Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Excerpt: Time Fall by Timothy Ashby

Time Fall
By: Timothy Ashby
Publisher: Self-Published
Published: Feb. 22, 2013
Genre: Historic Fiction

Goodreads | Amazon

Tim is having a giveaway for a copy of Time Fall over at his site

Lt. Art Sutton’s team of six US Rangers parachute into Nazi Germany… but they vanish in 1945. They land, a few minutes later, in 2011. The Rangers are unaware of the passage of time all around them and the valiant, misguided soldiers begin to attack “enemy” targets.

They face the age old question - What is good? What is evil?



In my work, I hope to keep readers on the edge of their seats as they are torn between rooting for these brave men, and knowing that the targets the men seek to destroy are innocent. In this excerpt, the men are about to plant bombs at what they believe is a German military base, and is in actuality a United States army outpost.


Roth gripped Sutton's jacket to drag him from the aperture in the fence.

As Sutton cleared the wire, he rolled onto his belly. Roth's helmet tapped against his, the elongated barrel of the sergeant's silenced pistol inches from Sutton's face.

"I will take care of him," Roth whispered.

"Only if he sees the hole," hissed Sutton. "You can't risk a shot from this position."

The footsteps came closer, scuffing the gravel. Sutton pressed into the ground, trying, as the commando instructors had taught him, to imagine himself part of the landscape. Roth lay so close that the hot air from his lungs warmed Sutton's face.

Sutton allowed only his eyes to move, flicking between the tread of the sentry's boots to Roth's pistol. He noticed the sergeant's hand trembling.

Boots less than two yards away. The sentry trudged nearer, steps erratic, scattering gravel chips. A pebble clinked against Sutton's steel helmet.

The sentry was almost in front of them now, tan boots and camouflage trousers in sharp detail, face shadowed by the Nazi helmet's rim. The boots dragged again, then halted directly in front of the hole cut through the fence.

Sutton saw Roth’s hand steady as he took aim at the sentry’s head. They heard the click of what sounded like a lighter. The pungent odor of cigarette smoke filled the air. Sutton thought it seemed impossible that the sentry would risk possible intruders seeing the red glow of his cigarette—the camp was supposed to be under blackout.

The sentry suddenly began speaking. Roth’s tightening trigger finger froze. He and Sutton glanced at each other in disbelief as they heard the man softly recite what sounded like an incoherent poem in fractured English while shuffling in a strange dance routine:

Yo, I'm runnin' through these yo's like Drano I got that devilish flow, rock 'n' roll, no halo We party rock, yeah, that's the crew that I'm reppin' On the rise to the top, no lead in our zeppelin, hey

The sentry made some whooshing noises, nodded his head, then threw the butt of his cigarette to the ground and mashed it with his boot. He yawned, seemed to adjust something on his ears under the helmet, then bobbed away.

Sutton realized that he had been holding his breath. He expelled it as the tread of the sentry's boots faded. There was no time to consider the man's odd behavior now. He slithered back up to the opening in the wire and propelled himself through, rising without breaking motion into a crouching run that brought him to the deep shadows under the wall of a building. The Rangers behind him hurled themselves against the wall at five-second intervals.”


Sutton darted from the sheltering wall. The vehicle park was surrounded by a rusted mesh fence - an unnecessary precaution, as the huge double gate yawned wide, one side crumpled as if a careless driver had collided with it. The repaired vehicles were segregated into columns of tanks, trucks and personnel carriers. Lampposts cast ineffectual pools of light at wide intervals, illuminating olive drab paint, white stars, and the large, stenciled letters US ARMY.

Sutton skidded to a halt, wondering if his eyes were deceiving him. He heard the gasping breaths of the other men as they slid against the wall beside him.

"What is it?" Roth asked. He saw the vehicles. So did the other four men.

"Holy cow!" someone hissed.

"What in the world?--"

"Silence!" Roth snapped. He moved closer to Sutton.

"What gives, Lieutenant? These are all American vehicles."

"Don't know," Sutton said. "The briefing officers said nothing about this."

He studied the ranks of machines, bafflement growing. He pointed at a row of tanks, their cannon barrels raised like a lancer's salute.

''Never seen tanks like those before. They can't be ours, or British for that matter."

