Saturday, February 27, 2010

HT News

The Historical Novel Society has announced the location of the next North American conference. It will be held on June 17-19 in 2011 in San Diego. I would love to be going!

To celebrate the release of her latest book, The Dead Travel Fast, Deanna Raybourn has a supply of specially made bookmarks available to US residents. Details on how to claim your bookmark can be found here.

Speaking of bookmarks, Marie from the Burton Review is giving away a bookmark as well as a copy of The Secret of the Glass by Donna Russo Morin.

Upcoming Releases - March 2010

This is a compilation of titles we have found in several places on the web, feel free to add your suggestions if we missed them.


March 1
The Scarlet Lion - Elizabeth Chadwick (US release)
A Blunt Instrument - Georgette Heyer (Rerelease)
Young Bess - Margaret Irwin. (US reissue)
Flight of the Falcon - Daphne du Maurier (Rerelease)
The Dead Travel Fast - Deanna Raybourn

March 2
The Last illusion - Rhys Bowen
On the Night of the Seventh Moon - Victoria Holt (rerelease)
Walking to Gatlinburg - Howard Frank Mosher
A Favorite of The Queen - Jean Plaidy

March 4
Savage Lands - Clare Clark
The Songwriter - Beatrice Colin
Harvest Nights - Pamela Evans
Corrag - Susan Fletcher
A Game of Sorrows - Shona McLean
Heresy - SJ Parris

March 8
The Girl at the Farmhouse Gate - Julia Stoneham

March 15
The Carpenter's Children - Maggie Bennett
The Winter Thief - Jenny White

March 16
The Last Rendezvous - Anne Plantagenet and Willard Wood
The Queen's Lover - Vanora Bennett
The Alchemy of Murder - Carol McCleary

March 23
A Darker God - Barbara Cleverly
The Creation of Eve - Linda Cullen
The Sheen on the Silk - Anne Perry
Dearest Cousin Jane - Jill Pitkeathley

March 25
Strange Images of Death - Barbara Cleverly
Death of a Pilgrim - David Dickinson
The Frozen Heart - Almudena Grandes
A Battle Won - Sean Thomas Russell

March 30
31 Bond Street - Ellen Horan
The Botticelli Secret - Marina Fiorato

Thursday, February 25, 2010

HT News

As part of the Historical Fiction Bloggers Round Table event for Donna Russo Morin's The Secret of the Glass, you can win a gorgeous Venetian Glass Pendant.

Over at Passages to the Past has given us a fab round up of where some of her favourite authors (who are some of my favourites as well) are at in terms of new releases and books they are working on.

More interesting news, this time at Reading the Past where Sarah has some details of recent publishing deals.

New book giveaways:

Galileo's Daughter by Dava Sobel (at Historical-Fiction.com)
Ciao Bella by Gina Buonagaro and Janice Kirk (5 copies at She Read A Book)
Alcestis by Katharine Beutner (at Wonders and Marvels)

O, Juliet by Robin Maxwell

Last year I had the pleasure to read Robin Maxwell's Signora daVinci. So, when she contacted me to see if I wanted an advance reader copy of her new novel, O'Juliet I jumped at the chance.

We all know the story of Romeo and Juliet so I will not repeat the story. Maxwell sticks to the major events that happen in William Shakespeare's story but does a nice job in retelling it with some new twists and characters. Maxwell's version it is set in 15th century Florence during the Medici era.

Juliet's best friend Lucrezia was engaged to Piero de Medici and big party was thrown by the patriarch of the Medici family, Cosimo de Medici and his wife. Juliet was there and met Romeo, who actually came to the party to enlist the help of Cosimo, to help break the feud between the Monticeccos' and Capellettis'. Right away the couple find they have a strong common interest, the writings of Dante.

The two found all kinds of different ways to see each other and their love for each other grew very fast. A big problem, even bigger than the feud was that Juliet was promised to her father's business partner, Jacopo Strozzi. She loathed him but as with most women back then, she had to abide by her father's wishes.
Romeo figured out a plan so that Juliet would be able to marry and live with him. However there are many twists and turns that get in their way.

I loved the way Robin Maxwell used the Medici as a starting point and background to the story. It really added a new and exciting dimension to the story. I didn't care for her portrayal of Jacopo Strozzi. She used the "done to death" plot of him being ugly and sour breathed. She mentioned this just about every place he appeared in the novel. Yes, I got the point, he was evil. That said, another part I really adored was the addition of Dante's writing in the story and how she used them.

Over all, I really did enjoy this retelling of Romeo and Juliet. I recommend it for fans of romance, historical fiction, and the Medici.

