M.J. Rose was the first really successful indie published writer I was aware of. (I hadn't yet heard of John Locke or Amanda Hocking.) I even had a book she'd written about self-publishing and selling the books herself. Then she got a traditional publishing contract. I liked her books and I liked that she was willing to share her tips. So I've been a fan for five years or so.
M.J. Rose writes lush prose.
I started out reading her Morgan Snow books, and they were a lot of fun. Her more work reminds me of the late, great Tanith Lee, and this new book (available in July) has pretty much everything I love in a book, plus Paris.
Here's the blurb:
In this riveting and richly drawn novel from “one of the master storytellers of historical fiction” (New York Times bestselling
author Beatriz Williams), a talented young artist flees New York for
the South of France after one of her scandalous drawings reveals a dark
secret—and triggers a terrible tragedy.
In the wake of a dark and
brutal World War, the glitz and glamour of 1925 Manhattan shine like a
beacon for the high society set, desperate to keep their gaze firmly
fixed to the future. But Delphine Duplessi sees more than most. At a
time in her career when she could easily be unknown and penniless, like
so many of her classmates from L’École des Beaux Arts, in America she
has gained notoriety for her stunning “shadow portraits” that frequently
expose her subjects’ most scandalous secrets. Most nights Delphine
doesn’t mind that her gift has become mere entertainment—a party
trick—for the fashionable crowd.
Then, on a snowy night in
February, in a penthouse high above Fifth Avenue, Delphine’s mystical
talent leads to a tragedy between two brothers. Devastated and
disconsolate, Delphine renounces her gift and returns to her old life in
the south of France where Picasso, Matisse, and the Fitzgeralds are
summering. There, Delphine is thrust into recapturing the past. First by
her charismatic twin brother and business manager Sebastian who
attempts to cajole her back to work and into co-dependence, then by the
world famous opera singer Emma Calvé, who is obsessed with the writings
of the fourteenth-century alchemist Nicolas Flamel. And finally by her
ex-lover Mathieu, who is determined to lure her back into his arms,
unaware of the danger that led Delphine to flee Paris for New York five
years before.
Trapped in an ancient chateau where hidden
knowledge lurks in the shadows, Delphine questions everything and
everyone she loves the most—her art, her magick, her family, and
Mathieu—in an effort to accept them as the gifts they are. Only there
can she shed her fear of loving and living with her eyes wide open.
Saturday, May 27, 2017
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