use out of them and when, after three weeks of record high temperatures, Daisy was finally able to fly home, I had been paddled, whipped, flogged and fucked in a number of creatively organic and inorganic ways. I was down to one or two emails of interest from the original post. If I was going to finish this project, I’d have to find a way that didn’t excite her wild defense of me. Anyway, I was losing interest. I like kink as much as the next girl, but I think it’s kinkier to be ball-gagged by someone whose mother has asked me to pass the mashed potatoes.

One of those lingering emails was from Dar. He thought my posting was quirky and too literate not to respond to. We spoke and I had no opinion of this younger man with a rather flat voice but I agreed to meet him for a movie.

Which he slept through.

We must have found something to talk about over iced tea afterward. I remember finding out that he has an MFA in creative writing and was from the West, which was enough to invite him to dinner at my apartment that week.

He arrived in a state of extreme nervousness. Daisy took one look at him and started humping him, something she’d done once before, to a fireman. She broke some of the tension he carried with him but as soon as he peeled her off he turned to me and said, “I have to tell you something before we go any further.”

I shivered a little at that.

“I’m a crack addict.”

I cocked my head and sized him up again. “I didn’t know white boys could be crackheads.”

“I’m a criminal,” he said.

“You’re an addict.” I shrugged my shoulders and went into the kitchen to fetch the chamomile iced tea he’d mentioned was his favorite. “So what? I’m an addict, too.”

“Not to crack. It’s not the same.”

I handed him a glass and sat down at my computer to pull up a research file. “Sugar and cocaine both affect dopamine receptors. Tolerance grows for each. The two substances are cross-addictive. Do you want to know more?”

He gulped his tea and then took another long sip. “I can’t believe you remember I love iced chamomile,” he said.

• • •

The company Dar had been working for had thought it wise for them to part ways. His lease had run out and, at the time we met, he’d decided to head to a friend’s beach house to go cold turkey. He was in the midst of saying good-bye to ten years’ worth of friends. After meeting up with old pals, he took to dropping in; when he was through with his farewells, he asked to stay for a night before hopping a bus to Georgia.

He stayed for ten days. The studio portion of the Bat Cave is about 15 by 40 feet, barely room for a single occupant. Now there were three, and one of us didn’t sleep. Except for forays to see his dealer, Dar worked frantically—downloading weird software, writing fragments of bopper poetry or base-crazy wisdom—on his laptop as I worked on a book. It was unaccountably comfortable, each of us in our own bubble of thought, emerging occasionally to share a good line, a website or a song. I gave him Frou Frou’s “Let Go” and he gave me the Postal Service’s “Clark Gable.” I would set a salad or bowl of yogurt at his side and two hours later he’d realize he’d eaten it and loved it. At night he created an elaborate ritual of tucking Daisy and me into bed.

The problem, he explained, was that, high, he found it hard to get an erection.

“But you would if you could, right?” I asked him about twice a day.

And one evening I came in from walking Daisy and he was splayed along the couch like Manet’s “Woman Reclining in Spanish Dress with Kitten.”

Except there was no kitten and he wasn’t dressed.

“So?” he said as I stood in the door and gaped. “Ready?”

“Uh,” I stuttered.

“It’s time. You want to do this, right? Let’s do it.”

I laughed as nervously as hair dancing over a flame. He stood up and walked over, unleashed Daisy, inspected the leash for a moment and then flung it into the kitchen behind us.

“So you don’t want to.”

I stuttered some more. “I do. I’m just . . . taken aback.”

“Abashed, disconcerted, out of countenance . . .”

“Surprised will do.”

I had never giggled, cried and come at the same time. That conjunction of silly orgasmic stars would happen once more in my life, the second and last time Dar fucked me and I made love to him. At least he was long-sober the last time. At least he got it up on a whim and at least he came.

Still. Twice in five years can make a girl kind of tense.

April

A couple of weeks after Dar loved the memories I’d saved for him, I ask him for music suggestions. Knowing we are now at a permanent impasse there cannot be a more stupid request I could make. Whenever one of my students goes through a breakup, I urge her to go out immediately and buy an album by an artist she did not listen to with her ex. “Cut your hair, take a juggling class, rearrange your furniture,” I advise. “Do whatever you have to do to become a person he doesn’t know anymore.” It begins with replacing the music because all she needs to do is run into 3 Doors Down on her iPod to start a day-long crying jag.

I am obviously bored out of my mind to invite Christopher O’Riley playing Radiohead into my life. With a lump in my throat, I listen to one tune and respond that I like it, then go back to playing Farm Town on Facebook.

Dar slams back. “What do you mean, you ‘like’ it? I sent you a playlist of songs I love and you listen to one and you ‘like’ it. You know music is one of the most important things to me. I think you owe me more consideration than that.”

I stare at the email, wondering what to say to make it right. I’ve gotten myself into one of those dumb arguments that is about one thing but is really about deeper matters of the heart, and although I started it, I’m pissed off at the fierceness of his response. I can listen to the song again, apologize and find something profound to say about it, or I can inform him that he’s overreacting to my mistake in asking for music that would remind me of his loose-hipped dancing forever.