3.5/5

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Donna Russo Morin on Why I Love Venice

Infatuation with magical, mythical lands has been a part of the human landscape for centuries. Atlantis, Shambhala, the Garden of Eden—all have been the topic of great research and discussion. Yet there are such real, magical places to be found—tangible, breathtaking, awe-inspiring places. And perhaps none is more mystical and compelling than Venice, Italy.

No more than shoals formed by silt then deposited in the Adriatic lagoon by the mighty Po, Adige and Brinta rivers, the Venetian islands began as a primitive trading post up to the 5th century A.D. The first wave of Barbarians, the Goths under Alaric, crashed down upon the inhabitants of the coastal mainland in 402. Running in fear, the people of Padua, Altino, Concordia, and Aquila took to the sea and took refuge on the little islets of sand and coach grass.

It would not be the last such assault and each one found more and more refugees crossing the lagoon in search of sanctuary. Yet even when the threats of plunder and pillage had passed, no one returned to their mainland homes. Instead, lives of privilege and cultivation were abandoned with glee for the beauty of the islands.

Like those first settlers, I had no intention of ‘spending time’ in Venice, of making it the setting of my second book. But after a two minute news story on the glass makers of Murano and a smattering of research, I was as possessed and obsessed with the unique land as those original colonists. I became enraptured, not only with the beauty of the water-ribboned land, but smitten as well with the innovative inhabitants who learned to build their magnificent stone mansions upon pylons driven into the soft earth of their home and inspired by their rich history, a history replete with determination and fortitude. When I found the likes of Doge Donato, Father Paolo Sarpi and the esteemed Galileo in the pages of Venetian history books, my story unfolded with the ease of an incoming tide.

THE SECRET OF THE GLASS takes place at the inception of the 17th century, when the Murano glassmakers are celebrated, revered, and imprisoned by the Venetian government. Sophia Fiolario, the daughter of a glass making maestro, has no desire for marriage, finding her serenity in the love of her family and the beauty of the glass. She learns of its secrets at her father’s side, where a woman has no right to be. But the life Sophia loves is threatened and she is thrust into the opulent world of the Venice court, becoming embroiled in the scheming machinations of the courtiers’ lives. The beauty of Venice, the magnificence of the Doge’s Palace, can only be rivaled by the intrigue and danger that festers behind their splendid facades. As she searches for an escape, she finds the arms of another, a man whose own desperate situation is yet another obstacle in their path.

Amidst political and religious intrigue, the scientific furor ignited by Galileo, and even murder, Sophia must do anything to protect herself, her family…and the secret of the glass.

******************

To read an excerpt, visit the author’s website at www.donnarussomorin.com.

Donna Russo Morin is currently working on her third historical novel, tentatively titled TO SERVE A KING, scheduled for an April 2010 release, in which a woman, raised from childhood to be a spy for Henry VIII at the court of Francois I, faces circumstances that spin her life out of control, forcing her to make potentially deadly decisions about her true and ultimate loyalties.

Monday, February 22, 2010

HT News

The ladies at the Historical Fiction Bloggers Round Table have kicked off their latest event featuring Donna Morin's The Secret of the Glass. Look forward to lots of giveaways and fun posts.

At 5 Minutes for Books there is a giveaway of Wench by Dolen Perkins-Valdez. It closes on February 24 so be quick!

You can win a set of Frances Hunter books To the Ends of the Earth: The Last Journey and The Fairest Portion of the Globe

Teddy Rose is giving away audiobook copies of Black Hill by Dan Simmons, as is Dar from Peeking Through the Pages.

You can win a signed copy of The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom over at The Book Lady's Blog as you can win this book at Passages to the Past as well.

Speaking of Passages to the Past, Amy is giving away 3 copies of The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson and a signed copy of The Killing Way by Tony Hays.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

HT News

Heather from The Maiden's Court has had a fabulous idea for a new series of posts called Caught on Tape. The idea is that "each of these posts will feature a historical person (usually royalty, but not always) and some of the films or tv appearances they make." The first historical figure featured is Katherine Howard.

Amy from Passage to the Past is giving away a copy of The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom.

Over at A Reader's Respite you can win a copy of Virgin and the Crab by Robert Parry, which she recommends to anyone who loved Wolf Hall.

Here's a chance to win two giveaways! Over at Jenny Loves to Read you can read an interview with Ciji Ware and there is a giveway of Island of the Swan. You can also win all three books in Marsha Altmann's Pride and Prejudice inspired trilogy.

Do you like historical fiction with an Irish setting? Over at CelticLady's Reviews you can win one of three copies of The Yellow House by Patricia Falvey.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Cover Story: Roses be Leila Meacham

At the moment I am reading Roses by Leila Meacham, and really enjoying it! This is a book that I hadn't even heard of until a couple of months ago, until I saw a mention in USA Today, and then suddenly, it was everywhere.

