Clockwork Tangerine by Rhys Ford

20484851Title: Clockwork Tangerine

Author: Rhys Ford

Genre: Steampunk

Length: Novella (90 pages)

ISBN: 978-1-62798-419-5

Publisher: Dreamspinner Press (February 20th, 2014)

Heat Level: Moderate

Heart Rating: ♥♥♥♥4 Hearts

Reviewer: Thommie

Blurb:The British Empire reigns supreme, and its young Queen Victoria has expanded her realm to St. Francisco, a bustling city of English lords and Chinese ghettos. St. Francisco is a jewel in the Empire’s crown and as deeply embroiled in the conflict between the Arcane and Science as its sister city, London—a very dark and dangerous battle.

Marcus Stenhill, Viscount of Westwood, stumbles upon that darkness when he encounters a pack of young bloods beating a man senseless. Westwood’s duty and honor demand he save the man, but he’s taken aback to discover the man is Robin Harris, a handsome young inventor indirectly responsible for the death of Marcus’s father.

Living in the shadows following a failed coup, Robin devotes his life to easing others’ pain, even though his creations are considered mechanical abominations of magicks and science. Branded a deviant and a murderer, Robin expects the viscount to run as far as he can—and is amazed when Marcus reaches for him instead.

Purchase Link: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=4718

Review: God I love Steampunk, but this novella is not merely that. In this, world science and arcane magick exist together on two different paths. However, it’s a taboo to mix them. That is until a brilliant young engineer falls victim of greed and his creations are turned into horrible tools of destruction and mayhem.

Marcus saw his father die from one such creation, a horrible death that shattered the entire family and left a bone deep grief in his soul. He moved on with his duties as the Duke’s son, now a Viscount, and keeps his father’s teachings deep in his heart. One of the most important teachings his father left him with is that those that can help should do so no matter who is in need of it. Thus, Marcus ends one dark night helping a man who was being beaten to death by three young gents. It is like this the story starts, with Fate smirking upon the son of a man murdered by the creation of the man he rescues. Because the victim of the beating is none other than the young scientist, Robin Harris.

Now Robin as a character is fascinating. His depiction wants you drooling over and over again. His life makes your heart hurt and stutter, and the need to shelter him from the world becomes real. He has suffered and continues to suffer due to people’s greed and their taking advantage of him and his genius. But for me, the true shining character here was Marcus. This character is strong in many ways. He is of noble blood yet he is not arrogant and the fact that he continues to help Robin despite the fact that Robin killed his father by proxy, makes Marcus charming beyond restriction.

These men each have their world where they live in and these worlds are too far apart. It’s because of that, that the story gains so much value when they mesh together. In a time when a man craves the love of another man is deemed unnatural and abominable, when loving a man might end the life, as you know it, their relationship becomes even more precious.

I loved how the story was told, I loved the fact that the pair didn’t jump straight into each other’s arms, and I loved the time given to these men to come together. I admit though that as the end of the novella approached and they still hadn’t made that final step I became anxious. The anticipation ratcheted my agony up in levels that I didn’t think this little novella was capable of. I reached the point where I started muttering under my breath about when would Marcus just freaking kisses Robin for crying aloud. Yes, patience is not my strong point. When they did come together though it was splendid. I loved every sensuous line, and every emotion emerging from the text. It was a fine release of all that tension that was building and building throughout the read. Made me wish for more and even as the story concluded with the most satisfying end, the need for more didn’t relent. I just loved this couple immensely.

I also got smitten with the Duchess. Oh, God was she one awesome creature. Her “tantrum” oh dear, was fantastic, hilarious as hell. That damn porcelain dog managed to survive in the end didn’t it? She was a real character indeed.

Bottom end this was a delicious story, wholesome in every way you see it, and leaves you with a sense of the world being as it should be and a big smile on your face. The only wrong thing I find in it was the cover, because come on, you have the little crow right there, Robin with his gorgeous long black hair and pale skin, and you don’t use him. That would have been perfect. *sigh*
Strongly recommended to all fans of Steampunk!