Which I tell him. I might be a thinner, happier person if I felt and expressed my anger at the moment it’s roused, so this spat is important. This is progress. I have never argued with a man I loved.

In fifteen minutes, we descend into an email tug-of-war of I-told-you-how-I-felt versus that’s-exactly-why-I-can’t-listen-to-these-songs. By the time he circles back to my lack of going with the flow, I’m browbeaten. “Stop this,” I snap. “Let’s just stop.”

I mean a full, complete halt to all proceedings, but having argued my point of view I’m too tired to emphasize that to Dar.

What I say to Kevin is, “What the fuck does he mean I don’t ‘go with the flow’? We met on craigslist, for God’s sake. I was letting men spank me that summer. He’d lost his job and apartment and was ten thousand bucks in crack debt when I took him in and kicked him out at the right time. You know I really want to move to Seattle, right? I have a life there. I have you and Grace and a family the size of the Osmonds within 500 miles. What’s here? I walk dogs. I have about four friends here, and the only ones I actually socialize with are Ben and Jean. There isn’t room to turn around in the Bat Cave. But I can’t make the decision because maybe I should move to Phoenix. I hate that city, but I could take care of Dad and see Dar on a regular basis. In the five years I’ve known him, we see each other a couple of times a year. All I do is wave good-bye.”

“Shouldn’t you say that to Dar?” Kevin asks mildly.

“I can’t. It’s been such a hard month already.” I imitate Dar’s voice: “‘I love you but I’m not in love with you; you’re too stressful; I love the way your brain works; you don’t take me or my interests seriously.’ I feel like one of those felt bull’s-eyes with Velcro arrows of Dar’s statements all over me.”

Besides, if I let him keep arguing our way back to that night in the car outside his house, he’d have to clarify what he meant by my lack of easygoingness and I’m not sure I want to hear it.

“You gotta disengage, Princess. Stop emailing him. Start saving your money and come back to Seattle. I’m lonely for you.”

All the tears of rage and love coalesce around my vocal cords at that. I miss Kevin, too. As ready as I’ve been for the last couple years to massacre my Visa card and move to Arizona, I’ve never woken up every morning hoping he will call me that day or text me a picture of the tomato seedlings in his kitchen window. Kevin does that. Kevin’s genius is for making me feel part of his life by sharing the small things in the day. Dar’s genius is for making room to twit witticisms between final exams or full appointment rosters.

“If I ever get it together to move out there,” I tell him, “can we have one night a month when we watch sad movies and cry until midnight?”

“No. We have other things to do.”

I think of our stop in the International District on the way back to his house. He had to buy some fish to feed his three adolescent turtles.

“Maybe feeding neon tetras to Me, Myself and I will be catharsis enough,” I say.

“Yes,” he purrs in his speaking-to-a-kid-with-a-scraped-knee voice. “Only pretty fishies for my babies. It’s so much fun to watch them snap them up.”

It could be our version of a reality TV family: food, love and gore.

Two

It takes Galapagos tortoises forty years to go through puberty.

The most important love is first love.

Freud would say that my first love was my father, and there is something to that. Little girls say their fathers can do anything, but mine really could. He set my broken arm, fixed my doll furniture, made the best spaghetti sauce, built a nineteen-foot sailboat, knew which mushrooms were poisonous and missed a lot of dinners because in our town, he was the first doc called for an emergency. My mother didn’t know how to work the Magnavox stereo but I did because my dad and I listened to music together in the evenings when he was home. He wasn’t just a hunter—he made his own bullets, an exacting and exciting hobby of molten lead and a delicate balance scale. He sewed up our Thanksgiving turkey with one hand and made new shoes for my Red Skelton doll. My father respected all those little girl things about me, but he didn’t treat me like a child. One Sunday afternoon he had forty-five minutes to teach me to ride a bike and I was flying down Dore Lane with five minutes to go. Later he taught me to drive his Oldsmobile 98, a small atoll of a vehicle, in the April mud up Miller Creek, saying one lesson in turning, stopping, accelerating and backing up in that mess was all I’d need.

As I write this, he’s nearly ninety-one and blind from macular degeneration. Nonetheless, we spend the first day of our 2011 Christmas vacation together comparing the birth narratives in the Gospels, figuring out that stigmata is a bunch of hooey because Jesus could not have been nailed through the palms of his hands, and reading up on the census that occasioned Mary and Joseph’s return to Bethlehem. (There wasn’t one.)

I still adore him.

As a kid, I also adored my brothers, who are seven and nine years older than I. They didn’t have any of Daddy’s powers to make things but they both had a glorious balls-to-the-wind aura that terrified and mesmerized me in equal parts. I would do anything to remind them I was alive and I made a fine target for the missile launcher on Dick’s Lionel train and gave away all my allowance to Jim for the firecrackers that scared me. Sometimes the three of us or the two of them were an unbreachable whole—my aunt Mildred considered us juvenile delinquents when she tried to take care of us while Mother was in the hospital—but mostly we went our own ways.