Here's the blurb:

Spanning the 20th century, the story of Roses takes place in a small East Texas town against the backdrop of the powerful timber and cotton industries, industries controlled by the scions of the town's founding families. Cotton tycoon Mary Toliver and timber magnate Percy Warwick should have married but unwisely did not, and now must deal with the deceit, secrets, and tragedies of their choice and the loss of what might have been—not just for themselves but for their children, and children's children. With expert, unabashed, big-canvas storytelling, Roses covers a hundred years, three generations of Texans and the explosive combination of passion for work and longing for love. 

When I was in the shops the other day, I saw the Australian (and perhaps elsewhere, not sure) cover and I was a little surprised by how different it is to the US cover:

 

Normally I would have said that the cover on the right would have been more suggestive of the content of the book, and that the cover on the left would have been more generic, but for some reason this time I find myself liking the US cover better. What about you? Which cover would you rather be seen reading?

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Sylvester by Georgette Heyer

Sylvester, Duke of Salford, seeks with unconscious arrogance a bride worthy of the honour of becoming his Duchess. He journeys to Wiltshire to inspect the Hon Phoebe Marlow, unaware that he has met her before and instantly forgotten the tongue-tied girl without beauty or elegance to recommend her.

Another of Heyer's regency novels with engaging characters and witty dialogue not to mention the detailed recreation of England's society during the Regency period.

Sylvester, the duke of Salford is very much aware of his rank and consequence. When he decides to get married he makes a list of suitable young ladies and goes to his mother for advice on which one to choose. His godmother makes him add one more name to the list, her granddaughter Phoebe Marlow.

Sylvester decides to visit Phoebe's family to see if they might suit but Phoebe is less than thrilled with the prospect of becoming his wife. She briefly met him in town during her first season and having thought him arrogant made him the main character of the novel she was writing. Not realising that there is a smart young woman behind the shy and repressed young lady he meets there Sylvester starts planning how to leave without being rude but the pressure Phoebe's parents put on her finally lead her to run away to London. But on the road her carriage suffers and accident and it's Sylvester which will come to rescue forcing them to spend some days together and actually get to know each other.

Unfortunately Phoebe's book where Sylvester features as the wicked uncle (which the second title of this novel) is about to be published and the ton not only recognises him in the character but starts believing that what is written might be a bit true. Phoebe have a very angry, and public, quarrel over it with her deserting him on the ballroom floor and their relationship will go through quite a few problems before it can be saved.

There is a really interesting and colourful set of secondary characters that add to the appeal of the story. The scenes where Phoebe and her friend Tom end up being kidnapped by Lady Henry and her second husband, who are eloping to France, not to mention the scenes with little Edmund are completely hilarious. The main characters start as a very unlikely couple and it makes for a really funny journey to watch them spar. I liked Sylvester more than Phoebe because he never felt that arrogant to me and he accepts most of her criticism quite charmingly. We don't see what led Phoebe to dislike him so and in fact she gladly accepts that she didn't know him all that well. In the end one can't help but cheer for Sylvester when he finally quite clumsily blurts out his feelings for Phoebe... It was a hard road to happiness for these two but a lovely one for me.

Grade: 4.5/5

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

HT News

One of the things that we have been missing in historical fiction is a major award, but that shortcoming has now been addressed! The Walter Scott Prize is "open to historical novels first published in the United Kingdom in 2009." The shortlist will be announced in March, and the winner announced at the 2010 Borders Book Festival in June! I can't wait to see which books make the inaugural shortlist.

Christine Trent has guest posted over at Enchanted by Josephine, and there is a personalised copy of The Queen's Dollmaker up for grabs!

Jen from Literate Housewife went to an author event featuring Kathleen Grissom, author of The Kitchen House. Head over to Literate Housewife where there are videos for you to view, and a couple of books that are going to be given away.

Dar from Peeking Through the Pages is hosting a giveaway of Philippa Gregory's The White Queen.

Monday, February 15, 2010

HT News

Courtesy of Sarah from Reading the Past: In the Seattle Times, the book editor, Mary Ann Gwinn has compiled a list of reader favourites of historical fiction with a US setting. Of the ones listed I have only read a couple, and there another couple that I really want to read! How many have you read?

Marie from The Burton Review went to an author signing event with Leila Meacham, author of The Roses. She has shared her experience, and she is giving away copies of the book as well!

Michele from A Reader's Respite is giving away her 'ever so slightly used' copy of The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom.

Over at Booklust, Aarti is giving away copies of Dan Simmon's book, Black Hills.