Fish and Ghost by Rhys Ford

FishandGhostsLGTitle: Fish & Ghosts

Series: Hellsinger, Book 1

Author: Rhys Ford

Genre: Paranormal/Humor/Mystery

Length: Novel (240 pages)

Publisher: Dreamspinner Press (December 30th, 2013)

Heat Level: Explicit

Heart Rating:
♥♥♥♥♥5Hearts

Blurb: When his Uncle Mortimer died and left him Hoxne Grange, the family’s Gilded Age mansion, Tristan Pryce became the second generation of Pryces to serve as a caretaker for the estate, a way station for spirits on their final steps to the afterlife. Tristan is prepared for challenges, though not necessarily from the ghosts he’s seen since childhood. Determined to establish Tristan’s insanity and gain access to his trust fund, his loving relatives hire Dr. Wolf Kincaid and his paranormal researchers, Hellsinger Investigations, to prove the Grange is not haunted.

Skeptic Wolf Kincaid has made it his life’s work to debunk the supernatural. After years of cons and fakes, he can’t wait to reveal the Grange’s ghostly activity is just badly leveled floorboards and a drafty old house. More than a few surprises await him at the Grange, including its prickly, reclusive owner. Tristan Pryce is much less insane and much more attractive than Wolf wants to admit, and when his team releases a ghostly serial killer on the Grange, Wolf is torn between his skepticism and protecting the man, he’s been sent to discredit.

Product Link: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=4522

Reviewer:   GiGi

Review: Its’ funny, its spooky, it’s mysterious and sexy! The strength and uniqueness of her characters is what keeps me coming back to Rhys Ford’s writing again and again. Ford is on my auto read list, and this title, the first in the new Hellsinger series does not disappoint! I can totally relate to, and love the quirkiness, talent, and intelligence of Tristan Pryce. While the arrogance, dominance and leap before looking mentality of Wolf compliments Tristan. The two at first seem like oil and water, but as the chaos and haunted shenanigans roll on we can see that the attraction is inevitable, more like fire and oil!


The secondary characters hold just as much interest to me, two of my favorites being Wolf’s mother and the dog. Yes, the ghost dog is one of my favorites in this spooctacular tale, especially when skeptical Wolf actually starts playing fetch with him! This highly entertaining book is full of horror, humor, supernatural events, and sprinkled with super sexy scenes between our two MC’s. Trying to prove that Tristan is a fake is quickly trying Wolf’s patience especially since he can’t deny he’s attracted to Pryce. Keeping his loyalties straight quickly becomes difficult. Fish and Ghosts is fast paced, and kept me glued to the pages from start to finish.

 

I may have lost sleep, but it was so worth it and I can’t wait for the next book in this supernatural series!

Whiskey and Wry by Rhys Ford

Whiskey&WryLGTitle: Whiskey and Wry     

Series: Sinners, 02

Author: Rhys Ford     

Genre: Contemporary, Mystery, Suspense     

Length: Novel (254pgs)    

Publisher: Dreamspinner Press (19th August 2013)    

Heat Level: Moderate – Explicit     

Heart Rating:  ♥♥♥♥4 Hearts   

Reviewer: Pixie     

Blurb: He was dead. And it was murder most foul. If erasing a man’s existence could even be called murder. 

When Damien Mitchell wakes, he finds himself without a life or a name. The Montana asylum’s doctors tell him he’s delusional and his memories are all lies: he’s really Stephen Thompson, and he’d gone over the edge, obsessing about a rock star who died in a fiery crash. His chance to escape back to his own life comes when his prison burns, but a gunman is waiting for him, determined that neither Stephen Thompson nor Damien Mitchell will escape. 

