Medium, Sweet, Extra Shot of Geek

I just read Medium, Sweet, Extra Shot of Geek by R. Cooper. I’m not a Trekkie, but I do love geeks, I really, truly do. I don’t care what you’re stuck on – if you’ve immersed yourself in a subject enough to cross the line and ended up on the crazy side, you’ll have my devotion. It doesn’t matter if it’s superheroes, code, plants or whatever, if you’re excited I’m with you! LOL

And Tommy…I loved Tommy.

I’ve only read Play It Again, Charlie by R. Cooper before but I’ve always meant to read more, and now I did. I loved it, I loved the coffee, I loved the quiet, geeky flirting, I loved how Tommy could read all Tavio’s looks.

Throughout it all I had this cosy feeling, just wanting more, waiting for them to take the next step. I wish it had been longer, I wish we would’ve been shown more, I’d had loved a glimpse into what their future might look like. Still enjoyed it, just wished there was more.

It’s short, it’s sweet, Tavio is silent, Tommy is talking non-stop, and how Tavio handles the caramel is as close to coffee porn we’ll ever come LOL.

Cute!

books2read.com/MediumSweet *


If you’re in the mood for nerds, I created a shelf for the ones I’ve encountered.


Medium, Sweet, Extra Shot of GeekFormer soldier Octavio “Tavio” Reyes works as a barista, a favorite with the customers—especially Tommy O’Shaughnessy. An avowed geek, Tommy comes in daily to flirt, usually under the guise of Trekkie talk. Tavio hesitates; now that he’s out of the army, he’s not sure how out he should be, or whether to take his chances on a geek devoted to sci-fi and comic books. But when Tommy compares him to an unemotional Vulcan, Tavio finally considers dating an out-and-proud nerd. Then Tommy surprises him again and introduces him to his daughter, whom Tommy loves even more than Star Trek or Tavio. Now Tavio has a whole new decision to make: Is he ready to romance a family man?


* By clicking the Books2Read link you’ll be taken to an external page. Links to Smashwords, Kobo U.S and Amazon contain affiliate links that earn me a small commission at no additional cost to you. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

 

Sympathy

In case you’ve missed it, I’m a Jordan Castillo Price fan. Sympathy is not your usual JCP story, though. I liked it, not saying I didn’t, but there are no ghosts, no vamps, no paranormal stuff.

There is this house, and I expected it to be a haunted house kind of story, but it’s not that either, not really.

Anthony Potosi runs a gardening business with his brothers, but they don’t really get along. Two and half years ago he was in a car crash that ruined his hip and killed their father and they’re all dealing with that their own way.

One day Anthony is to deliver some plants to an old Victorian house he and his brothers believed to be haunted when they were kids. He’s still creeped out by the house, but the artist living there intrigues him.

He tries not to let his limp show as he delivers the plants, but David, the artist, knows more about Tony than he’s aware of. Their paths have crossed before but Tony didn’t notice.

It’s short and sweet and while David’s sculptures gave me some chills LOL, this is a contemporary story.

books2read.com/Sympathy *


SympathyIt took Anthony Potosi years to recover from the accident that claimed his father’s life, and doctors told him he’d never walk again. He proved them wrong. Now he’s back at the landscaping business, Potosi and Sons, he shares with his two older brothers—but they seem more interested in getting Anthony to sell out his share than in celebrating his recovery.

The oil-and-water relationship between Anthony and his brothers is hardly new. Even when they were kids, Sal and Chip delighted in terrorizing their baby brother with stories like “The Hook,” complete with visits to the abandoned Victorian a half mile down the two-lane.

Now Anthony towers over his brothers…but he’s still the youngest. When the new owner of the Hook House calls an order in, they take a little too much satisfaction in sending him to face his old fears. And learning to open up again to trust, desire—and maybe even love—is far scarier than The Hook.


* By clicking the Books2Read link you’ll be taken to an external page. Links to Smashwords, Kobo U.S and Amazon contain affiliate links that earn me a small commission at no additional cost to you. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

 

Save The Frogs Day

Today it’s Save the Frogs Day!

You might not know this, but I have ranidaphobia (phobia of frogs). I get that people can’t understand how anyone can be afraid of them – what’s scary about frogs, right? I don’t know, I can’t really explain it.

frog in waterIt’s the legs, those folded creepy legs that at any second can unfold and make the freaky little thing jump farther than a kangaroo *shudder*.

People think I’m joking, and again I get that, because how can anyone be afraid of frogs? But I have nightmares about frogs. I very seldom have bad dreams, but if I do, you can bet your arse it’s filled with horrific little creatures jumping around.

