Florand has an unparalleled knack for creating the best men. They are alpha men who aren't jerks, but very passionate and confident. Stubborn when it comes to winning the woman they love's heart. They express their love through their work, be it the world's finest chocolate, a sugar spun confection, or a macaron made to embody their affection. The passion in this story was remarkable. I do not understand how any writer can describe making hot chocolate or a macaron as more passionate than actually making love, but Laura Florand does it. Like a boss.
Florand's writing unfailingly takes my breath away. As I read The Chocolate Kiss, I would continually grab my (very indulging) husband's arm and sigh dramatically. He would smile and say "You love it so much, yeah?" I would sigh even harder and more dramatically, read a beautiful passage, and then I would say "See how much he loves her? How patient he is? How careful he is with her heart?" This cycle repeated itself throughout my reading of the book. Did I mention my husband is indulging?
Laura Florand has secured her place as my favorite author. I emphatically recommend The Chocolate Kiss specifically, and her entire work as a whole.
Series: Amour et Chocolat #1/La Vie en Roses #1
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Series: Amour et Chocolat #1/La Vie en Roses #1
Publisher: AOS PublishingPublication Date: 4/9/13
Format: Paperback
Pages: 245
Source: Purchase
Rating: 4 stars
Her father’s worst enemy...
Top chef Gabriel Delange never forgave his old nemesis Pierre Manon for all the other chef had cost him.
One stolen rose...
And he most certainly couldn’t stand the sight of his own most famous dessert, the legendary Rose, claimed as Pierre’s own on the cover of his new cookbook.
A substitute victim...
But even Gabriel could hardly go through with a lawsuit when he learned the older chef had just had a stroke. Especially not when Pierre had one very cute daughter willing to be Gabriel’s victim instead.
Jolie Manon...
As a child, Jo had seen her family torn apart by her top chef father’s obsession with his work. She had given years of her own adult life to trying to pull him out of depression, after he lost a star. Now a food writer, she might be fascinated with a chef’s work, but she knew how to guard her heart. She would never allow another chef into her life.
Unless he blackmailed her into it...
Welcome to the heat and sun of Provence, where jasmine and roses climb up old colored walls, where fountains play in ancient stone villages, and where even a beast can prove he is a prince at heart…
My Thoughts
Oh, Gabriel Delange... I'm not sure there is a man out there who can match your angst, energy, passion.
That is my initial reaction to The Chocolate Rose, a contemporary take on the Beauty and the Beast story. Our beauty is Jolie Manon, whose father stole credit for Gabriel's work ten years prior. In an effort to spare her father, Jolie agrees to write a cookbook with Gabriel, committing to spend half of her time with him. Gabriel Delange is a beast in Jolie's eyes. Not in looks, but in ego and manner, in his unbridled passion for his work, and for her. But Jolie, she protests too much. She likes the beast in Gabriel. She provokes it.
I know I'm being very melodramatic in my thoughts, but it's this book! Gabriel was such a larger-than-life character, even in comparison to Florand's other Amour et Chocolat men. The others are passionate men, but much more restrained than Gabriel. He's thrown his heart at Jolie's feet, though he tries so hard to control himself, and he doesn't want it back. He wants her love. Jolie, she was really slow on the uptake in regards to Gabriel's feelings for her. To her credit, she's been warned off of chefs her entire life. She believes Gabriel could possibly be toying with her for a while, and thinks "Why would he want me forever when he could have anyone?" As a reader, I had the luxury of Gabriel's thoughts, knowing he loves her heart and soul.
I read The Chocolate Rose immediately after finishing The Chocolate Kiss, which is my favorite in the series. Coming off that books give this one an impossible task. I would have loved more time with this story and more time for the love between Gabriel and Jolie to build.
But in the end, The Chocolate Rose is another great story from Laura Florand. Even if it's not my favorite of hers, it still surpasses most.
Favorite Quotes
"You're lucky you're so hot," she said bitterly.
"I know," he said despairingly, shoving his hands into his pockets as leaned a shoulder against the jasmine. "It doesn't bear thinking of, what my social life would be like if I was ugly on top of everything else. Now what have I said?"
"You are so-incredibly-arrogant."
"I know. He sounded exasperated. "But I don't see how I've been arrogant with you. It seems as if ignoring your signals indifferently would have been a lot more arrogant, but apparently I have no idea."
Her signals.
She ground her teeth over the urge to take two great fistfuls of his hair, yank his head down hard
, so that it hurt, and bite that sensual, arrogant mouth of his. And that would teach him for finding her signals so obvious.
And now--she had reached one of those slim hands of hers into him and closed it around his heart.
And she just held it there. How was he supposed to move around, continue to live calmly and strongly, while someone was squeezing his heart like that? He was afraid if he got up too fast from the cafe table or walked too quickly and outpaced her, it would get ripped right out of his body.
No sudden movements.
He had known he shouldn't make any sudden movements with her hand gripping his heart like that. And sure enough, she had ripped it right out of his body, and now she was standing there looking at it as if it was icky and bloody and she wasn't sure where to put it so that it didn't mess anything up.