With the assassin on his tail, Damien flees to the City by the Bay, but keeping a low profile is the only way he’ll survive as he searches San Francisco for his best friend, Miki St. John. Falling back on what kept him fed before he made it big, Damien sings for his supper outside Finnegan’s, an Irish pub on the pier, and he soon falls in with the owner, Sionn Murphy. Damien doesn’t need a complication like Sionn, and to make matters worse, the gunman—who doesn’t mind going through Sionn or anyone else if that’s what it takes kill Damien—shows up to finish what he started.     

Purchase Link: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=4107    

Review: Damien finally gets a chance to escape his prison when it is set on fire, but he discovers that he just might have jumped out of the frying pan into the fire. With an assassin on his trail, Damien heads for the only place that he knows he can find help: San Francisco, but finding his best friend isn’t going to be easy when most of his memories are missing. Sionn offers help to the young man who busks outside his pub, but things become dangerous when Dee seems to become the target for a mad man. 

This is a great mystery/suspense as we dig into the mystery surrounding Damien and his death. Damien is a dead man; after his band was in a car crash Damien was mysteriously whisked away and locked up in an asylum but now his memories are resurfacing stronger than before and someone wants him shut up permanently. Managing to escape, Damien sets out to find the person who means more to him than anything: Miki St. John, but finding his friend is next to impossible when all Damien can remember is a warehouse somewhere in San Francisco. Sionn owns his own pub and becomes intrigued by the young man who busks outside; when he discovers the problems Dee is having, he offers to help. As the two get close things start to fall into place but there is still a killer and the person who hired him to deal with. 

I loved this story and the mystery surrounding Damien’s ‘death’, I loved the circumstances of Damien finding himself and Miki again and seeing their incredible friendship in play. Sionn is a wonderful character and he compliments Damien well, he was supportive as Damien fumbled with rediscovering his life and they were very hot together. Damien is wonderfully written with him having fears about his sanity at times and his struggle to remember just what is the truth of his life. The storyline is well paced and drags you in from the beginning; we become involved with discovering the truth about why Damien was locked up in an asylum. The danger is exciting and has you biting your nails on the edge of your seat, the mystery intrigues as you try to work out who was behind it all, and the love story is sweet and passionate.    

Although I really loved this book, I wasn’t blind to its faults. The assassin: was there a more incompetent bumbling killer? He might have been vicious and twisted but he was more like an amateur than the professional he professed himself to be. The story never explained how Damien managed to be declared dead…. there would have had to have been a hell of a lot more pay offs than just the pretend parents and many more witnesses to the fact that he was really alive. Those were the things that left me feeling slightly disappointed with this story, I like things to be wrapped nicely in a parcel, and everything explained. 

I recommend this to those who love danger and mystery, finding love in dangerous times, rediscovering a friendship, getting to the truth and an ending that makes you wonder what is coming next. 

 

Black Dog Blues by Rhys Ford

8862431943_04b4feb9c9_bTitle: Black Dog Blues

Series: Kai Gracen 01

Author: Rhys Ford

Genre: Urban Fantasy

Length: Novel (277pgs)

Publisher: Coffee Squirrel Press (22nd June 2013)

Heat Level: Low

Heart Rating: ♥♥♥♥♥4 ½ Hearts

Reviewer: Pixie

Blurb: Ever since he’d been part of the pot in a high-stakes poker game, elfin outcast Kai Gracen figured he’d used up any good karma he had when Dempsey, a human Stalker, won the hand and took him in. Following the violent merge of Earth and Underhill, the human and elfin races were left with a messy, monster-ridden world and Stalkers were often the only cavalry willing to ride to someone’s rescue when something shadowy and dark moved into the neighborhood.

There certainly were no shortage of monsters or people stupidly willing to become lunch for one.

It was a hard life but one Kai liked. And he was good at it. Killing monsters was easy. Especially since he was one himself.

After an accident retired Dempsey out, Kai set up permanent shop in San Diego, contracting out to the local SoCalGov depot. It was a decent life, filled with bounty, a few friends and most importantly, no other elfin around to remind him he wasn’t really human.