Most helpful customer reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Well written, poignant story of one woman's quest
By Susan C. McConnell
Francis Kuffel is the author of the wonderful memoir, "Passing for Thin," which I have read multiple times. Her new book is about her search for love in her 50s, primarily through online dating sites. She writes well and the book is an entertaining and quick read. I had to take off one star simply because the book was a little depressing and at times the story was frustrating. Example: she says she is looking for love, yet she makes so many obvious errors and poor choices that at times the book is tough reading. She goes to meet a man for coffee at Starbucks, but instead of him buying her coffee, she goes immediately home with him and straight into bed. This is NOT the way to find love, and anyone past 21 should know that. At other times, she's seeing one man two decades younger than she and another who is an Orthodox Jew. There's no way she can have a successful LTR with either of them! She is her own worst enemy, and that makes the book rather sad reading at times.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Interesting Story About One Woman's Journey Through the World of Men
By Donna Hill
Some of this book is too detailed for me. Frances dates an Orthodox Jew which leads her to research Judaism, she goes on dating websites and then researches them, and she nearly gets fooled by a scam artist and then researches the art of scamming.

Frances is at her best when she's talking about her life and the people in her life. I love memoirs. I love to learn about people--their quirks, their troubles, their joys. Maybe it's hard to get a book published these days unless you do research. It's wasted on me, though. Actually, I started to enjoy the book about halfway through because her dates were showing up on a regular basis and it was enjoyable to meet all the unusual characters. I didn't laugh or maybe just once, but I smiled a lot and cringed sometimes.

Then towards the end she became very serious and talked about her depression and her visit to her psychiatrist. Coincidentally, at this time she counsels her college students after one of their classmates commits suicide. Just as she had been entertaining the same idea, this tragedy occurred and forced her onto the side of life, rather than death. For a clinically depressed person, I'm sure that the thought of suicide can be a recurring obsession. The idea occurs to Frances again and this time the thought of her beloved dog, Daisy, and her family, including her 95-year-old dad, give her reason to go on living. By the last page Frances is coping with life as a single person, although she is standing ready to be called into sharing a home with a male friend should the time be right for them both.

It's the type of story that is becoming more and more common today. Many men and women are out there searching for Miss Good Enough or Mr. Good Enough, and it's sure not easy. It wasn't the type of story that made me feel deeply--I didn't cry or laugh (other than that one time). It's just very sad and makes one fantasize about a sequel--where Frances either meets Mr. Good Enough or finds that living with her male friend, who happens to be gay, is a happy solution, ala Will and Grace, or just starts to relish her life alone.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Distracted
By E. S. Witthoeft
While this book has its moments, and women of a certain age can certainly relate to some of Frances Kuffel's situations, the book is, well, unfocused. What starts out as one woman's search for love in middle age gets weighed down and distracted by Kuffel's many issues, which range far beyond dating. I have read Kuffel's two previous memoirs and this book feels like she has written one too many. As you read Kuffel's books, you cheer for her to overcome her demons. This book, in the end, simply collapses beneath the weight of her baggage.

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Minggu, 27 Juli 2014

@ Ebook Free Whispers in the Dark (A KGI Novel), by Maya Banks

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Whispers in the Dark (A KGI Novel), by Maya Banks

She came to him when he needed her the most.  
She came to him at his lowest point. The voice of an angel, a whisper in the dark. She's the only thing that gets Nathan Kelly through his captivity, the endless days of torture and the fear that he'll never return to his family. With her help, he's able to escape. But he isn't truly free, because now she's disappeared and he's left with an all-consuming emptiness as he struggles to pick up the pieces of his life. Did he imagine his angel? Or is she out there, needing his help as he'd once needed hers?   Now he rushes to save her before it's too late.
Shea has been on the run from people who will stop at nothing to exploit her unique abilities. She never wanted to drag Nathan, who'd already suffered so much, into danger, but she doesn't have a choice so she reaches out to him for help. Finally face-to-face after having already formed a soul-deep bond in hell, their emotional connection is even more powerful than their telepathic one. Nathan refuses to consider ever letting her go again, but she worries they can never have a life free of the dangers that dog her every step. He'll protect her with his every breath, but can he convince her that they are meant to face these threats together?

  • Sales Rank: #215167 in Books
  • Published on: 2012-01-03
  • Released on: 2012-01-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 4
  • Dimensions: 6.83" h x .96" w x 4.31" l, .35 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 352 pages
Features
  • Dedication, acknowledgments, 47 chapters.

About the Author
Maya Banks is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Surrender Trilogy and The Breathless Trilogy. Her chart toppers have included erotic romance, romantic suspense, contemporary romance, and Scottish historical romance.

Most helpful customer reviews

29 of 31 people found the following review helpful.
UP ALL NIGHT!!!
By S. Mccullough
I preordered this yesterday 'cause I knew it was coming out today. I was up in the middle of the night and downloaded to my K. I thought I'd read a page or two to get the feel. BOY WAS I WRONG!!! I finally climbed in beat at 5:30 this morning to get up at 7 to get to work!! First time in a very, very long time that has happened. I prefer straight romantic suspense but have given up on the genre ever having enough books to keep me going. I read some of the lighter paranormal and enjoy them. This was a very good blend of the two! I have really enjoyed all of the KGI books and look forward to the next. I was out on the data bases looking for the release date for the next one. So you know it looks like it comes out 7/3/12 if it does not get changed.
Grab this one and hold on for the ride. Be sure you gather your snacks and let the dog out before you start so you don't have to stop unitl the very end. Well worth the price of the book!

