I’m always excited to tear into my BookCase.Club box! They’ve chosen excellent books in all the past boxes and have plenty of great themes to choose from.
*Disclaimer: This box was sent to See, Shop, Love! in exchange for an honest review.
BookCase.Club is an affordable way to satiate your inner book lover! They send two hand-picked books every month for only $9.99, and cheaper options per box if you sign up for three-, six-, and 12-month options.
There are eight different cases to choose from:
- Thrill Seeker – mystery/thriller
- Strange Worlds – sci-fi/fantasy
- Teenage Dreams – young adult novels
- Read To Me – four children’s picture books
- Blind Date – paranormal romance
- Booking for Love – romance
- Quarterly Cook Books – two cook books every three months
- Quarterly Military History – two military history books every three months
Penny Harrigan is a low-level associate in a big Manhattan law firm. She has an apartment, but no love life. When C. Linus Maxwell, a mega-billionaire and international playboy, invites her to dinner and then whisks her off to a hotel in Paris, where he brings her to undreamed-of heights of sexual gratification for days on end, Penny is, well, pleased. However, when Penny discovers she is a test subject for a line of female sex toys so effective that women by the millions are lining up outside the stores to buy it on opening day, she understands the gravity the situation. A billion husbands are about to be replaced. What is Maxwell really up to? Erotically enabled world domination? Penny sets out to discover his motivations, and with a little help, stop him before it is too late.
I have to admit that I do judge a book by its cover sometimes, and this one has an absolutely gorgeous one! The Thinking Woman’s Guide To Real Magic by Emily Croy Barker is a fantasy novel that looks like it’ll be as great as its cover:
During a miserable weekend at a friend’s wedding, eager to forget about her disastrous breakup and stalled dissertation, Nora Fischer wanders off and somehow finds herself in another realm. There, she meets glamorous Ilissa—who introduces Nora to a decadent new world—and her gorgeous son Raclin. But when the elegant veneer of this dreamland shatters, Nora finds herself in a fairy tale gone incredibly wrong. And the only way she can survive is by learning real magic herself.
Bottom Line: I’m honestly not sure which book I’m going to read first! Beautiful You certainly sounds risque, but given that it’s a Palaniuk novel I’m sure there’s more to it than needless erotica. The Thinking Woman’s Guide To Real Magic seems like a novel that would instantly suck me in. Maybe I’ll read them both at the same time!