That was until a sidhe lord named Ryder arrives in San Diego and Kai is conscripted to do a job for Ryder’s fledgling Dawn Court. It was supposed to a simple run; head up the coast during dragon-mating season to retrieve a pregnant human woman seeking sanctuary with the new Court then back to San Diego. Easy, quick and best of all, profitable. But Ryder’s “simple” run leads to massive trouble and Kai ends up being caught in the middle of a deadly bloodline feud he has no hope of escaping.

No one ever got rich by being a Stalker. But then hardly any of them got old either. The way things were looking, it didn’t look like Kai was going to be the exception.

Purchase Link: US: http://www.amazon.com/Black-Blues-Gracen-Series-ebook/dp/B00DK3DPSI

UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Black-Blues-Gracen-Series-ebook/dp/B00DK3DPSI

Review: Elfin Kai was won in a poker game by a human Stalker, Dempsey, and was trained to be a Stalker; he is the only Elfin Stalker in southern California. Now with Dempsey retiring due to injury Kai has set up shop in San Diego, contracting out to the local SoCalGov depot to kill the monsters that were released when Underhill merged with Earth. Kai is so merged in the human culture that he sometimes forgets he was Elfin but when he is contracted to work for sidhe lord Ryder he is reminded of his past. Kai’s new contract was supposed to be an easy run, but heading up the coast during dragon-mating season to retrieve a pregnant human woman is anything but simple when he is dragged into a bloodline feud and his own past comes back to haunt him.

This is an absolutely brilliant Urban Fantasy story that has danger, horrible monsters, tempting sidhe, and intriguing heroes. Kai has a mysterious past that is filled with horror, he wants nothing to do with any other Elfin and is perfectly happy with his life in the human world, it is dangerous but nothing that he hasn’t faced before, and he lives by his own rules. Being forced to take a job for the sidhe lord Ryder is far from his idea of fun but if he doesn’t do it, his Stalker license could be pulled, gritting his teeth he sets out on an action packed journey that brings his bloody terrifying past back to him.

Kai is a brilliant character, he faces so much in this story, and his reactions are just perfect. Kai is scarred by his past in more ways than one and his fears reach out and grab you, he has good reason to never want to see the Dusk Court again. Kai’s sexuality is fluid, male/female doesn’t matter to him he enjoys both, but some people he will steer clear of. Ryder and the other characters are there but more in the background, this is Kai’s story and although it is a great with the action, danger and Kai’s history being revealed, nobody really jumps out like Kai does so we are left wondering as to who could really catch Kai’s eye because it isn’t only Ryder who wants a taste of Kai. It left me wondering just what direction this series would head in with Kai’s love interest because Kai seemed much more receptive to the females, because even with his detailed reaction to Ryder he still seemed to welcome the females touch more than Ryder’s.

This story is very much focused on the Urban Fantasy with any romantic/sexual interest taking a back burner, the imaginative settings and terrible creatures pull you into an exciting adventure and discovering Kai’s life is interesting. There’s plenty of danger from the black dogs, dragons, Dusk sidhe and Dawn sidhe and Kai is dragged into the Elfin world even as he tries to stay out of it. We get a dark gritty story that makes you wonder as you turn the page just what Kai will face next, and you wonder just how much more his poor body can take before it gives up.

I recommend this is you want a dark, gritty, danger filled Urban Fantasy, incredible world building, fascinating characters and just a slight hint of sexual attraction.      

 

Dirty Laundry by Rhys Ford

DirtyLaundryLGTitle: Dirty Laundry

Series: A Cole McGinnis Mystery

Author: Rhys Ford

Genre: MM / Mystery / Suspense

Length: Novel

Publisher: Dreamspinner Press (April 19th, 2013)

Heat Level: Moderate

Heart Rating: ♥♥♥♥3.5~4 Hearts

Reviewer: Thommie

Blurb: For ex-cop turned private investigator Cole McGinnis, each day brings a new challenge. Too bad most of them involve pain and death. Claudia, his office manager and surrogate mother, is still recovering from a gunshot, and Cole’s closeted boyfriend, Kim Jae-Min, suddenly finds his teenaged sister dumped in his lap. Meanwhile, Cole has his own sibling problems—most notably, a mysterious half-brother from Japan whom his older brother, Mike, is determined they welcome with open arms.