Wonder and Marvels are giving you the chance to win a copy of O, Juliet by Robin Maxwell.

Challenge: The Alphabet in Historical Fiction

It's time for a new letter in The Alphabet in Historical Fiction but first let's take a look at our entries for the letter E :


1. Cat (Tell me a Story) - Year of Wonder by Geraldine Brooks

2. Carrie C.(Opalescent Essence ) - The Farming of Bones by Edwige Dandicat 

3. Ana T. (Aneca's World) - The Scarlet Lion by Elizabeth Chadwick

4. Leya (Wandeca Reads) - Eve: A Novel of The First Woman by Elissa Elliott

5.  Rowenna (Hyaline Prosaic ) - Hotel on The Corner of Bitter Street by Jamie Ford

6. Lucy (Enchanted by Josephine) - Trianon by Elena Maria Vidal

7. Whitney (Historically Speaking) - Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte

8. Stephanie (The Stark Raving Bibliophile) - The Known World by Edward P. Jones

9. Teddy Rose (So many Precious Books...) - Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

10. Miss Moppet (The Misadventures of Moppet) - Barbara Erskine

11. Marg (Reading Adventures) - Leonardo's Swanns by Karen Essex

12. Sarah (Reading The Past) - Eleanor Fairburn

13.  Heather (Epoch Tales) - The Englishman's Boy


 And now it's time to remember the rules and introduce the new letter!

Each fortnight you have to write a blog post about an historical fiction book of your choice (it might even be something you already read before), but it MUST be related to the letter of the fortnight.

You have several possibilities:
- the first letter of the title
- the first letter of the author's first name or surname
- the first letter of a character's first name or surname
- the first letter of a place where an historical event took place

You just have to choose one of them and participate.


Please check our blog each 1st and 15th of the month to find out our new letter, and then link your post (not your blog) back to our page through Mr Linky (see below). Then come and check to see who else has posted and visit their blog to find out all the details of the book they were reading.

You have until February 28th to complete your mission, the next letter will be published on March 1st and it is the letter F:




Saturday, February 13, 2010

Giveaway winners!

 

Congratulations to 


who has won a copy of Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford. If Katy could please email us with her details, we will forward them on.

Enjoy!

Friday, February 12, 2010

HT News

It's the Tudor Book Blog's first blogiversary, and to celebrate, there are two giveaways. The first is a review based contest and the second is the chance to write your own short story. Head over to the Tudor Book Blog for all the details.

Lizzy from Historically Obsessed is giving away a copy of The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom.

Lucy from Enchanted by Josephine is giving away Marsha Altman's Austen spin-off trilogy. Yes, you can win all three books, The Darcys and The Bingley's, The Plight of the Darcy Brothers and Darcy's Great Escape. Marsha Altman has also guest posted for Lucy.

Arleigh from Historical-Fiction.com is giving away a copy of The Sultan's Harem by Colin Falconer.

Over at Rebecca's Book Blog you can win a signed copy of Susanne Dunlap's upcoming release, Anastasia's Secret.

Amy from Passages to the Past has a couple of new giveaways. One is for a signed copy of The Boleyn Wife by Brandy Purdy, and the other is for a copy of Leonardo's Swans by Karen Essex.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

The Scarlet Lion by Elizabeth Chadwick

Following early beginnings as a knight in the English royal household and a champion of the tourneys, William Marshal's prowess and loyalty have been rewarded by the hand in marriage of Isabelle de Clare, heiress to great estates in England, Normandy and Ireland. Now a powerful magnate, William has weathered the difficult years of King Richard's absence on crusade and is currently serving him on campaign in Normandy while Isabelle governs their estates. All the stability William and Isabelle have enjoyed with their young and growing family comes crashing down as Richard dies and his brother John becomes King. Rebellion is stirring throughout the Angevin domains and although John has created William Earl of Pembroke, the friction between the two men leads William and Isabelle to distance themselves in Ireland. The situation escalates, with John holding their sons as hostages and seizing their English lands. The conflict between remaining loyal and rebelling over injustices committed, threatens to tear apart William and Isabelle's marriage and their family...

Last year I read the Greatest Knight, I liked it very much but somehow I was not compelled to pick up its sequel right away. Now I was looking through Elizabeth Chadwick's books trying to decide what to read and The Scarlet Lion seemed like the perfect choice.

If The Greatest Knight focused solely on William Marshall, The Scarlet Lion devotes great attention to his wife and his children. I loved it how the characters are brought to life, their problems and worries, the political decisions of trying to survive during the reign of King John.

