book round-ups, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Books with Sports

We are closer to the end of the Winter Olympics than we are to the start so for today, I’ve got some novels with sports in them for you. They’re not all winter sports, but some of them are. There are also a whole bunch that I’ve read and not liked and haven’t included here – although I have included one of my more recent sports reads, because it made me cross and I needed to talk about it! And also the book that I was hoping to replace it with has also made me cross, but in a less interesting way. Anyway, I’ve also already written a Recommendsday about sports romances, so if you haven’t had enough yet, you can find that there.

The Favourites by Layne Fargo

Given that all the drama that came out of the Ice Dancing results (if you haven’t read about it yet, here are some articles), I couldn’t not start with Layne Fargo’s book about ice dance from last year. I wrote a bonus review about it around the time of Worlds last year, but it’s so much fun that it bears a repeat. This has got a scrappy wrong side of the tracks pairing taking on the world of ice dancing, and is framed through a documentary being made ten years after their final skate. It’s got lots of drama, the bits of the sport that Fargo has tinkered with are cleverly chosen and you don’t have to know anything about skating to enjoy it. I’m a huge figure skating fan – until Tuesday night I had watched every minute of competition this games, and this is one of the very few books I’ve read set in a sport that I’m a keen follower of that hasn’t managed to really annoy me in one way or another. There’s a reason why I haven’t read many/any of the figure skater (usually with a hockey player) romances that are having a resurgence at the moment. I read a few a couple of Olympics ago (Pyeongchang games I think) and they really wound me up and I haven’t been back since. But this I can really recommend.

Isn’t It Bromantic by Lyssa Kay Adams

Cover of Isn't it Bromantic

I’ve got an ice hockey-related romance for you now, and it’s not Heated Rivalry! Isn’t it Bromantic is the fourht book in the Bromance Book Club series, which have a couple of sporting heros. The first in the series had a baseball player hero who is trying to win his estranged wife back with the help of a secret romance book club for men, and the other books follow the other members of the group. Isn’t It Bromantic’s hero is Vlad aka The Russian who is a professional ice hockey player in Nashville. Years earlier back in Russia, he married one of his childhood friends to help her after her journalist father disappeared. It’s been a marriage of convenience, but Vlad has decided he wants more and is using the book club to try and work out how to win his wife’s love. This was the story in the series that I had been looking forward to maybe the most and although it didn’t quite live upto all my hopes it was still a fun read even if it did have far too many tropes all mashed in together. I found the series as a whole a bit uneven – full of great ideas but not always as good in the execution, which was a bit frustrating, but I don’t think any of them were actually bad if you know what I mean.

Cross The Line by Simone Soltani

Cover of Cross the Line

Dev is a Formula One driver who may have blown up his career prospects with a social media disaster Willow is his best friend’s little sister who is full of ideas but struggling to get a job out of college. Dev hires Willow to help with his image problem, but the two of them struggle to keep it professional as their feelings threaten to get the better of them. I am a massive Formula One fan, and have been for as long as I can remember and really I think this may make me a bad candidate for reading F1-set romances, because I will pick at the sporting detail. All that aside, this one has a massive plot device that it uses towards the end but then leaves unresolved that really, really wound me up. In fact it annoyed me to the point that I went back and read the final chapter and the epilogue again the day after I read it, because I had finished it late at night and I wanted to make sure that I hadn’t missed something. I hadn’t. So, all in all frustrating. And as I said at the top, it made me cross and I wanted to talk about it, but also people who know I read romance and like F1 often ask me if I’ve read any of the booming trend for F1 romances and so now I’m reporting back!

Happy Humpday!

books, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: Sports romances

The Olympics Opening Ceremony takes place in Paris on Friday, but actually the first bits of action happen today with the start of the football and rugby 7s pool games, so for this Recommendsday I’m reminding you of some of the sports romances that I’ve enjoyed – although full disclaimer, a lot of these sports aren’t in the olympics.

The men’s 100m at the weekend

But I’m going to start with one that is – football of the soccer variety and recent BotW pick When Grumpy met Sunshine which has a bad boy of football in a fake relationship with his ghost writer. There’s also Chloe Liese’s Bergman Brothers series, which has a couple of soccer stars among the heroes and heroines – like in If Only You, which has the double whammy of a soccer-playing heroine and an ice hockey player hero.

In fact ice hockey romances seem to have overtaken NFL players as the sport you’re most likely to see in a romance novel, possibly because the word puck rhymes so usefully for a title. Before the ice hockey romance craze, most of the sports romances were about NFL players, like Susan Elizabeth Philips’ Chicago Stars series or Alexa Martin’s Playbook series. And now we’ve got a growing group of baseball romances too, so I can only assume that we’re a year max away from a load of basketball player romances.

I have read more baseball romances than other sports recently – but that’s not saying much because it’s basically just Cat Sebastian’s two historical ones – You Should Be So Lucky and We Could Be So Good. It’s not quite a straight romance-romance, but Linda Holmes’s Evvie Drake Starts Over remains among my favourite novels of recent years.

I often find it quite tricky to recommend some of the more recently published sports romances, because everything is tending very New Adult and that is not my bag at all. I’ve read at least two NFL romances in the last six months where the blurb has seemed like it was right up my street and then in the reading I’ve wanted to throw them across the room* because they’ve annoyed me so much. And no I’m not going to tell you who that is, but I’m sure you can work it out if you look through my Goodreads reviews!

In terms of my own to-read pile, I’ve got Let The Games Begin which is actually set at an Olympics, Match Point which is tennis, Tessa Bailey’s Fan Girl Down which is about golf and Cross the Line which is about Formula One on my to-read pile.

Happy Wednesday everyone

*but I didn’t because they were ebooks and I might have damaged my Kindle if it hit something.