As if his own personal dramas weren’t enough, Cole is approached by Madame Sun, a fortune-teller whose clients have been dying at an alarming rate. Convinced someone is after her customers, she wants the matter investigated, but the police think she’s imagining things. Hoping to put Sun’s mind at ease, Cole takes the case and finds himself plunged into a Gordian knot of lies and betrayal where no one is who they are supposed to be and Death seems to be the only card in Madame Sun’s deck.

Product Link: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=3754

Review: Now here is a book that gave me conflicting feelings, but I think this is the case with Cole McGinnis Mysteries. There are things I love too much in the series and things that irritate the hell out of me. Let’s take a ride shall we?

So, main character Cole McGinnis and I seem to have developed some really special feelings for him. I adore this character, he is a man’s man, he is brass, he is coarse, he is grumpy and funny and he cusses a LOT, and I love that about him. He is also sensitive and loving and caring and I love the fact that he tries to hide it, but utterly fails to. What really cracks me up though is the crazy-magnet he seems to have attached to his person. I mean he literally stops somewhere and either crazy people show up or dead bodies flow all over his feet. He still insists on going around though and truly believes he does not have the crazy chasing him. You got to love that guy.

So in this book he once again gets in the middle of the crazy pot and tries to find out which way is North and which way is South, while some invisible hand is stirring said damned pot. I loved the start. It was to be expected that it would start with a nice, intense and brilliantly hilarious scene. The fact that it included a poodle and some serious ass chewing should give you a hint or two. And after this scene, which reminds us who Cole is and introduces him to those that haven’t met him yet, the serious stuff begins.

Now there is the mystery part and the romantic part of the story. The mystery part was all sorts of funny for me. Yes, I found dead bodies thrown at Cole’s feet extremely funny and I had to hold my belly from laughing every time it happened. I mean really, it was as if the murderer was stalking him and killing people a bit before, during or after a meeting with Cole. If I was cop I’d arrest him just because. But back in the story, the whole idea behind the killings made sense in a perverse kind of way. Truth be told I figured the guilty one when Cole wondered what his “laundry” would be since his façade was so nice. But it was quite enjoyable reading it through. The thread was perhaps a bit too tight and the investigation a bit too slow and the police work a bit… not there? I mean what the heck did the police do? But, all in all, it was fun and that’s what matters in the end. I do have a slight irritation at how the final scene with the murderer and Cole evolved, but it’s not that important.

What is important is the fact that the romantic part gave me too much frustration. I so didn’t like how the relationship with Jae went or started in this book. I’ve been patiently waiting through the action scenes to finally, finally see Jae again and have the couple solidify their relationship, because they had this dragged way to much in that damned veil of vagueness and uncertainty. so excuse me while I throw a fit at the whole family stuff that comes in and complicates things yet again. I’m bitchy but come on, it’s not funny seeing Cole go into a drunken stupor and drama yet again, hasn’t he had enough? I suppose though it was a nice way to bind them together and make them tight and inseparable in the end.

Another thing that I found frustrating was the fact that Cole’s brain jumps in too many thoughts when in the middle of something very important such as having intimate intercourse with Jae. You don’t have him thinking of irrelevant things when he’s spreading Jae in front of him, you just don’t. It seriously takes the focus from the main course and then you got to get in the mood again after the short break. I mean it’s hot, it’s too hot, don’t make us take a breath, let us burn there, let the intensity wash over us, because what you did instead was plain teasing. So not nice. *Sigh*

The surprise of this book though was Ichiro. I cannot describe how much I liked this character. He’s Cole’s brother by the way, and I cannot wait for more of him. He is simply fantastic and finally, finally some Japanese blood in the series. It seriously sucks that Cole is half Japanese yet he has no cultural treats of the country on him. So Ichi was a very nice addition and a great way to make the fans of the series start pacing around with impatience.