William Marshall was one of the most powerful men in medieval England and, through, his wife Isabelle; he also had considerable power in Ireland. With this story the author shows us how difficult it was to achieve and maintain that power, especially as Marshall’s achievements truly were outstanding in any age. If William comes alive has the consummate courtier, who knows that sometimes it is better to wait and ignore some of the indignities and humiliations to come out the victor; it is Isabelle Marshall that reveals herself has the true soul of the family, caring for her children and her husband while maintaining a keen eye on the political events.

Together they have to face seeing their oldest sons being made hostage by King John, war in their Irish lands and the constant political games of distrust and betrayal of a king who trusted no one and liked to break those who surrounded him.

The book covers the years from 1197 to William's death in 1219. In a period as politically complicated as this one was Elizabeth Chadwick truly has the gift of making it all seem very simple. My one complaint is that I was expecting to hear more about the Magna Carta but it is a small one considering what the author has achieved in explaining the period.

Now I can't wait for William and Isabelle's daughter Mahelt's story. And while I wait for it I may just have to start reading about Ida and Roger Bigod. It seems I can’t get enough of these characters and I would happily continue reading about the Marshall family and their allies in future books. But somehow I don’t think we will be seeing them in many more books as none of the Marshall sons had children and the properties and wealth ended up being divided between the daughter’s husbands.

Grade: 5/5

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

The Postmistress by Sarah Blake

It is 1940. France has fallen. Bombs are dropping on London. And President Roosevelt is promising he won't send our boys to fight in "foreign wars."

But American radio gal Frankie Bard, the first woman to report from the Blitz in London, wants nothing more than to bring the war home. Frankie's radio dispatches crackle across the Atlantic ocean, imploring listeners to pay attention--as the Nazis bomb London nightly, and Jewish refugees stream across Europe. Frankie is convinced that if she can just get the right story, it will wake Americans to action and they will join the fight. Meanwhile, in Franklin, Massachusetts, a small town on Cape Cod, Iris James hears Frankie's broadcasts and knows that it is only a matter of time before the war arrives on Franklin's shores. In charge of the town's mail, Iris believes that her job is to deliver and keep people's secrets, passing along the news that letters carry. And one secret she keeps are her feelings for Harry Vale, the town mechanic, who inspects the ocean daily, searching in vain for German U-boats he is certain will come. Two single people in midlife, Iris and Harry long ago gave up hope of ever being in love, yet they find themselves unexpectedly drawn toward each other.
Listening to Frankie as well are Will and Emma Fitch, the town's doctor and his new wife, both trying to escape a fragile childhood and forge a brighter future. When Will follow's Frankie's siren call into the war, Emma's worst fears are realized. Promising to return in six months, Will goes to London to offer his help, and the lives of the three women entwine.



I finished this book last week and I've been struggling with the exact words to write this review and do it justice. It is a book that I really enjoyed, the kind that makes you think about human nature, about past events but also of its echoes in today's world. It was also a book that made me sob like a baby in some scenes and that I closed with a satisfied sigh.

This is a story set during WWII. In the US in Franklin, a small town in Massachusetts, Iris James is the postmistress. She takes her job very seriously, she knows many of the town's people secrets and she sees herself as a keeper of those secrets. Every written news posted goes through her and she observes everyone else in town and reflects about their behaviour. She feels a special connection with Harry Vale, the town's mechanic who is convinced a German U-Boat will eventually arrive at their shores and keeps watching the ocean.

Frankie Baird is an American living in London during the Blitz. She is a journalist and every day her voice on the radio reaches Franklin and let's people know of the war happening in Europe and of the journey the Jews are being forced to make to reach safety. Frankie feels she is not doing enough to spread the awareness of what is really going on and that there is nothing more important than telling the truth to the world about what is really going on.

Emma Trask is a young newlywed. She just married Franklin's doctor and they share a happy existence till he loses one of his patients in childbirth and feels he must go to London and help in the hospitals as a sort of atonement. Emma is left pregnant and her life revolves around her trips to the post office to send the letters to her husband and receive his.

Frankie meets Emma's husband in London. She sees him die in a car accident and eventually finds herself the bearer of a letter from him to Emma that she ends up never delivering. Similarly Iris receives the letter that informs Emma of the accident and also decides to keep it. Frankie finally gets her wish to go to the continent and travel by train from Berlin to the border with Spain. During her journey she will meet a lot of people, Jews, on the run from what is happening in Germany and the occupied countries and trying to reach Lisbon so they can sail for America. Better than telling their story she gives them voice by recording who they are, where they are from and where they hope to go to... from them she learns the horrors of leaving people behind, of being saved by luck or coincidence and that everything can be lost in a matter of seconds and the lack of valid papers. Frankie also learns that sometimes the story gets to you and you can't just "get out" as her boss used to tell her to.

