June 12, 2012

Review: About Last Night by Ruthie Knox



Source: we received an e-ARC of the book through NetGalley for review purposes.

Given the amount of Contemporary Romance I review, it’s quite obvious that I’m partial to it. But in a genre that can get quite repetitive, finding great new authors can be difficult. When I read Ms. Knox’s debut novel, Ride with Me, I was over the moon because is not often that I read a book so compelling. After having read About Last Night, I’m happy to tell that Ride with Me wasn’t a one-hit wonder, and that Ms. Knox is a truly wonderful author.

Mary Catherine Talarico is a wild child in the process of reforming herself. In order to do so, she has removed herself from everything and everyone. She moved to London, doesn’t really have friends, she works, she works and she works. Basically she wants to be a dull girl and things that all work and no play will help her achieve that goal. 

“Cath didn’t have any friends. She had a roommate who didn’t like her, a socially awkward boss who did, and an empty life that revolved around her job.”

Because her life is quite detached, she has become a master people watcher. She can predict who will be at the train station and what they’ll do once they arrive. Her favorite person to observe is a serious, suit-wearing hunk, whom she calls City. One day, she gets drunk and City takes her to his house. He’s a perfect gentleman but when she recovers they give in to temptation and have sex. It turns out that Cath isn’t as reformed as she thought, and City isn’t as stuffy as his suit makes it seem.

City’s real name is Neville (yes, Ms. Knox is so good that she can make someone named Neville sexy). He isn’t happy with his life. Forced to work at his family’s bank, what he really wants to do is paint. So Cath and Nev are two repressed individuals full of passion that when convined make sparks fly. But sex isn’t everything they have in common, and it isn’t what they are really looking for in each other. He can see that Cath is broken, but he doesn’t care. He’s willing to wait until she’s ready to open up to him and he won’t try to fix her in the meantime. But Cath has a lot of self-hatred working against her and she will have to learn how to deal with it in order to have a healthy relationship.

This is a character driven story and the conflict comes from within the characters. Cath has to learn how to love and forgive herself, and Nev has to stop being so passive and take action. It has angst, strong emotions and sex. They look and act so different from each other that it’s almost an opposites-attract story, yet they weren’t that different. They both were unhappy with their current lives, but he wasn’t doing anything to fix it, and she was trying but failing. 

Cath is the main character and the book revolves around her. It’s her journey and her story. Fortunately for us, she’s a likeable heroine. I saw her as someone with a lot of guilt, hurt and self-loath, who wanted to get better but didn’t know how. She was very young and in a way immature. I’m not a fan of heroines getting better thanks to the healing powers of the hero’s mighty peen, but in her particular case it works because Nev helps her see herself under a different, more positive light, something she never would’ve accomplished by herself. When the book ends she’s still a work in progress, there’s no miraculous cure for such deep psychological wounds, but she’s on the right path.

I must say that Nev read older than he truly was. I was surprised when he tells his age because judging by his behavior and personality I thought he was way older than that. But then, closer to the end, he behaves like a young, immature man. Until that point he was very understanding and almost perfect. Or so it seemed, because if you look closer, he was drifting and unhappy about his life, but either unable or unwilling to do something about it. I found him confusing and contradictory. How can someone so sure of himself when faced with a complex woman like Cath, so understanding and patient, be so passive and insecure with his own family and in his personal life? He wanted to be a painter, not a banker, then why not go and do it? This inconsistency and the actions that lead to the confrontation at the end of the book, were the weakest links in what otherwise was a truly wonderful romance.

Needless to say, I absolutely recommend this book and everything Ms. Knox writes. She is one of my new favorite authors and I want everyone to read her books.

A slightly very long note: I didn’t get a finished copy, so I don’t know for sure, but it says that the book contains snippets from other titles, so it probably ends around the 90% mark. I say this because knowing how much book is left is part of the reading experience (you know the bad guy isn’t the real bad guy when they catch him and there’s still 25% of the book left, right?) and I hate it when the book suddenly end and the rest is promo content. So either check if there’s extra content at the end, or keep in mind that the book may be shorter than it seems.

Review by Brie
Grade: 4
Sensuality: McSteamy
Purchase: Amazon

Synopsis:

Sure, opposites attract, but in this sexy, smart, eBook original romance from Ruthie Knox, they positively combust! When a buttoned-up banker falls for a bad girl, “about last night” is just the beginning. 
Cath Talarico knows a mistake when she makes it, and God knows she’s made her share. So many, in fact, that this Chicago girl knows London is her last, best shot at starting over. But bad habits are hard to break, and soon Cath finds herself back where she has vowed never to go . . . in the bed of a man who is all kinds of wrong: too rich, too classy, too uptight for a free-spirited troublemaker like her. 
Nev Chamberlain feels trapped and miserable in his family’s banking empire. But beneath his pinstripes is an artist and bohemian struggling to break free and lose control. Mary Catherine—even her name turns him on—with her tattoos, her secrets, and her gamine, sex-starved body, unleashes all kinds of fantasies. 
When blue blood mixes with bad blood, can a couple that is definitely wrong for each other ever be perfectly right? And with a little luck and a lot of love, can they make last night last a lifetime? 
Includes a special message from the editor, as well as excerpts from these Loveswept titles: Because of You, Ride with Me, and Doc Holiday.

Loveswept. June 11, 2012.

8 comments:

  1. I liked this book too. Nev's inconsistency with Cath v. his family didn't bother me. I think family pressure is much more deep rooted and harder to escape than a new person with drama in your life. I do think the whole, you must get married ploy, was weak. But otherwise, I liked this one a lot.

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    1. Where you surprised by how young he was? In a way it makes sense because it explains why he had such a hart time dealing with his family, but his interactions with Cath made him seem much older and mature.

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  2. I have been hearing great things abour this book around the blogs and chats.. I cannot wait to read it..

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    1. She will be visiting us next week and giving away one copy of the book. Make sure to stop by and enter the contest!

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  3. It's amazing how people can help and encourage others in similar situations, but often times don't have the insight and strength to help themselves. I find the problem with Nev very realistic so I probably wouldn't be as bothered by it. But I guess it would depend on how strong the author makes him toward everything else.

    Sounds like a sweet romantic story running high with emotions and issues. I'll have to eventually give this author a try. PS...I meant to tell you I piked up those two Nora Roberts Books you suggested to me. I'll have to try and work at least one in soon!

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    1. Oh yay! Let me know if you want to do a guest review on the blog or something else. I really hope you enjoy them ;-)

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  4. Ugh, I hate when they put excerpts at the end and books end earlier than you expected ^_^; Thanks for the warning.

    I have to say, I found Ride With Me okay. The heroine got on my nerve a lot... so I'm not sure I'll be picking up this one, but at least, I'll keep it in mind :)

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    1. I hate it too!

      I really enjoyed RwM, in fact, I think I liked it just a little bit better than this one, and I'm not even a fan of road trips. But maybe you will enjoy this one more, you should give her a second chance ;-)

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The books reviewed here were purchased by us. If the book was provided by the author or publisher for review, it will be noted on the post. We do not get any type of monetary compensation from publishers or authors.