He sank his head forward into his hands, the water pounding on the back of his head. His chest felt torn wide open, one gaping, terrifying hole, and no one was handing her heart back across the way to fill the spot.
"Be careful with my brother, Jolie."
Uh-oh. She wasn't sure she knew how to be careful of Gabriel.
"Don't...merde. Don't--make him fall even harder for you,if you're going to drop him when you get bored."
Bored? Of Gabriel?
[...]"He's not very boring," she said.
"I need to meet a cookbook writer," Raphael informed the heavens very firmly. "Let's say, when you get frustrated then."
Jolie burst out laughing. "I've been frustrated with him since before I even met him."
Raphael sighed. "This intervening in someone else's love affairs doesn't really work, does it? Just--don't do anything mean, all right?"
"You have the most beautiful heart I've ever seen," she said softly.
He took a sharp breath, and his hand lifted to cover that heart, as if it suddenly felt fragile. "Not a marshmallow?" he managed, but the attempt at dryness in his voice was a little rough.
"It's so big," she said. "It fills all of you. It fills everyone around you. And yet inside"--she touched the flecks of gold left on her plate.--"I think there's this precious center that, if I'm careful, if I show you can trust me with it, you'll give only to me."
Series: Amour et Chocolat #4
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Publisher: Kensington
Publication Date: 7/30/13
Format: Paperback
Pages: 298
Source: Purchase
Rating: 5 stars
La Vie en Chocolat
Dominique Richard's reputation says it all--wild past, wilder flavors, black leather and smoldering heat. Jaime Corey is hardly the first woman to be drawn to all that dark, delicious danger. Sitting in Dom's opulent chocolaterie in Paris day after day, she lets his decadent creations restore her weary body and spirit, understanding that the man himself is entirely beyond her grasp.
Until he touches her. . .
Chocolate, Dominique understands--from the biting tang of lime-caramel to the most complex infusions of jasmine, lemon-thyme, and cayenne. But this shy, freckled American who sits alone in his salon, quietly sampling his exquisite confections as if she can't get enough of them--enough of him--is something else. She has secrets too, he can tell. Of course if she really knew him, she would run.
Yet once you have spotted your heart's true craving, simply looking is no longer enough. . .
My Thoughts
** Spoilers if you haven't read The Chocolate Touch and Sun-Kissed **
Oh yeah....no one writes tortured, romantic heroes like Laura Florand. It's like, the passion of Heathcliff without the crazy and abuse. These men, all her men, are passionate about chocolate and the woman who steals their heart.
My impressions from Dom Richard have been through the eyes of his frenemies. Those impressions were that he was a brutish flirt, womanizer, and that he took arrogance to a new level. But I cheated. I read Sun-Kissed, and got a glimpse of a man in love, and who protected his love with a remarkable care. So, I knew Dom had it in him, but in this book I learned how far he'd come in his life, how hard he'd worked, how difficult it was for him to fall in love, and exactly how beautiful that love for Jamie Corey was.
I also went into The Chocolate Touch very curious about what Jamie had undergone off-page. I knew in Sun-Kissed that she'd been severely injured, but that she was okay. And that she had Dom. I have to say, Jamie has been the most endearing heroine of this series, for me. Her strength and capacity to love Dom was so beautiful.
Even though I knew where Dom and Jamie end up (Sun-Kissed is a must-read!), their story was all I'd hoped for.
I loved The Chocolate Touch. I think I'm still a bit partial to The Chocolate Temptation, and The Chocolate Kiss is my favorite, but this one stands right up there.
Favorite Quotes
Him,with his all-out, aggressive, take-it-or-leave-it approach to women, he was so reined in, so subtle, so gentle. Slow, slow, slow, he told himself. Slow. She's a cream or a pastry or a chocolate to be tempered just right. Think about her that way. Sloooow.
Let her absorb you. Just the way she sat in the salle day after day and absorbed everything you made ,as if it was the only thing in life she wanted to do.
She pushed the free hand toward the one he held,apparently trying to gesture closeness."Warm,"she said again.And then she did something that undid him to the last faint whisper of his soul:she gave his hand a squeeze with fingertips that could just barely reach around his,apparently using him to indicate what she wanted to say. He meant warmth.He meant this word she couldn't find.
He turned and kissed her
"Whatever it is you're trying not to do. You can do it to me."
He had survived everything else after all.
She shook her head, her mouth a bitter twist as she forced her gaze back to her chocolate. "You don't know what you're asking."
"Then why don't you tell me?"
Blue eyes locked with his in one moment of naked honesty. "If I could, I would crawl into you and never come out.
"Why don't you ever stay the night with me? Only one time, since we've started dating, have you stayed until I woke up. It's confusing, the way you're always gone in the morning."
"I've always stayed the whole night," he said, startled. "I leave for work." Still pressed back against his desk, he stared at her. "You didn't know that?"