And lastly I have to mention the end of this book… I must, even if I don’t want to. What on Earth was up with that? I mean… Really? Dear Lord that was just plain sick. It makes me wonder with all the shitty things that are thrown at Cole, and especially from members of that particular family, how is he still mentally stable? And what is it with them? I haven’t got it yet, what is their problem with Cole for the love of God and everything sacred? Agrrr, the frustration of not knowing that one question is killing me.

So the conclusion of the above rant is, if you’re already a fan of the series I won’t bother, you’ve probably already preordered and knocked the book off. However if you are new to this series I strongly suggest you start reading them in order to get a better grasp of the storyline, even though you can read this as a standalone. It might be a bit overwhelming with the abundance of characters, but I think you’ll enjoy it nonetheless; it was a very enjoyable ride, yet again.

Dirty Secret by Rhys Ford

Title:  Dirty Secret

Author: Rhys Ford

Series: Cole McGuiness Mystery #2

Genre: Romantic Suspense

Length: Novel

Publisher: Dreamspinner (September 28th, 2012)

Heat Level: Explicit

Heart Rating: ♥♥♥♥♥5Hearts – OMG I loved it so much!!!

Blurb: Loving Kim Jae-Min isn’t always easy: Jae is gun-shy about being openly homosexual. Ex-cop turned private investigator Cole McGinnis doesn’t know any other way to be. Still, he understands where Jae is coming from. Traditional Korean men aren’t gay—at least not usually where people can see them.

But Cole can’t spend too much time unraveling his boyfriend’s issues. He has a job to do. When a singer named Scarlet asks him to help find Park Dae-Hoon, a gay Korean man who disappeared nearly two decades ago, Cole finds himself submerged in the tangled world of rich Korean families, where obligation and politics mean sacrificing happiness to preserve corporate empires. Soon the bodies start piling up without rhyme or reason. With every step Cole takes toward locating Park Dae-Hoon, another person meets their demise—and someone Cole loves could be next on the murderer’s list.

Product Link: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=3244

Reviewer: Showme

Review:  I truly loved this book.  I finished the first one minutes before starting the second one. If you read the first one you know how the author ended it. Thank goodness I didn’t have to wait. This is absolutely one of my favorite reads of 2012. It’s beautifully written and I’m completely in love with Cole and Jae.

This book picks up after the first in the series, Dirty Kiss. If you haven’t read that one don’t read any further. The murder mystery is new, but the journey is so wonderful you don’t want to spoil it. Scarlet hires Cole to find out what happened to a friend who disappeared the night of a raid on a gay bar in LA years before. This mixes Cole into some unfinished business within Korea’s southern chaebol.  The murder mystery this time around wasn’t as intense for me because it didn’t revolve around Jae, but it was still a damn good one with a nod to Adrien English. Literally, Cole thinks he’s hot…but don’t we all.

Let’s just start with my newest obsession, Jae and Cole. Their sex scenes are so steamy, but meaningful. They really are a special couple.  The love between them is so obvious, but Jae’s obligation to his family still hangs between them.  Cole and Jae are more open with their affection and the little touches and smiles make me swoon.  The pet names which can sometimes annoy me made me smile.  I came out of this one with much more hope things will work out for the guys. There’s no doubt it’s going to be painful, but that’s just makes what they have more beautiful. I have a better understanding of the shame gay Korean men carry around. It’s fascinating and heartbreaking. It’s a different kind of struggle to create some tension between Cole and Jae than I’m used to reading in this genre.

Cole’s family makes an appearance and it’s not all warm and fuzzy. I love Scarlet.  She does give me warm and fuzzies. We learn a little more about her lover and everything he gives up for the woman he loves. The prejudice Scarlet has to endure to be with her man even though she’s such a beautiful person. Bobby is a just pure fun and joins Cole in his investigative work again. Thank goodness he’s always there for Cole, because he needs all the help he can get. Even though I would love to gorge myself on page after page of Jae and Cole, I adore so many secondary characters in this series so every page was a joy. I wasn’t necessarily laughing while reading this book, but I caught myself smiling quite a bit.