Roth grunted an assent. "They look more like German King Tigers – the Panzerkampfwagen Six. Must be a new type that our intelligence doesn't know about yet." Roth thrust his jaw towards the parking area. "Most of the other vehicles are unknown to me also. But why are they all painted to look like Americans?"

Something nagged at Sutton's mind, a memory of an article in Stars and Stripes, a story given substance by conversations with men who had served in the Battle of the Bulge five months earlier.

"It's a Kraut trick. Armored columns painted to look like they're Americans. They used that trick at the Bulge last Christmas. Really fooled our guys. Even had English-speaking Krauts in our uniforms."

"I'll be…," Sarnoff muttered. "I remember hearing about that from a guy who was at Bastogne. Dirty Nazis!"

"Our fighter pilots will sure think twice before attacking 'em," Sutton added. "Let's make sure they never get out of here! Rendezvous where we left our gear in fifteen minutes.”





An international lawyer, businessman and writer, Tim Ashby worked in Washington DC as a counter-terrorism consultant to the U.S. State Department, and then as a senior official - the youngest political appointee of his rank - at the U.S. Commerce Department, responsible for commercial relations with Latin America and the Caribbean. He held two Top Secret security clearances and worked with a number of colorful characters, including members of the U.S. military's Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC). He has lived in the Caribbean and Europe as well as various places in the United States. An avid historian, he published widely on military history, archaeology, business and international relations. A licensed attorney in Florida and the District of Columbia, Tim Ashby has a PhD degree from the University of Southern California, a JD from Seattle University Law School, and an MBA from the University of Edinburgh Scotland.



Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Excerpt: The Journey by John A. Heldt

The Journey
(Northwest Passage, #2)
By: John A. Heldt
Publisher: Self-published
Published: Nov. 3, 2012
Genre: Historical Fiction


Goodreads | Amazon | Barnes & Noble





Seattle, 2010. When her entrepreneur husband dies in an accident, Michelle Preston Richardson, 48, finds herself childless and directionless. She yearns for the simpler days of her youth, before she followed her high school sweetheart down a road that led to limitless riches but little fulfillment, and jumps at a chance to reconnect with her past at a class reunion. But when Michelle returns to Unionville, Oregon, and joins three classmates on a spur-of-the-moment tour of an abandoned mansion, she gets more than she asked for. She enters a mysterious room and is thrown back to 1979.

Distraught and destitute, Michelle finds a job as a secretary at Unionville High, where she guides her spirited younger self, Shelly Preston, and childhood friends through their tumultuous senior year. Along the way, she meets widowed teacher Robert Land and finds the love and happiness she had always sought. But that happiness is threatened when history intervenes and Michelle must act quickly to save those she loves from deadly fates. Filled with humor and heartbreak, THE JOURNEY gives new meaning to friendship, courage, and commitment as it follows an unfulfilled soul through her second shot at life.


Excerpt

When the frightened-looking young man dropped his hat, Nick stepped on the accelerator. Shelly heard tires squeal as her head slammed against the top of her seat and both cars lurched forward. Within seconds Nick shifted into second gear and steered the 'Cuda back to the center of the road, correcting a fishtail that had pushed Shelly's pulse to triple digits.

Shelly ignored both Nick and Waylon Cooney and focused instead on the dark road ahead, which dipped and rose like a mellow stretch of a roller coaster track. She squeezed the handle and said a silent prayer, asking God to keep her in one piece, instead of eighty-five, as the 'Cuda approached a rise in the road and visibility of oncoming traffic fell to a hundred yards.

The Trans Am started to pull away.

"Hold on," Nick said as he shifted gears.

With one hand on the dash and another on the door, Shelly silently screamed. This was insane, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest insane. She glanced at the instrument panel just long enough to see the speedometer needle pass 135 and the tachometer needle hit its max.

For two hundred yards the muscle cars moved in unison, as if attached like a motorcycle and a sidecar. Neither driver managed to gain a significant advantage over the other.

When the cars passed blindly over yet another rise, Shelly looked into the distance and saw oncoming lights. She put her hands on her face and then on the dash. She pushed herself back as she tried to will a quick end to an adventure that had rapidly become a nightmare.

"I think I've got him," Nick said as he pulled the stick one last time. "Sit tight."

"This is crazy!" Shelly screamed.

