Showing posts with label historical novel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical novel. Show all posts
Saturday, October 1, 2016
A luminous novel of female empowerment
I'd heard of Caroline Herschel before, sister of the composer/astronomer William Herschel. (He is the man who discovered Uranus, which was once known as "Herschel's Planet.") When I stumbled across this book on Pinterest, on a board dedicated to beautiful covers, my curiosity was piqued. (I LOVE the cover.) The Stargazer's Sister was a wonderful historical novel and I recommend it highly.
Labels:
Caroline Herschel,
historical novel,
Uranus,
William Herschel
Monday, February 23, 2015
March reading list: March Violets by Philip Kerr
If you haven't read Philip Kerr's March Violets--the first of his Bernie Gunther mysteries, you should put it on your TBR list. Set in 1936, it is the first of what the author called his "Berlin Noir" trilogy. The story takes place during the Summer Olympics of that year. the book was published more than 25 years ago, but remains a terrific read.
Monday, June 2, 2014
Free French Fiction!
Well, not quite, but close. Gastien, the cost of a dream, free on Kindle today. Part of a series. (And don't we all love series?) Eye-catching cover. I always like seeing the Eiffel Tower on a cover. And free offers on books with a lot of good reviews. (History! Sex! Artistic dreams!) Author Caddy Rowland is a painter herself, and I love the way she describes painting ("Making love to the color.")
Labels:
Caddy Rowland,
Gastien,
historical novel
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Book Review: Christine Pope's All Fall Down
Illustration by Nadica Boskovska |
Writer Christine Pope ventures into fantasy in All Fall Down, a story of pestilence and
ignorance and a woman who fights both. This is fantasy in the vein of George R.
R. Martin's Song of Ice and Fire
novels, more of a magic-tinged historical novel than a romp with fairies and
elves. The world building is precise and developed with both logic and flair. There
are contending kingdoms and the actions of rulers impact the lives of the
ruled, sometimes in a benign way but often… not.
These people come off the page, they feel real and rooted
with problems and responsibilities and hard, hard choices to make. The
political situation that exists in the world Pope has created has an impact on
the plot; it's integrated into the narrative on many levels and not just thrown
in to create random drama.
Merys, the heroine of the story, is a healer, a woman of
science not superstition. Kidnapped by slavers who sell her to a lord whose
domain runs on slave labor. Lord Shaine is not a bad man, and it's to Pope's
considerable credit that she makes him sympathetic and sexy in a way that makes
him more than a standard-issue alpha male.
Merys is enormously appealing as a woman who relies on her
wits to better her own situation but who also takes care of those around her. Her
intervention in the life of a young stable hand changes his life for the
better. Her bond with the daughter of the man who holds her captive is warm and
caring, and extends to the young man the girl is destined to marry. Merys has
real "people skills" and interacts as easily with the cook as with
her master's aristocratic allies.
As always, Pope's prose is a multi-sensory experience, with
mouth-watering descriptions of feasts and detailed accounts of courtly dress.
At its core, this is a romance novel, with several story strands resonating
with romance--from the sweet relationship between the lord's daughter and her
beloved to Merys' growing attachment to Lord Shaine despite their difference in
philosophy. There's a true maturity to their bonding, which does not come
without sacrifice but which is all the sweeter for it.
This book is the first in a series of novels set in "The
Latter Kingdoms." I cannot wait to read the next one, which is called Dragon Rose.
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