I really recommend this series. I’m almost giddy about how happy I am to have found it and know this review probably didn’t do it justice. So just read it for yourself and you’ll know just how I feel. I can’t wait for the next one Dirty Laundry. My mind is spinning trying to think of where the author is going to take us after the way Dirty Secret ended. Yep, you will be left wanting more, but it’s not exactly a cliffhanger.  I think this author has created something special in this series

Dirty Kiss by Rhys Ford

Title: Dirty Kiss

Author: Rhys Ford

Genre:  Contemporary, GLBT Mystery/Suspense

Publisher: Dreamspinner Press (July 1, 2011)

Length: Novel

Heat Level:  Explicit

Heart Rating: ♥♥♥♥4.5 out of 5Hearts

Reviewer:  Artemis

From the Publisher:  Cole Kenjiro McGinnis, ex-cop and PI, is trying to get over the shooting death of his lover when a supposedly routine investigation lands in his lap. Investigating the apparent suicide of a prominent Korean businessman’s son proves to be anything but ordinary, especially when it introduces Cole to the dead man’s handsome cousin, Kim Jae-Min.

Jae-Min’s cousin had a dirty little secret, the kind that Cole has been familiar with all his life and that Jae-Min is still hiding from his family. The investigation leads Cole from tasteful mansions to seedy lover’s trysts to Dirty Kiss, the place where the rich and discreet go to indulge in desires their traditional-minded families would rather know nothing about.

It also leads Cole McGinnis into Jae-Min’s arms, and that could be a problem. Jae-Min’s cousin’s death is looking less and less like a suicide and Jae-Min is looking more and more like a target. Cole has already lost one lover to violence—he’s not about to lose Jae-Min too.

My Review:  Rhys Ford had me hooked from the first chapter of this book and I picked it up every chance I had for the 2 days it took me to finish reading it. I am a big fan of M/M romances as long as there is plenty of plot, action and character development to go along with the romance! Dirty Kiss was a perfect balance of all the things I love of this genre. There is a solid storyline, likeable characters, AND steamy sex scenes!

Cole takes on the case of Kim Hyun-Shik’s apparent suicide as a favor to his police officer brother, Mike. While he goes into the investigation thinking there won’t be much to learn, he is in for quite a surprise. Still trying to recover from the shooting death of his lover 3 years before, Cole is quite unprepared for the feelings that pop up for Jae-Min, the victim’s cousin. As the investigation progresses and Jae-Min finds himself in danger, Cole falls hard and has to work quickly to uncover the truth about Kim Hyun-Shik’s death and the role that the prominent Asian gay club Dirty Kiss has to play in the case.

The author’s writing style is smooth and witty. I found myself smiling over the character’s interactions and quickly turning each page to find out where the plot would head next. Ms. Ford does a great job of teasing the reader with bits and pieces of the character’s back stories…giving you just enough to make you want to keep reading to find out more. She provided a wonderful look at homosexuality in Asian culture and gave the reader a real understanding of what it means to be gay in a Korean family. While Cole is part Japanese he has been raised 100% American and doesn’t always understand the family obligations and need for secrecy that Jae-Min feels so deeply. The secondary characters are all unique and given individual personalities of their own.

The sex in the story is definitely hot but fits into the story quite nicely. The plot and characters are well developed before the sex enters in and each encounter actually contributes something to the character development. This is not sex just for the sake of sticking in some hot and heavy scene.

Without giving away any important bits of the story, I will say I wanted MORE out of the ending. While it definitely fits my personal requirement of ‘happily ever after’ I found myself turning the page and asking “What? That’s it?” Maybe Ms. Ford has a sequel planned so we can take the characters and their relationship a little bit further?