32 of 36 people found the following review helpful.
Amazing Read!!
By Amazon Customer
I read the previous reviews and I get what they are saying. There is a paranormal twist but at least it's believable. You know she has extra abilities from the excerpt so it's not a surprise. It actually enhances the story and it makes the relationship between Nathan and Shea seem natural and not forced. The plot is good and its fast paced. While here ability makes her easy to find she is still trapped long enough that she is deeply traumatized and it is by no means a fail safe because it takes a lot of her energy to make the connection. I don't think there will be other paranormal elements in future books with the exception of Rio's because Shea and her sister are likely the only ones with powers that are strong enough to make a difference. Also there were major plot twists that had me going....WHAT?????? Shea is one of the best heroines so far in the KGI series. The story also has its typical male banter that is so funny. Its a great read and I would recommend it to anyone who loves romance.

31 of 35 people found the following review helpful.
Whispers in the Dark
By A. Schreiner
Nathan Kelly's plan was to serve his last tour in the Middle East, and then join his brothers in their private KGI operations, an elite group who contract with the government and private sector, taking on dangerous jobs. But his plan gets screwed up when he gets captured in Afghanistan. Stuck in a dark cave, tortured, naked, and starved, he is not sure how much longer he can survive. But then he hears a voice in his head. At first he thinks he is crazy, but the voice is persistent.

It turns out to be the voice of Shea, who lives back in the States. Shea and her sister Grace have a special gift. They can use telepathy to communicate with people -- not specific people, it seems, just random people. Shea can take away someone's pain as well, and Grace can do one step better by healing them. But their special powers bring much danger to them. A year ago, their parents were murdered, while Shea and Grace narrowly escaped. Now they are being hunted by people who want to abuse their ability and most likely do worse things to them. They have separated and don't keep in contact, to stay more hidden.

When Shea hears Nathan's torture sessions, she immediately does everything she can to help take away his pain so he can endure and survive. She anonymously clues his brothers in to where he is being held, so he can be rescued. Once she is secure in knowing he is safe, she stops contact with him, as she continues her own battle to survive. But Nathan is not going to forget that voice in his head, and when Shea ends up being hunted again, she calls out for help.

Whispers in the Dark by Maya Banks is the first I've read of this series, but I think it does pretty well as a stand-alone. It has a strong beginning, as we watch Nathan truly suffer at the hands of his captors. While I'm not a fan of a supernatural twist being thrown into an otherwise straight-forward romantic suspense series, Shea's telepathic abilities didn't annoy me too much. I did find it odd that throughout the book, she communicates only with Nathan and a few other people. She can't control to whom she speaks with, but it also made it sound as though she would have had others trying to talk to her in her head.

But as I said, the beginning is really good. Once Nathan escapes and the story jumps ahead six months to where he is more physically recovered, comes the time where he meets physically with Shea. Here is where the story started to go downhill for me. The romance didn't work for me at all. I get that they have this bond because of the trauma they suffered while he was kidnapped and then later when she was kidnapped, but they meet face to face and pretty much fall in love instantly. They have sex and it's perfect, Nathan is perfect, Shea is perfect, everything is perfect. Well, except that they forget to use a condom several times. But otherwise, everything is just ... perfect. It got annoying and their relationship just turned out ... corny. Too mushy, too goody-goody, not appealing to me.

I also questioned how Shea could have this mind-blowing, romantic sex (more than once) with Nathan while her beloved sister, the person she cares about most in the world, is missing, possibly kidnapped by the evil bad guys. Shea didn't seem the type to be all smiles and joyful in bed, while the one person in her life who has always been there for her could be in danger.

Whispers in the Dark turned out to be OK for me. The suspense part gets a high grade, but with a lackluster romance, it was more of a disappointing read.

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Jumat, 25 Juli 2014

@ Download Ebook Night Seeker (An Indigo Court Novel), by Yasmine Galenorn

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Night Seeker (An Indigo Court Novel), by Yasmine Galenorn

Eons ago, vampires tried to turn the dark Fae to harness their magic, only to create a demonic enemy more powerful than they could have imagined. Now, the Vampiric Fae are on the move, hunting anyone in their path. As the war with the vampires ratchets up, Myst, Queen of the Indigo Court, enshrouds New Forest in her chilling grasp.

Cicely Waters, owl shifter and Wind Witch, has rescued the Fae Prince Grieve at a great cost. Their reunion has lost them the allegiance of the Summer Queen--and the tolerance of the vampires. In desperation they turn to the Consortium for help. Now, to regain the good will of Lainule, they must dare to enter the heart of Myst's realm. But as Cicely and Grieve embark on their search for the heartstone of Summer, Winter is already wreaking her terrifying revenge.