She shook her head.
"So when you wake up and I'm not there, you've been thinking--what?"
"That it's understandable you would need space. That I need to let you breathe."
There was a silence. "No," was all he said, the word packed tight with meaning. "No. I--breathe better when you're right here."
Series: Amour et Chocolat #5
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Publisher: Kensington
Publication Date: 11/26/13
Format: Paperback
Pages: 368
Source: Purchase
Rating: 4 stars
No one hates Paris--except Summer Corey. The moody winters. The artists and their ennui. The inescapable shadow of the Tour Eiffel. But things go from bad to worse when Summer stumbles into brooding, gorgeous chef pâtissier Luc Leroi and indecently propositions the hero of French cuisine...
Luc has scrambled up from a childhood panhandling in the Paris Métro to become the king of his city, and he has no patience for this spoiled princess, even if she does now own his restaurant. Who cares if she smiles with all the warmth of July? She doesn't eat dessert!
There is only one way to tempt her. A perfect, impossibly sweet seduction...
My Thoughts
Oh my.
The Chocolate Heart was so intense! I've mentioned that I read the series out of order, beginning with the first book, then skipping to
The Chocolate Temptation (book six), then I read
Sun-Kissed (book seven) then went back and read two through five. With all my hopping around, I've noticed that the series definitely gets more intense as you go from books two through five.
The Chocolate Temptation was a bit less intense for me, but I think that was due to Patrick Chevalier's deceptively easy-going manner. I should also note that much of this story runs concurrent to
The Chocolate Temptation, and it was very cool to see some of the same events happening through Luc Leroi's darker perception.
Anyway, back to
The Chocolate Heart! I really liked it. Like The Chocolate Touch, it was a harder read. The writing is still beyond gorgeous and I just love revisiting Laura Florand's Paris and her intense, emotionally draining men. What made it difficult was what also made it very good: Summer and Luc were profoundly damaged by their childhoods, slow to believe that they each held value to the other, and very, very slow to open up. Yes, it was frustrating to have those blocks between Luc and Summer, but I also felt it was true to their character and good of Florand to not make it "easy" for the sake of the reader.
I honestly don't know what I can say at this point without becoming even more redundant. The entire series is a gorgeous experience. It's full of passion and angst and sexy and romance. Funny moments, sad moments, heartbreaking moments and moments so beautiful, so beautifully
expressed that I'm brought to tears. It's been a wonderful experience. If you're looking for intense and beautiful,
Amour et Chocolate is definitely the series to read.
Favorite Quotes
Her eyes flickered to his with a flash of pure hunger.
Yes! Triumph licked him, thorough hot licks of her mouth on his skin. Oh, yes, I can make you hunger for me.
And then her smile turned her whole beautiful, luminous, delicate face into something so impossibly wonderful that his hands- his hands- almost shook with the need to grab it to him, to crush it to him, and never let it get away.
"You're so beautiful." Water streamed off him, that lean body of his all wild, taut muscle, his face burned clean of anything but passion.
He kept saying that as if she really was. She slipped her hands up those slick shoulders. "Let go,"she whispered. "Lose control."
His body shook in hard, long spasms that drove him deeper into her. "Hold me while I do," he whispered. "Hold me together. Don't let me go."
So she wrapped her arms around him as hard as she could and held on.
And he let all the wildness out."
"I could kiss you until there's nothing left of you," he whispered.
Where the words should have woken that visceral fear of being reduced to nothing in someone else's life, instead an image grew of herself: golden, strong, glowing in his arms like a precious star. "No, you can't."
His thumb traced over her lips. "Don't underestimate how long I can kiss you."
A soft smile, almost as contained as one of his, full of an astonishing amount of confidence. "Don't underestimate how long I can last.""
Luc gave that tiny,contained grin of his and admitted: "I wouldn't mind having a fountain built to me. And"--his voice got all funny again--"I have a really powerful vision of you with four black-haired kids in lavender fields." He took a deep breath and watched her.
She got all funny. As if her whole being had disappeared into a burst of butterflies, fluttering upward, outward. It felt dizzying and tickling and terrifying and lovely.
Amour et Chocolat Series
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My Reviews
About Laura Florand
L
aura Florand is the international bestselling author of the Amour et Chocolat series (The Chocolate Thief, The Chocolate Kiss, etc.), where sexy French chocolatiers woo the women they love with what they love best--romance you can taste.
Her books have been translated into seven languages, received the RT Seal of Excellence and starred reviews from Publishers Weekly, and been recommended by USA Today, NPR, and The Wall Street Journal, among others.
She was born in Georgia, but the travel bug bit her early. After a Fulbright year in Tahiti, a semester in Spain, and backpacking everywhere from New Zealand to Greece, she ended up living in Paris, where she met and married her own handsome Frenchman, a story told in her first book Blame It on Paris. Now a lecturer at Duke University, she is very dedicated to her research into French chocolate. For some behind the scenes glimpses of that research, please visit her at
www.lauraflorand.com.