Eventually the three women meet in Franklin where besides Iris and Emma no one seems really to be aware of what is going on or actually care much about it.

I was fascinated but Frankie's broadcasts. I can easily imagine not only these characters but real people during WWII sitting at home next to their radios and waiting to hear news of the countries at war. How important it was for the truth to be told and how heavy a burden that must have been for those who chose to place themselves in danger to tell it. Not because they are in danger but because they are changed forever by what they have experienced. I thought the book raised very interesting questions, some of which are personal and may have different answers for each of us. Other questions may not have satisfying answers... but it is important that we mention them. It was a story that intrigued me and moved me... I was left wanting to know what became of those three women after all that happened to them... and I just love books that make me think and leave me wanting more…

Grade: 4.5/5

I would like to thank Lydia Hirt at G.P. Putnam's Sons / Riverhead for sending it to me. The hardcover is released today in the US.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

D - Lord Faureston (vol. 1) by Bruno Maïorana, Alain Ayroles and Thierry Léprevost


Richard Drake is an adventurer, dark, bold, even if a bit of a brute. During an high society ball, he meets the charming but strong-willed Catherine Lecombe. The young woman is not at all attracted by the arrogant man who is always seeking her attentions. In the other hand, the mysterious Lord Faureston seems to have quite a powerful effect on her... Driven by jealousy, Drake is determined to know more about the man and how he claimed fortune and title after some tragic deaths. Especially when he senses that Catherine might be in danger...

This is the first volume of a story for all paranormal fans who always enjoy a new vampire tale.
Catherine Lecombe is the typical romantic young woman who is looking for the perfect passionate man. Her distaste for Richard Drake is visible for the instant they meet. She cannot stand the man or even hear about his incredible stories set in exotic lands. For her, he is just another rich man who explores the weaker and who never misses an occasion to brag.

Of course, we also feel there's more about her excessive feelings than scorn. And Drake seems to have the same opinion since he uses all his charm to convince her that he is much more interesting than she seems to think. But then, the blond and elegant Lord Faureston enters the game for Miss Lecombe attentions.


There's no secret about Faureston's nature. Quite quickly we know what he is, but his past or even his true relationship with another attractive woman remains more or less clouded. He is undoubtedly an intriguing character, even if he is cruel and ruthless.

I really enjoyed the drawings and the color palette used in this volume. They have many interesting details and the authors manage to create a very misty and sometimes creepy scenes, especially those with Lord Faureston. Nonetheless, I have some difficulties with the leading man, Robert Drake (character inspired by the 19th century explorer Richard Francis Burton). He immediately made me think of Gengis Khan with those eyebrows and heavy mustache. A big no-no for me.

D - Lord Faureston was a nice read but not as exciting as I wished it would be.

Grade: 3.5/5


Thursday, February 4, 2010

HT News

I am very, very behind on my blog reading, so expect this issue of HT News to be huge in terms of giveaways! Here goes.

Robin Maxwell has written a very interesting piece for The Huffington Post on how the online world has changed promotion for authors over the last few years.

Anna Elliott has unveiled the trailer to her upcoming release, Dark Moon of Avalon. Head on over to Youtube to take a look.

Deanna Raybourn has been interviewed over at All About Romance about her upcoming novel The Dead Travel Fast. This book is not part of the successful Lady Julia Gray series, and it is one that I am very much looking forward to! There is also a chance to win a copy of the book.


One of our favourite historical fiction bloggers, Meghan from Medieval Bookworm, is going to be appearing on That's How I Blog a bit later in the year, and she is going to be talking about The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England by Ian Mortimer. To help other's read the book before the radio appearance, Meghan is giving away three copies of the book to anyone with a US address.

Serena from Savvy Verse and Wit is giving away a copy of Jamie Ford's Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet. Be quick. This giveaway ends on February 5. We also are giving away a copy of this book.

You can win a copy of Robin Maxwell's O, Juliet over at All Things Royal, and also at The Burton Review where you need to share your favourite literary lovers. Other chances to win are available at Enchanted by Josephine and Historically Obsessed (these two close on 5 February so be quick), and at Hist-Fic Chick, The Maiden's Court, Passages to the Past and Historical-Fiction.com. These giveaways are all part of the Historical Fiction Round Table blogging event. As part of that same event,Arleigh (from Historical-Fiction.com) also has some Romeo and Juliet inspired giveaways that aren't books! Check out the details here, here and here!

Julianne from Writing the Renaissance is also giving away a copy of O, Juliet.