  • Sales Rank: #999155 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Berkley
  • Published on: 2012-07-03
  • Released on: 2012-07-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.88" h x 1.00" w x 4.25" l, .35 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 336 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Review
"Yasmine Galenorn's imagination is a beautiful thing."—Fresh Fiction

"Yasmine Galenorn is a sheer force of nature, a sorceress whose wand and cup are ink and paper. The magick she weaves with the written word is iresistible."—Maggie Shayne, New York Times bestselling author

About the Author
New York Times bestselling author Yasmine Galenorn writes urban fantasy, mystery, and metaphysical nonfiction. A graduate of Evergreen State College, she majored in theater and creative writing. Yasmine has been in the Craft for more than thirty years and is a shamanic witch. She describes her life as a blend of teacups and tattoos, and lives in Seattle, Washington, with her husband, Samwise, and their cats. 

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Series Keeps Getting Better and Better!
By Kathy E.
I strongly recommend you read the previous books in the series (Night Myst and Night Veil) prior to reading this installment.

I really enjoy this series; and while I find it a bit darker and more series than the Otherworld series, there is also a superficial element to it. However, it does not have a great impact on the story and can be bypassed or disregarded easily.

I loved the story progression and the feeling of unraveling a great, dangerous mystery; in addition to the deep sense of danger slithering around every corner. This was definitely my most favored book of the series so far.

For the series fans, this book is a must read. There is a lot that happens in this installment that will have considerable influence and consequences on future books.

I highly recommend this book to fellow dark urban fantasy readers and look forward to the next book Night Vision due out July 2013.

I also recommend:
Once Burned (Night Prince, Book 1)
Pleasure Unbound (Demonica, Book 1)
Shadow's Fall (A Novel of the Shadow World)
Bloodstone (A Deadtown Novel)
Lover Reborn (Black Dagger Brotherhood)

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Great plot with potential that fizzles
By Kathy Davie
Third in the Indigo Court urban fantasy series revolving around two cousins and their friends.

My Take
It's heavy-handed, melodramatic , and all too easy. Sure there are a number of dramatic moments: a hunt and battles. But when you take a step back, they are only moments---sweet, romantic, terror-filled, and fearful---and their conclusions are too simple. But hey, at least we have the clichéd protagonist who can't be bothered to stop for a minute to learn the negative side effects. Oops, gotta stop and grab that eyeball that rolled right out o' me eye socket...

I was curious as to how Galenorn would handle the big reveal to Ysandra when Cicely confesses to their deception. Yawn. And what's with all the mention of werewolves in the stories so far? They pop up once or twice to what...add a hairy experience? Nothing ever involves them. So...why?

We do get the back story on how Cherish and Shy meet. It's so sweet...yawn... Such potential with Geoffrey and Leo. Good thing Galenorn decided to wait...wouldn't want to tire the boys out too fast. Of course, we have to endure the big dramatic moments of Cicely's cheesy blind acceptance of how her choices will change her fate. No, there's nothing wrong with this; it's actually very admirable. Unfortunately, Galenorn has set me up like Pavlov's dog---a dramatic moment that will flatline and die off.

I do enjoy the characters. They love and care for each other and yet have suffered such losses. Losses more obvious in the tell of the story than in the show. Intellectually, I can empathize, but Galenorn doesn't make me feel it.

It's sad because Galenorn has a great plot with so much potential. Potential that fizzles with the snow that will melt in the spring.

There's also the melodrama of it with patches of cliché worked in. Don't get me wrong, I'm looking forward to the next in the series, Night Vision (Indigo Court, #4)---mostly because I always have to know what happens next, but it's not a story I feel compelled to own.

The Story
It's official. Their not-so-happy group have banded together as the Moon Spinners per the Consortium requirements. But they're still in hiding in the warehouse with the Shadow Hunters, Fae, and Vampires hunting for them, even as the Queen of Summer lies dying.

Nothing will stay as it seems, and the old order will be overturned in too many ways to count.

The Characters
Cicely Waters is a witch who manipulates the Air, shapeshifts into an owl, and is soulmated to Grieve. Ulean is the Air Elemental Lainule asked Grieve to bind to Cicely's service. Aunt Heather was taken and turned in Night Myst (Indigo Court, #1); all that's left alive of the family is Cicely's cousin Rhiannon Roland, a witch who manipulates fire. And has her own shape!

A prince of summer, Grieve was turned by Myst into a Vampiric Fae, a fate he battles daily. Chatter, his best friend and cousin, is in love with Rhiannon. Wrath, Cicely's father, is the King of Rivers and Rushes, Lainule's consort. And the owl who has been training Cicely to shift. Lainule is the Queen of Summer, terrified by possible loss into choosing wrongful alliances. The Maiden of Knowledge was a great opportunity for some drama--guess Galenorn was tired that day.

Peyton Moon Runner, a half-werepuma and half-magic-born, is about to meet Rex, the father she doesn't remember.

Kaylin Chen is a 101-year-old martial arts sensei and dreamwalker possessed by a night-veil demon. And he is falling for the bard, Luna. Zoey is with the Akazzani, a source that may have a way to rescue Grieve.

Geoffrey the Great is the Northwest Regent for the Vampire Nation and he's determined to turn Cicely, to use her. Leo Bryne was Geoffrey's day runner who made his preferences known in Night Veil (Indigo Court #2). Erik is another day runner who has made some bad choices. Icarus is a vampire who runs Inley, an underground club for vampires.

