Author: Kim Smith
Publisher: Red Rose Publishing
Format: ebook, novelette
Genre: Romance
Publisher Addresses: Red Rose Publishing, 12065 Woodhull Rd., Forestport , NY 13338
ISBN number: 978-1-60435-344-0
Price: $2.99
Publisher website: http://www.redrosepublishing.com
Review by Aaron Paul Lazar
I've never read a romance. Honestly. But I ordered Kim M. Smith's ebook, A Will to Love, because I fell in love with her silky smooth writing style when I discovered her first book, a cozy mystery entitled Avenging Angel. I ordered A Will to Love this morning-while recovering in bed from a hospital stay-and read it in one, luxurious sitting.
How many men actually read romance? I have no idea. I suspected the content would only appeal to women, but I was wrong. Smith's strong characters and the emotions they evoked wove magically together the moment I met Benton Jessup and Kitty Beebe.
Jessup, a man haunted by the loss of his lifelong soul mate Carla, tries to keep his southern inn afloat. He cooks meals for his guests with ease, and has even been written up in the local gourmet press. But his heart's not in it. He aches for Carla and plods through life in a haze of sorrow.
Enter Kitty Beebe, a romance author from Ireland with fiery gold hair and disturbingly beautiful blue eyes. One would expect this setup to result in a predictable rescue of poor Jessup, but it doesn't go quite so easy for him, which adds to the luscious tension. Kitty, a complicated lady, becomes besotted with Jessup, but isn't sure she's ready to rescue him for a lifetime.
Another character I fell for was "The Inn" itself. Set in the lazy southern countryside, its beguiling charm oozed from the pages. I want to go there. I want to live there. And I wouldn't mind being Benton Jessup. At least in my dreams.
In this passage from A Will to Love, we discover the depth of Jessup's pain:
"But they had to come back to Mississippi and the life that she wanted.
At least the memories would remain forever. Maybe that was why he had agreed to the Celtic cross now adorning the headstone. Its gray granite cast a faint shadow on the small bundle of pansies he laid on the grave. He didn't speak. He wouldn't know what to say anyway. His whole life, past, present, and future now rested beneath the fresh grasses growing over the mounded earth in the little cemetery on their land.
She would understand his stalwart silence. She had known him through and through.
There would never be another woman who would be that close to him.
He'd make certain of it."
The only issue I could find with the novelette was its requisite length. Of course novelettes are short. But I hated it to end and wanted to learn more about Kitty's past, the things that led her to a troubled sort of hesitancy to love. I yearned for more of their life at The Inn and in the cottage in Ireland. I guess that's the nature of a novelette, and of course, the skills of a fine writer. They always leave you wanting more.
Smith, "a true blue southern gal who was raised on black -eyed peas and cornbread," promises more books, including another romance short, Love Waltzes In due in the Forever Young Anthology at Red Rose Publishing, September 2009. The second Shannon Wallace mystery is due in December, 2009.
See more at her website, www.mkimsmith
***
Aaron Paul Lazar wasn't always a mystery writer. It wasn't until eight members of his family and friends died within five years that the urge to write became overwhelming. "When my father died, I lost it. I needed an outlet, and writing provided the kind of solace I couldn't find elsewhere."
Lazar created the Gus LeGarde mystery series, with the founding novel, DOUBLE FORTÉ (2004), a chilling winter mystery set in the Genesee Valley of upstate New York. Like Lazar's father, protagonist Gus LeGarde is a classical music professor. Gus, a grandfather, gardener, chef, and nature lover, plays Chopin etudes to feed his soul and thinks of himself as a "Renaissance man caught in the 21st century."
The creation of the series lent Lazar the comfort he sought, yet in the process, a new passion was unleashed. Obsessed with his parallel universe, he now lives, breathes, and dreams about his characters, and has written nine LeGarde mysteries in seven years. (UPSTAGED - 2005; TREMOLO:CRY OF THE LOON - 2007 Twilight Times Books; MAZURKA - 2009 Twilight Times Books, with more to come.)
One day while rototilling his gardens, Lazar unearthed a green cat's eye marble, which prompted the new paranormal mystery series featuring Sam Moore, retired country doctor and zealous gardener. The green marble, a powerful talisman, connects all three of the books in the series, whisking Sam back in time to uncover his brother's dreadful fate fifty years earlier. (HEALEY'S CAVE: A GREEN MARBLE MYSTERY, 2008; ONE POTATO, BLUE POTATO, 2009; FOR KEEPS, 2010) Lazar intends to continue both series.
Lazar's books feature breathless chase scenes, nasty villains, and taut suspense, but are also intensely human stories, replete with kids, dogs, horses, food, romance, and humor. The author calls them, "country mysteries," although reviewers have dubbed them "literary mysteries."
"It seems as though every image ever impressed upon my brain finds its way into my work. Whether it's the light dancing through stained-glass windows in a Parisian chapel, curly slate-green lichen covering a boulder at the edge of a pond in Maine, or hoarfrost dangling from a cherry tree branch in mid-winter, these images burrow into my memory cells. In time they bubble back, persistently itching, until they are poured out on the page."
The author lives on a ridge overlooking the Genesee Valley in upstate New York with his wife, mother-in-law, and beloved Cavi-poo, Balto. Recent empty nesters, he and his wife are fixing up their 1811 antique home after twenty-five years of kid and puppy wear.
Lazar maintains several websites and blogs, is the Gather Saturday Writing Essential host, writes his monthly "Seedlings" columns for the Voice in the Dark literary journal and the Future Mystery Anthology Magazine. He has been published in Absolute Write as well as The Great Mystery and Suspense Magazine. See excerpts and reviews here:
Contact him at aaron.lazar@yahoo.com


Comments: 10
Aaron, this was a wonderful review. Your comment that you never read a romance caught my attention. (I like to call my novels "love stories".) I thought my audience would be entirely women and was surprised when several men read my first two books and said they truly enjoyed them. So I hope the reading of your first "romance" has changed your mind. LOL
http://www.paintings-prose-palmbeach.com
Thanks for this review, Aaron. I wish novels didn't have to get stuck in those "ticky tacky boxes" the publishing industry insists upon calling "genres". Many romance novels have a much broader appeal if only we could get the word out.
Hey, Marie. I am very much looking forward to reading your stories! If they are as lovely as your paintings, then I'll be bowled over! See? I'm making my way through my pile of committments!
Hi, Natalie. Me, too. Genre classification is so limiting. There are mysteries with romance in them, romances with mystery within, and every other kind of combo! I hope I've been able to bust the myth today that only women read "romance." It was actually very compelling!
Thank you all for commenting on Aaron's post about my novelette. Aaron, you really deserve so much applause for your efforts as a reader of romance! I wish I could get my hubby to read them!
A fabulous review. It sounds like a great book.
I read my first romance novel just a few months ago and was surprised at the writing skills in the book I chose. Guess we have to learn to look beyond our own stereotyping. A good writer is a good writer. Period.
Thanks for posting your review to the Gather group, Bookin'.
Thanks, Christine. You're right. I think I've always thought of the romance genre with a little ...er... arrogance? Well, maybe that's too harsh a word, but I didn't think it was for me. How wrong we can be. The Lord keeps me humble!
Great comments! Did you know that Romance outsells all over types of writing? Thanks, Aaron, for the comment on my paintings. A few who have read my books say they are "literary" How's that for loftiness?? I give the reader a peek into an artist's psyche, what makes them tick, and also take him/her on a nice vacation to New Orleans where the food is outstanding and the music is sweet. Nice weekend everyone.
Hey, Marie! Your books sound wonderful! Thanks for letting us know about them. ;o)