Marie from The Burton Review has interviewed Ciji Ware about her recently re-released book, Island of the Swans. You can also win a copy of the books, so please be sure to check it out. Amy from Passages to the Past is also giving away a copy of the same book.

Amy is also giving away two copies of Katherine McMahon's Rose of Sebastopol and five copies of Drood by Dan Simmons.

Over at Scandalous Women you can win a copy of Wench by Dolen Perkins-Valdez.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Devil's Cub by Georgette Heyer


When lovely, saucy Mary Challoner had practiced her hold deception upon the hot-blooded, fiery-tempered young Marquis of Vidal substituting herself for the young wench he had thought to carry off to France–she had little notion he would grimly hold her to her part of the bargain. Now he had left her, and she was alone, a stranger in a strange land, prey to the intrigues of glittering, heartless, 18th century Paris.

Only one person could rescue her–the Marquis himself. But how could she ever trust this man? How could she even hope to overcome the contempt in which he held her? And how could even the sudden flowering of her love ever bridge the terrible

Quite honestly, I don’t think I can do this book justice. Clever humor pours all through the pages of this wonderful story. I spent last Sunday afternoon with a beatific smile plastered on my face laughing uncontrollably. My cat, who was sleeping right next to me, was awaken several times and made me well aware with some glaring looks that I was disturbing his comfortable nap.

The characters are a true delight, attaching and far from perfect, which made them even more attractive to my eyes. But it’s the dialogues that caught me completely unaware with their delicious wittiness. There are so many memorable moments that is hard to pick up a favorite.

Vidal is a true rake, not the kind that makes all the show and, at the end, is another misunderstood man who is in great need of talking about his feelings. But he is always honest with his intentions and clearly shows marriage is not in his immediate plans. The pretty and frivolous Miss Challowner caught his eye and she is convinced he will make her his marchioness.

After another scandal, Vidal needs to leave the country and intends to take his current love interest with him. But this is without counting with the young woman’s elder sister, Mary, who always knew the Marquis true intentions. Determined to ruin his plans, she decides to go in her sister’s place

I enjoyed Mary immensely! There’s sizzling chemistry between her and Vidal right from the beginning, but they both try to ignore it the best they can without many success. The shooting scene is hilarious and one of my many favorites in this book.

The constant interventions of Vidal’s family contributes to many funny moments, especially when his paternal aunt is involved (her complains about Vidal’s behavior and comparisons to her son are higly amusing) or even his mother, Léonie, the heroine of These Old Shades, who has always a peculiar talent to comfort her son.

I cannot recommend this book highly enough! Devil’s Cub is now in my comfort reads shelf forever.

Grade: 5/5

Monday, February 1, 2010

Blog Tour: Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford **includes a giveaway**

In the opening pages of Jamie Ford’s stunning debut novel, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, Henry Lee comes upon a crowd gathered outside the Panama Hotel, once the gateway to Seattle’s Japantown. It has been boarded up for decades, but now the new owner has made an incredible discovery: the belongings of Japanese families, left when they were rounded up and sent to internment camps during World War II. As Henry looks on, the owner opens a Japanese parasol.

This simple act takes old Henry Lee back to the 1940s, at the height of the war, when young Henry’s world is a jumble of confusion and excitement, and to his father, who is obsessed with the war in China and having Henry grow up American. While “scholarshipping” at the exclusive Rainier Elementary, where the white kids ignore him, Henry meets Keiko Okabe, a young Japanese American student. Amid the chaos of blackouts, curfews, and FBI raids, Henry and Keiko forge a bond of friendship–and innocent love–that transcends the long-standing prejudices of their Old World ancestors. And after Keiko and her family are swept up in the evacuations to the internment camps, she and Henry are left only with the hope that the war will end, and that their promise to each other will be kept.

Forty years later, Henry Lee is certain that the parasol belonged to Keiko. In the hotel’s dark dusty basement he begins looking for signs of the Okabe family’s belongings and for a long-lost object whose value he cannot begin to measure. Now a widower, Henry is still trying to find his voice–words that might explain the actions of his nationalistic father; words that might bridge the gap between him and his modern, Chinese American son; words that might help him confront the choices he made many years ago.

Set during one of the most conflicted and volatile times in American history, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet is an extraordinary story of commitment and enduring hope. In Henry and Keiko, Jamie Ford has created an unforgettable duo whose story teaches us of the power of forgiveness and the human heart.

I am not sure why it is, but I really love to read books that are set against a background of war. Some of the most memorable books I have read have been set against either WWI or WWII, and so when I see a new book getting good reviews that have either of these settings, I am very likely to add it to my TBR list. So it was with Jamie Ford's Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, firstly because of its setting and secondly the title and the cover which are both pretty eye catching.