Regina Altos is the Emissary to the Crimson Court, her brother's twin and lover, and one terrifying vampire; her brother, Lannan, is a professor at the Conservatory, a sadistic, cruel vampire who wants Cicely above all things. Juliana is part of Lannan's stable.

Ysandra Petros is from the Consortium, who knows much more than expected.

Myst, Queen of the Indigo Court, was fae and Geoffrey's lover before Geoffrey turned her, making her so much more powerful than he. When that powerful, who needs partners?

The Vein Lords, a.k.a., the Crimson Court, a.k.a., the Vampire Nation, are the vampires. Yummanii are the fully human. The Consortium is a worldwide organization of supernaturals, who, along with the Vein Lords and certain officials, run the world. Akazzani are a group of historians---yummanii and magic-born---who bear silent witness to the events around them. The Moon Spinners are the new magical society in New Forest. What's left of the city anyway.

The Cover
The cover is a chilling foreshadowing of what is to come, and it's all about Cicely. A dark night brightened by the snowy landscape, by her head an owl roosts on a branch overhanging the icy stream near which Cicely crouches in her deep royal blue u-shaped tank top, her tattoos visible, wearing black leather pants and calf-high stiletto boots. One hand on her hip, the other crossing a thigh and holding a dripping dagger, Cicely is confident and challenging.

The title finds me clueless. Could the Night Seeker be one of the vampires, a Vampiric Fae seeking to avoid the light-rage, or is it a euphemism for death?

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
night seeker
By Erin Brooks
this book is an amazing continuation of the series. it is still full of suprises and that is what i love about these characters. lannan altos,myst, grgoery and leo are all still at large. lannon wants to posses her and the others just want to kill her. so much potential awaits

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~~ Ebook The House of God, by Samuel Shem

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The House of God, by Samuel Shem

By turns heartbreaking, hilarious, and utterly human, The House of God is a mesmerizing and provocative novel about Roy Basch and five of his fellow interns at the most renowned teaching hospital in the country. 

Struggling with grueling hours and sudden life-and-death responsibilities, Basch and his colleagues, under the leadership of their rule-breaking senior resident known only as the Fat Man, must learn not only how to be fine doctors but, eventually, good human beings. 

A phenomenon ever since it was published, The House of God was the first unvarnished, unglorified, and uncensored portrait of what training to become a doctor is truly like, in all its terror, exhaustion and black comedy. With more than two million copies sold worldwide, it has been hailed as one of the most important medical novels ever written.

With an introduction by John Updike 

  • Sales Rank: #3547 in Books
  • Published on: 2010-09-07
  • Released on: 2010-09-07
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.19" h x 1.00" w x 5.44" l, .72 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 400 pages

Most helpful customer reviews

384 of 390 people found the following review helpful.
The real deal if you're in medicine, scary for the layman
By USAF Veteran
There are all kinds of things I hate about this book. I hate remembering how long I would go without sleep and the psychic torture that an internship inflicts on you. I hated the depersonalization of patients. I hated the sexual escapades. Most of all, I hated having in print the real feelings of an intern who has been up for three days - praying on the way to the ER that that Nursing Home Gomer with 20 fatal diagnoses would have the decency to croak before you got there so you could get an extra five minutes of sleep or a stale doughnut before the cafeteria closed again.
Shem portrays masterfully the jumble of emotions of a typical intern. There is a superficial level of glossy brown-nosing that got you into med school in the first place. Buzz words like compassion, continuity of care and empathy are used with the teaching physicians and in meetings. Then there is a deeper level of survival where you would kill your mother for 5 minutes of sleep or being able to crap without the code blue pager going off. This level is usually not discussed or written about in many of the typical intern coming-of-age books out there. Not because it isn't true, but because it's uncomfortable and offensive to non-physicians. Shem is the master of this level of medical thinking. No one else even comes close. Shem approaches but doesn't quite get to an even more primal level - that of duty. This level is what keeps an intern from punching his residency directors or the arrogant surgeon who asks him "What is the difference between a sh*thead and a brown-noser" and then tells you the answer is depth perception.(True story) It's what makes you do your best when you know the patient is hopeless or even abusive as you try your best to save them from themselves or some disease.
The humor is black as night and the sex is soft-core porn, according to my nephew in medical school to whom I sent a copy of this book.
House of God has two profound themes. The first is a detailed description of medicine and medical training. This theme is presented with black humor, and some (but not as much as you think) exaggeration. I have read nothing that does this better. The second theme of the book is universal, however. It is the theme of Man vs. World and the World wins, but the Man is too maimed to know it.
The book still disturbs and haunts me because Shem puts in print graphically and eloquently some of the thoughts and occurences that we don't even admit to ourselves.