In the morning when I’m walking to work, I often see frogs who have been run over by cars in the early morning hours, and my entire body tenses even before I can see if it truly is a frog. Just seeing something farther ahead on the road makes the hairs on my body stand on end. If it is a frog it doesn’t matter that it’s dead and I know it won’t jump, my heart starts banging as if I’m running for my life, and I sort of am because I have to stay as far away from the dead little monster as I can, traffic be damned. Luckily I live in the middle of nowhere so when I say traffic, we’re talking the occasional car.

When I’m out walking, I often have to take detours because a frog is blocking my way. Again, we live in the middle of nowhere so I’m often walking in the woods. Since I was born without a sense of direction, taking detours in the woods often makes for hours of walking LOL.

So you’d think I’d be all for killing the frogs, right? I’m not.

More than 30% of the species are at risk of extinction. Frogs are important both as prey and predators, tadpoles help regulate blooms and algal contamination, and grown frogs eat insects like mosquitoes and therefore help us with diseases like malaria, Dengue fever and Zika. They’re important! And since they absorb toxins, chemicals and bacteria through their skin, they’re powerless to withstand what we’re poisoning them with.

I’m not gonna bore you with more facts, but please, think of the frogs, offputting as they may be.

To celebrate this day I’ve re-read not one but two of my favourite books. First out is Frog by Mary Calmes. Frog has nothing to do with actual frogs but with a title like that it has to be included in a Save The Frogs Day post.

Weber is a bull rider, a little rough around edges, and in love with a neurosurgeon. He knows he’s not up to standard, and even less so when he has to give up his dream of being a professional bull rider after one too many injuries.

Cy, the neurosurgeon, has everything but the one thing he wants – Web. He doesn’t care if Web is a bull rider or a nanny, all he wants is to come home to his man, so when Web once again shows up at his doorstep, he intends to keep him forever.

I love this, it’s a little different from the other Calmes books, but still, very much a Calmes book if that makes sense, I know it doesn’t. Read it if you haven’t!

books2read.com/CalmesFrog


FrogWeber Yates’s dreams of stardom are about to be reduced to a ranch hand’s job in Texas, and his one relationship is with a guy so far out of his league he might as well be on the moon. Or at least in San Francisco, where Weber stops to see him one last time before settling down to the humble, lonely life he figures a frog like him has coming.

Cyrus Benning is a successful neurosurgeon, so details are never lost on him. He spotted the prince in a broken-down bull rider’s clothing from day one. But watching Weber walk out on him keeps getting harder, and he’s not sure how much more his heart can take. Now Cyrus has one last chance to prove to Weber that it’s not Weber’s job that makes him Cyrus’s perfect man, it’s Weber himself. With the help of his sister’s newly broken family, he’s ready to show Weber that the home the man’s been searching for has always been right there, with him. Cyrus might have laid down an ultimatum once, but now it’s turned into a vow-he’s never going to let Weber out of his life again.


Second out is Clear Water by Amy Lane. I was talking about this book a few weeks ago when I was talking about eco-warriors.

Patrick is a spaz, and he’s hooked up with the wrong guy. One night, his boyfriend slips him a roofie and drives his car into the river with Patrick passed out inside. Whiskey, a field biologist out for a late night walk, sees it happen and dives in to save Patrick. (While going through episodes of Mythbusters in his head LOL)

Patrick who doesn’t want to go home to his judgemental father stays on Whiskey’s houseboat with Fly Bait (the lovely Freya), Whiskey’s lab partner. Together they spend a summer studying two-headed frogs and try to find out what’s causing the anomalies in the bullfrog population.

This is another absolute favourite of mine. I just love Whiskey and Fly Bait, and despite ranidaphobia and a general dislike of insects and stuff this books has me thinking I should’ve become a biologist (though in reality, I’d make a terrible one).

I could read this book over and over, and I doubt I’d grow bored of it.

books2read.com/ClearWater


Clear WaterMeet Patrick Cleary; party boy, loser, and spaz. Patrick’s been trying desperately to transform himself, and the results have been so spectacular, they’ve almost killed him. Meet Wes “Whiskey” Keenan; he’s a field biologist wondering if it’s time to settle down. When the worst day of Patrick’s life ends with Whiskey saving it, Patrick and Whiskey find themselves sharing company and an impossibly small berth on the world’s tackiest houseboat.

Patrick needs to get his life together and Whiskey wants to help but Patrick is not entirely convinced it’s doable. He’s pretty sure he’s a freak of nature. But Whiskey, who works with real freaks of nature, thinks all Patrick needs is a little help to see the absolute beauty inside his spastic self, and Whiskey is all about volunteering. Between anomalous frogs, a homicidal ex-boyfriend, and Patrick’s own hangups, Whiskey’s going to need all of his patience and Patrick’s going to need to find the best of himself before these two men ever see Clear Water.


There you have it. Now go out and do something to save the frogs!


 

* By clicking the Books2Read link you’ll be taken to an external page. Links to Smashwords, Kobo U.S and Amazon contain affiliate links that earn me a small commission at no additional cost to you. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.