I do also enjoy books where there is dual storyline. In this case, the central character is Henry Lee. When we first meet Henry, he is a widower whose wife died from cancer six months before. He had retired early from his job to care for her, and now finds himself a little lost in his life. One day he is out walking when he sees a crowd around a hotel that has been closed down for many years and is currently being redeveloped. He learns that there has been a discovery in the basement. It was packed with the belongings of many Japanese-American families who were interred in camps during WWII. When he sees a painted parasol, his own memories of those days are reawakened. He has strived hard to not remember those events, avoiding the part of the city which used to be the Japanese quarter, so this reawakening is in some ways painful.

When he was 12 years old, Henry was a boy who attended a prestigious white school on scholarship. Because his fiercely patriotic Chinese father was concerned about Henry being mistaken as a Japanese boy, he is forced to wear a badge saying 'I am Chinese'. The only other Asian at the school is Keiko, a Japanese-American girl. As one of the terms of their scholarship the two children are forced to work together in the school kitchen, and gradually forge a strong friendship, initially because they can face the school bullies together, but also because of a common interest in Jazz music. Henry's father would be horrified to know that his son has a Japanese friend because of the Japanese invasion of China that preceded their attack on Pearl Harbour.

As the internment of Japanese families commences, Henry is horrified to learn that his friend Keiko is one of the people who is to be put into the internment camp, despite the fact that she was born in America and can not speak Japanese, and he will do anything he can possibly do to maintain his connection to her.

This was an enjoyable book. I really enjoyed the development of the friendship between the two main young characters, and thought that there were some very well developed secondary characters, especially Sheldon, the African-American jazz musicians who Henry gives his lunch to every day in exchange for a few cents, and also Mrs Beatty who facilitates the maintained contact between the two of them even after Keiko's family is moved away from Seattle.

I also really enjoyed how Seattle was portrayed in this novel. I have never been there, but after reading about the various parts of the city, I wanted to go. It is also obvious that Jamie Ford loves jazz music, and I liked the way that the rare record that Henry starts to search for was the catalyst for change within several different relationships in his life.

One of the things that I did really like in this novel was the study of the relationship between Henry and his son, not only as a standalone relationship but also as a reflection of Henry's own relationship with his father, and as magnified through the stress of watching someone that they both loved suffer through the pain of cancer. For so long, Henry's wife Ethel had been the conduit through which Henry and Marty communicated so they had to learn a whole new way of dealing with each other once she had passed on. So often you see that despite the best of intentions children make the same mistakes their own parents made without even realising it. I liked that there was some growth in the relationship between Henry and his son, particularly after Henry surprises Marty and his white fiancee by revealing the secrets of his past.

If there was one thing that didn't really work for me, it is the idea that the Henry and Keiko could be in love at the age of 12 or 13. The relationship wasn't physical, but whether the depth of that connection could occur is a different matter. Maybe that is because my son is very nearly that age and I can't imagine him being anywhere near old enough to form such a strong relationship, or maybe it is because I am thinking about the 12 or 13 year old boys who I knew - I'd rather not actually.

America is not the only country where the incarceration of groups of people happened just because they had Japanese or German ancestry. It's hard to believe that if the same thing was to happen in this day and age that there wouldn't be a huge outcry, but it is surprising that more people aren't aware that these events were taking place just 60 years ago. It isn't that long ago really.


Whilst I did have a couple of issues with the book, I am glad that I read it and I will definitely be looking out for the author's next book, and I guess that that really is recommendation in itself. I gave this book a rating of 4/5.

I borrowed Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet from the library in preparation for participation in the TLC Book Tours blog tour for this book. If you would like to see other stops on the tour, then please consider stopping by at the following blogs:


Monday, January 18th:  Word Lily
Tuesday, January 19th:  Diary of an Eccentric
Wednesday, January 20th:  Bibliofreak
Thursday, January 21st:  Crazy for Books
Tuesday, January 26th:  A Novel Menagerie
Wednesday, January 27th:  In Spring it is the Dawn
Thursday, January 28th:  Savvy Verse & Wit
Friday, January 29th:  Save Ophelia
Monday, February 1st:  Historical Tapestry
Tuesday, February 2nd:  The Brain Lair
Wednesday, February 3rd:  Lit and Life
Thursday, February 4th:  Nerd’s Eye View
Friday, February 5th:  Feminist Review
Monday, February 8th:  Suko’s Notebook
Tuesday, February 9th:  Books and Movies


****Giveaway Details****

If you would like to win a copy of this book, then please leave a comment on this post (including your email details if they are not easily available on your profile). This giveaway is only available to US/Canadian residents (sorry to everyone else) and will close on 10 February.

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