99 of 109 people found the following review helpful.
House of Reality
By MD resident
It's interesting to hear non-medical opinions on HOG. This book is actually not that humorous. I can see how it "seems" to be; with all the dark morbid humor and the LAWS. A colleage told me not to read this book until i had finished my 3rd year of MD-school. Why? Until you put yourself on the ward, this book doesn't mean much to you. I didn't believe him and read it at the end of my 2nd year. I read it again at the end of my 3rd year. It was like i was reading a different novel. There is no way to clearly describe the sensation of having 7 admissions on call...all gomers....trying desperatly to BUFF and TURF them.
This book is a must read for the doctor to be. The nonmedical world has to realise that what seems as perverse dark sick humor (gomers, turfing, not doing anything, the only good admission is a dead admission) is merely an attempt to survive the onslaught of internship. Balance fatigue with limited knowledge and throw in some unparralled responsibility and you get a taste of what it's like.
House of God does just that.
Oh.. and never ever.... go to a teaching hospital in July. :)

96 of 110 people found the following review helpful.
The "Catch 22" of the medical world.
By Yuval Ben- Amnon,MD.
I have read this book three times: When I was a first year medical student I found it to be exaggerated. When I was in my intern year I found it to be an understatement. Reading it for the third time in the middle of my residency allowed me to have a more mature perspective of this book. I find it to have a striking resemblence to another classic: "Catch 22" by Joseph Heller. I will start by saying that both books are NOT great literature masterpieces . They do not stand in one line with Joyce, Amos Oz, Steinback or Hemmingway and as a work of art they therefore deserve , in my opoinion 2 or 3 stars of rating.They do share, however, a unique quality which is this: They both manage to capture in an astonishing accurracy, through sarcasm and absurd, all that is twisted, wrong and cruel in the systems they deal with. Being both a doctor and an IDF officer, I can testify from personal experience that both the military and the medical field have a lot in common , mainly that they both are a stressfull, wearing enviroments. Shem's accurate perception lead this book to being the sharpest description of this enviroment so far, just as "Catch 22" was in its times I therefore share the enthusiasm of the majority of the reviewers of this book, as much as I can identify with the ones who found it disappointing in the literary sense. It therfore gets a rating of 4.

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Selasa, 22 Juli 2014

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Melt Into You (A Loving on the Edge Novel), by Roni Loren

Her first love has returned, and he's brought a friend...
 
After running away from home and the boy who broke her heart, Evan Kennedy has kick-started the perfect new life with her celebrity fiancé. So what if said fiancé prefers guys? She knew the deal. And with her ticket to The Ranch, an exclusive resort where any fantasy can be satisfied, she knows she can find someone to fulfill her less-than-traditional desires on the side.
 
She just never expected that man to be Jace Austin, her old heart-breaker--all grown up, hard-bodied, and holding out a collar. She knows it's probably a world-class bad idea--especially since Jace has brought along his buddy Andre, who's every bit as irresistible. But if they can stick to the no-strings rules, so can she.
 
Too bad Jace has never been so good with rules. Evan is convinced "forever" is a word used only in greeting cards, but Jace and Andre have one last fantasy of hers left to fulfill. It's time to go big or go home. And neither man has ever been a fan of going home.

  • Sales Rank: #905260 in Books
  • Published on: 2012-07-03
  • Released on: 2012-07-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.23" h x .92" w x 5.46" l, .70 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 368 pages

Review
"Revved up and red-hot sexy, Roni Loren delivers a riveting romance!" --Lorelei James, NY Times Bestselling author of the ROUGH RIDERS series

"Loren writes delicious, dark, sensual prose...I'm looking forward to reading this author's next book" --USA Today, Lea Franczak

2013 RITA® Finalist for Best Contemporary Romance

About the Author
Roni wrote her first romance novel at age fifteen when she discovered writing about boys was way easier than actually talking to them. Since then, her flirting skills haven't improved, but she likes to think her storytelling ability has. Though she'll forever be a New Orleans girl at heart, she now lives in Dallas with her husband and son. If she's not working on her latest sexy story, you can find her reading, watching reality television, or indulging in her unhealthy addiction to rockstars, er, rock concerts. Yeah, that's it. 

Most helpful customer reviews

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
This story also includes: ménage scenes, a M/M scene and plenty of voyeurism -it is not for the timid!
By Bookaholics Reviewer
Melt into You by Roni Loren
Contemporary Romance -July 3rd, 2012
4 1/2 stars

Melt into You is the second novel in the author's erotic Loving on the Edge series.

Evan and Jace have a past. Evan was a teenage foster kid with a crush on Jace, the son of the family she was living with. His kind attention attracts her, but quickly turn bad when they succumb to passion and Evan believes that Jace never loved her. She runs away and finds herself destitute and on the streets until she finds a friend named Daniel. Together Daniel and Evan create a lucrative and popular relationship team. Evan poses as his fiancée. Now she has everything: success, money, security. The only thing is Daniel is gay! But they need to keep their façade for the business they have created together. But their plans are derailed when one of the speakers at their seminar is Jace. The owner of Wicked which caters sex toys among other things. And Jace is hotter, sexier and on the prowl. He knows he hurt Evan but he can't seem to stop thinking of her even if she is engaged to another man. As they are forced to work together the temperature rises.

Things become complicated when Evan is surprised by a special present from Daniel. He gives her a vacation to The Ranch, an exclusive sex club that can fulfill the repressed needs that Daniel can't fulfill. But to her surprise, she finds that Jace works there and so does his equally sexy friend Andre. Jace and his partner Andre are determined to fulfill her every fantasy. Only what happens when deeper emotions become involved. What will Evan do and how will Jace react to the lies she has been hiding?

