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•  LoveHampton by Sherri Rifkin

Summer Love, Summer Lessons
Rifkin's witty romance about a nice gal who tries to become accepted into a group of party-hopping friends who have rented a house in the Hamptons to share for a summer also has some sound moral lessons that go down as smooth as a summer cocktail.
•  Book of Trouble, The: A Love Story by Marlowe, Ann

Star Crossed in Love, or Do We Cross Ourselves?
Don't let the subtitle fool you: this is much more than a love story, although that may be its initial raison d'etre. It may be about a specific couple in a specific time and cultural context, but the basic emotions it touches upon are universal.
•  Star Struck by Anderson, Pamela with Quinn, Eric Shaw

Sex, drugs, and…More Sex and Drugs!
No one reads a book that begins with the heroine awaking from a drug-induced stupor wondering why her nipples hurt expecting great literature. Yet even as a mindless guilty pleasure, Star Struck pushes the limits of plausibility and cheese from the beginning
•  Redemption of the Cannibal Woman, The by Denevi, Marco

Extravagant hopes dashed in Buenos Aires
Although neither the plots nor the language bear any obvious relationship to the works of Edgar Allen Poe, there is something about the hopes for love reminiscent of Poe.
•  Foreign Affairs by Lurie, Alison

Comic, ultimately poignant tale of Americans abroad
Foreign Affairs provides the pleasures of incisive observation of conflicting assumptions (intracultural as well as cross-cultural ones), elegant, pointed prose, and creative plotting.
•  Zuleika Dobson: An Oxford Romance by Beerbohm, Max

The Staggering Stupidity of Which Adolescent Males are Capable
The novel elaborately details the disruption of the cloistered calm of a then all-male Oxford that a flirtatious and attractive young woman causes when she visits her grandfather. One of the most admirable features of Beerbohm's book is its calling attention to the herd mentality of young men as relentless followers of fashion and as easy prey to romantic notions.
•  The Last Rogue by Simmons, Deborah

A Harlequin Romance Worth Reading
Take all the negatives you know about Harlequin Romances and chuck them out. This one is worth reading.
•  Losers' Club, The by Perez, Richard

Lookin' for love in a place he seemed to have almost found it
The arcs of three romances and a job are a lot to manage in a 176-page novel, some pages of which are filled with examples of Martin's poetry, , but The Losers' Club is an entertaining and occasionally touching first novel of accomplishment, not just of promise.
•  A Man to Call My Own by Lindsay, Johanna

Moving from Romance to Mainstream
A Man to Call My Own overcomes its typecasting and moves into mainstream novel territory with class.
•  The Flower and the Sword by Navin, Jacqueline

No Romance, No Story—Not Even Decent Sex!
There's absolutely no pleasure in The Flower and the Sword. It's not historical anything, and it's full of cutout characters and situations.
...More Reviews in Books - Romance
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