The Book Voyagers


Hi lovely people. I bring you today another review written by me. I am happy to say that my blogger's block is finally coming to an end. I have been written more and more in the blog and hosting guest posts and blog tours/cover reveals. I feel good and I feel like I could write more in it this month. 

This book review is for the book Pretending He's Mine by Mia Sosa, the new book and sequel of Acting on Impulse, released last year. That book was one of my favorite that year and this series continues to grow in my heart. But I'll let you all know why in my review, so hope you enjoy the reading!


Pretending He's Mine
by Mia Sosa
Series: Love on Cue
Publisher: Avon Impulse
Release: April 10th, 2018

For Hollywood agent Julian Hart, representing his best friend—megastar Carter Williamson—means it’s nearly impossible to keep his personal life and career separate. To make matters worse, Carter’s younger sister has been starring in Julian’s wildest fantasies more often than he’d care to admit. He knows she’s off-limits, but when Ashley shows up on his doorstep, needing a place to crash… suddenly his greatest temptation is sleeping down the hall.

Free-spirited Ashley Williamson doesn’t do commitment. Jobs, apartments, men… why let herself be tied down? But she’s had a crush on her older brother’s best friend for years and she’s committed to making Julian want her, one towel-clad midnight encounter at a time. But just as things start heating up, their steamy flirtation is interrupted by Carter’s east coast wedding. Ashley has no desire to go home and face her reputation as the family disappointment. But living with—dare she say dating?—a successful, sexy film agent could give them something else to talk about. 

Julian can’t believe he agreed to fake a relationship with the one woman he can never have. And it’s going to take more than a little willpower to remember it's all pretend. Or is it?


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Pretending He's Mine made my insides swoon! Mia Sosa continues to write a pretty fantastic and fun series. The follow-up to Acting on Impulse didn't disappoint for me. 

In this book there is Ashley and there is Julian. Ashley is Carter's little sister and Julian is his agent and best friend. Everything gets a little bit complicated when Ashley starts living with Julian because she doesn't have anywhere else to go! The forced proximity is real in this book, I tell you all. She even has her room just besides his own. They have a little bit of tension going into the novel but it really all gets more intense throughout Pretending He's Mine. They start to live with one another! So it's obvious one starts to see many things about the other one.


Their chemistry is the fire emoji times a million. It's going to make you melt with no chance to get back up but you have to, to finish the novel because it's so worth it! It's an enchanting book with fun events and returning characters as well. It has humor and love at the center of it all. It also has family and one thing I really loved is Tori and Ashley getting closer and also with Eva! My favorite trio being wild together is my favorite. 

I adored every second of this novel and cannot wait for Eva and Anthony's time to shiiiiine. I want more books in this series, it's so fabulous and it's great to see behind-the-scenes in actors's lives! Or agents! Or stunt doubles! Mia Sosa wrote a very beautiful book that will leave you wanting for so much more.

Enter the giveaway! (US only)



Mia Sosa was born and raised in New York City. She attended the University of Pennsylvania, where she earned her bachelor’s degree in Communications and met her own romance hero (spoiler alert: she married him). Mia once dreamed of being a professional singer, but practical considerations (read: the need to generate income) led her to take the law school admissions test instead. 

A graduate of Yale Law School, Mia practiced First Amendment and media law in the nation’s capital for ten years before returning to her creative roots. Now she spends most of her days writing contemporary romances about smart women and the complicated men who love them. Mia lives in Maryland with her husband and two daughters and will forever be on the hunt for the perfect karaoke bar.

Website | Twitter | Facebook


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A few days ago I decided to make an infographic for the Gideon's Riders series by Kit Rocha so people know a bit more about this series. It has become one of my absolute favorite series so I just wanted to share the love. I've already published this on Twitter, so if you have seen it already, that's why! But I wanted to post it in the blog so it doesn't get lost in the Twitterverse (because of so much tweeting, tweets and threads get lost so easily lmao).




I highly recommend picking up this series. It's definitely a series you want to follow along, and I promise you it only gets better from the first book. It has found family most of all and that's something that I really really enjoy and I know some of you as well!

Links:
(ASHWIN IS CURRENLTY 99c RIGHT NOW!)
Ashwin: Goodreads | Amazon | iBooks | B&N 
Deacon: Goodreads | Amazon | iBooks | B&N
Ivan: Goodreads | Amazon | iBooks | B&N
Hunter: Goodreads 
Gabe: Goodreads 
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Everything I needed to know about diversity and racial/cultural representation in pop culture I learned in the nineties. 

Back then I was an avid fan of category romance novels. Most of the books I read were set in England. Needless to say, women of color did not play a role in these narratives, not as a supporting character and certainly not as the lead. One day, I got my hands on a weathered paperback copy of Terry McMillan’s Waiting to Exhale (1992). Waiting is not romance. It falls squarely in the genre of “four friends who meet to drink wine, laugh, cry, and dish about their lives.” McMillan’s unfiltered writing style broadened my field of vision. It gave me a glimpse of what was possible: fresh stories, salty comedy, relatable heroines of color, and heroes that I recognized. Soon after, my interest in category romance dwindled. 