This is one steamy book. When Evan decides to go to The Ranch to figure out what she wants, does she ever get more than she expected! This sexual odyssey will make many readers blush. It was smokin' hot and intense, and Evan is just started to explore her sexuality and it was thrilling to read her become more comfortable with her body. As she explores the world of BDSM I was as spell-bound as her! This story also includes: ménage scenes, a M/M scene and plenty of voyeurism -it is not for the timid! I loved how Evan got to live out fantasies she didn't even know she had. It felt realistic and not overdone. Jace and Andre are used to sharing. Both are very dominant and totally devoted to her pleasure. But they soon find themselves attached to her. Talk about double the pleasure! It was also interesting to read that for the first time that `sharing' a woman really bothered Jace and how shocked and possessive he felt of Evan. I also liked how he wants her to be happy. And when they both decided to show her what she is missing if she marries her fiancée, there is no holding back!

Readers who enjoy Shayla Black's novels will love this book!

Reviewed by Steph from the Bookaholics Romance Book Club

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Journey into healing with love at the end.
By Shari
Young lovers, Evan and Jace, have one night of passion when they are to young to deal with the consequences. When things blow up on them both, Evan takes to the streets on the run and Jace is kicked out of the house by his father.

Now years later, Evan is on tour with her fake fiancé, promoting his career as a couples counselor, on the cusp of getting his own talk show. The secret is her fiancé is gay and committed to another man, but he needs Evan to help with his image. He saved Evan when she was on the verge of committing suicide and now is her best friend she feels she owes.

Jace tried to be the good son and go int the family business and marry the right woman. But he wasn't happy so he started his own sex toy store with help from his friend Andre. But his wife couldn't handle it and left him...but not without digging for as much money as she could get in alimony. Now Jace needs Evan's fiancé to endorse his store for couples, unbeknownst that Evan is his fiancé.

The two meet and sparks fly from an old romance, but Jace won't risk his business getting involved with Evan again. He's also been burned and can't commit to any woman, but still loves to dominate them.

Evan's stressed, so her fiance gives her a three month membership to The Ranch. The Ranch is a BDSM club that caters to all kinds of fantasies, but mostly Jace and Andre are members and Doms. Evan goes with them as their sub for the weekend, but holds onto her heart knowing they could easily break it and she can't afford that.

The intricate weaving of the lovers was painful and wonderful to watch. Each had so many hurts and desires for their life that had to be peeled back to see what was real and what was just defensive layers. We don't know in the beginning all the details the one night the lovers originally come together and this shapes their lives. Each little bit adds to the puzzle until you see two people who were torn up and put themselves back together.

While Jace and Evan had a past, we little by little pull Andre into the lovers mix and find that Andre loves Jace as much as he could love Evan. This is just as much a M/M romance as it is a M/F or even a M/F/M romance. Each type of romance growing slowly and deeply.

Let's not forget the heat though. The sexy love and non-love scenes scorched up the pages as I kept turning and turning as fast as I could read. I stayed up till 1 in the morning because I couldn't put the book down it was so good.

The story just doesn't take place over one weekend, but several months, which was refreshing not to see everyone jump at once into love. There is heartache and pain. It isn't a simple love story and the pain wasn't from the BDSM everything as much as it was emotional pain of dealing with the past, present and possibly a future together.

I highly recommend this book. It just pushed all the right buttons with me and had me wanting the next book faster than Roni can write it!

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Melt Into You
By M. Whitmore
I really enjoyed Melt Into You. Even though it's only the 2nd book of the series (with a novella in-between) it's my favorite book so far. We met Jace in book 1 and I instantly liked him. He owns a sex store called Wicked. He's the black sheep of the family and loves it. Too bad his father doesn't and their strained relationship affects Jace's relationship with the rest of his family. When Jace was 19, his family hosted a 16 year old foster girl, Evan. The attraction was there and undeniable and though Jace tried to do the right thing, he gave in to temptation and Evan ran away. Fast forward 12 years and Evan's life is picture perfect. She's engaged to Dr. Dan, a successful psychiatrist and is about to have the stability and life she's always wanted. Until she runs into Jace and threatens everything.

I love The Ranch. Can I go visit? I kid. I don't think I have the balls. The history between Jace and Evan is complicated and rich. They both feel guilty about their one night stand but for different reasons. It's an uphill battle with Jace and Evan trusting each other enough to open up. Throw in sexy Andre to stir the pot and make things even more complicated.

I was hesitant about buying the menage turned romance story. I always feel like someone ultimately gets left out of the emotion and the loving. Ms. Loren expertly spends equal time and plot with Jace/Evan, Andre/Evan and Jace/Andre. I was wondering how Jace's and Andre's relationship would be handled and I thought it was done well. It made sense and I was satisfied.

I love this series and can't wait to read book 3. From the preview, I think it's Grant's book - the owner of The Ranch. I was kinda hoping it would be Wyatt, Jace's brother. Wyatt is wound tight and it looks like he needs a lot of Ranch in his life.

Definitely check out this series. It's sexy and hot with great characters and plot. There's a great balance between the sex and the romance that I really love and think is hard to do. You care about these characters outside the bedroom and this is why I enjoy this series so much.

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