The hit HBO show, Sex and the City (1998 – 2004), based on the novel of the same title by Candace Bushnell (1997), had a similar effect on me. I started watching the show in grad school even though my dorm room cable package didn’t include HBO. The premium channels were scrambled but the audio was clear. On Sunday evenings, I’d climb into bed and give myself a manicure while listening to SATC. The voiceover narration made it easy to follow the overlapping storylines: four friends who meet at a diner to...you get the point. But since I couldn’t see the fashion featured on the show, I was left wondering what Carrie and her friends wore to brunch or on dates. I never had to wonder about the ethnicity of the characters because, while Carrie’s fashion sense was eclectic and diverse, her social set was not. A New York City devoid of cultural and ethnic diversity is as imaginary as Narnia or Wakanda. 

This is not to say that the nineties was a throwback to the fifties. Some of my favorite shows featuring actors of color were produced in that decade: Martin (1992-1997), In Living Color (1990 – 1994)… But a clear bright line separated mainstream entertainment and shows made for “minorities.” 

I’ve now mapped out three veins of pop culture influence: category romance, Waiting to Exhale, and Sex and the City. For the sake of brevity, let’s stick with those three. What’s the takeaway? From nineties category romance, I learned that a lack of diversity may potentially alienate even the most devoted fan. It’s bad business. No one likes to be ignored or made to feel irrelevant. From Terry McMillan I learned to write in my most authentic voice, tell stories from my unique point of view, and to do it with humor and style. Lastly, from Sex and the City, I learned that excellent writing can hold its own, but also faithful world building in a contemporary narrative is important. The contemporary writer cannot edit out large sub-sections of a city’s population for convenience’s sake. 


Miami Dreams, my contemporary romance series with Harlequin Kimani Press, is set (duh!) in Miami, Florida. I tap into the city’s natural diversity. In my debut novel, Exclusively Yours (March 2018), I adopted a mixed salad approach to diversity. My heroine, Leila, is Afro-Caribbean; Brie, her protégé is African- American; and Sofia, her best friend, is Latina. Leila’s love interest, Nicolas, is the child of Canadian snowbirds. I tossed it all in. Still, I struggled against my default settings. In a pivotal scene, Nick and Leila meet with a wealthy couple seeking to buy a condo in Miami Beach. An early draft depicts the couple as American and heterosexual. In the finished manuscript, the couple is foreign and homosexual—by all statistical standards a more accurate depiction of a wealthy couple seeking to buy a condo in Miami Beach. 

It’s 2018 and so much has changed since the nineties. Naomi Campbell still slays. But a hit HBO show, Insecure, is set in California and features a diverse cast. Independent publishing has offered a space for formerly marginalized authors to produce stories that reflect their tastes and experiences. Traditional romance imprints have produced powerhouse authors of color and are expanding their lists. There is still a long way to go. See the “State of Racial Diversity in Romance Publishing 2017” by the Ripped Bodice. 

Nothing I’ve said here is particularly groundbreaking. This is just one writer’s journey to understanding the importance of representation in popular culture. It didn’t come naturally; it was a lesson I had to learn. As society awakens to the idea that representation matters, let’s agree that diversity in pop culture may be a lot of things: a moral imperative, a smart business move. The one thing it isn’t is a trend. The term, “diversity trend,” was pushed by some major publications and has been much debated on Twitter. Diversity is a mandate and the only way forward. But since we’re on the topic of trends, let’s talk about Carrie Bradshaw’s wardrobe. Her iconic tutu skirt, her thrift shop finds, vintage classics, street chic, and haute couture glam… 

Yes, I eventually got premium cable channels. I’m all caught up. 

Reference articles: 
  1. 15 Publishing Professionals On Why Diversity Isn't a Trend But A Reflection of Our Lives 
  2. Diversity in Publishing: Still Hideously Middle-Class and White?
  3. The Ripped Bodice Presents: The state of racial diversity in romance publishing 2017


Nadine Gonzalez is an author, artist, and attorney. Born in New York City, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, she eventually moved to Miami, Florida. The vibrant city is her muse. Nadine shares her home with her Cuban American husband and their beautiful son. For more information, visit Nadine-Gonzalez.com or follow @_NadineGonzalez (IG, Twitter).
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Silvana [The Book Voyagers]'s bookshelf: read

Heart of the Steal
it was amazing
Heart of the Steal
by Avon Gale
The Infamous Miss Rodriguez
it was amazing
The Infamous Miss Rodriguez
by Lydia San Andres
No Strings Attached
really liked it
No Strings Attached
by Mina V. Esguerra

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