Apparently focused on the task at hand, Nick did not respond. He instead tightened his grip on the wheel and floored the accelerator. Seconds later he pulled ahead of the Trans Am, veered into the right lane, and shot through the intersection ahead of his rival and ahead of an oncoming pickup whose driver had already hit its horn.

Nick tapped the brake and eventually slowed to a reasonable speed. He drove another fifty yards to a wide spot in the road, did a U-turn, and pulled onto a narrow, sloping shoulder on the east side of Route 10. He turned off the ignition, laughed, and faced the girl at his side.

"So much for the shit kicker," he said triumphantly. He extended his arm behind Shelly's head. "What do you think? Did we kick some ass?"

Hearing no reply, Nick leaned toward his passenger.

"Shelly? Are you all right?"

Shelly let go of the dash, dropped her head, and turned away. Shaken and most definitely stirred, she took a moment to collect herself before looking at Nick with an ashen face.

"I think I peed my pants."

John A. Heldt is a reference librarian who lives and works in Montana. The former award-winning sportswriter and newspaper editor has loved reading and writing since writing book reports on baseball heroes in grade school. A graduate of both the University of Oregon and University of Iowa, he is an avid fisherman, sports fan, home brewer, and reader of thrillers and historical fiction. Heldt is the author of THE MINE and THE JOURNEY.

Find John on: Blog | Facebook

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Excerpt: The Siren of Paris by David LeRoy

The Siren of Paris
By: David LeRoy
Publisher: David Tribble Publishing
Published: July 9, 2012
Genre: Historical Fiction


Goodreads | Amazon





Born in Paris and raised in the United States, 21-year-old Marc Tolbert enjoys the advantages of being born to a wealthy, well-connected family.. Reaching a turning point in his life, he decides to abandon his plans of going to medical school and study art in Paris. In 1939, he boards a ship and heads to France, blissfully unaware that Europe -- along with the rest of the world -- is on the brink of an especially devastating war.

When he arrives at l'École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux Arts, more ominous signs surface. There are windows covered with tape, sandbags shielding the fronts of important buildings, whispers of Parisian children leaving the city, and gas masks being distributed. Distracted by a blossoming love affair, Marc isn't too worried about his future, and he certainly doesn't expect a Nazi invasion of France.

Marc has a long journey ahead of him. He witnesses, first-hand, the fall of Paris and the departure of the French government. Employed by an ambassador, he visits heads of state, including the horribly obese gray-haired Mussolini and the charismatic Hitler. He witnesses the effects of the tightening vise of occupation, first-hand, as he tries to escape the country. He also participates in the French resistance, spends time in prison camps, and sees the liberation of the concentration camps. During his struggles, he is reunited with the woman he loves, Marie, who speaks passionately of working with the resistance. Is she working for freedom, or is she not to be trusted?


Excerpt

“Marc, Marc,” a voice called out from the bustling Metro crowd. Marc turned, but could not see who had called his name, and doubted if it was even for him. As he turned back, he heard his name again. David emerged from behind a crowd of young school children.
     “Shouldn’t you be out at Fontainebleau?”
     “Hey, yes, I am heading back now. I came into Paris to line up my next flat,” Marc said, shaking David’s hand.
     “Dora said the same, plus that she had been showing you off around town,” David said as the crowd of young school children moved around them.
     “Ah, yes, the gang. How is Nigel?”
     “Good. He is out of town right now on some banking business. I have been busy as well. I have a new supplier and have been lining up the contracts back in the States.”
     “David, I need to catch this train.”
     “No problem. When you are in Paris, we can meet up at Dora’s for a Sunday brunch.”
     “You bet.”
     Marc patted David’s shoulder and left to board the train that would take him to the southeast side of Paris. On board, a woman moved through the cabin toward the rear, passing row after row of school children. “Are all you little ones going on a holiday?” she said as she passed.
     “We are going south in case the Germans bomb the city,” a boy said, looking up at her.
     “That is absurd. Nothing will happen, but you have a good trip all the same.”

     After making a connection back to Fontainebleau, Marc spent the evening drawing.
     “How was Paris?” his roommate asked.
     “A bit tense. It appears they are sending the little ones out of the city.”
     “The drama of it all. I bet that was the government’s idea. Always trying to convince us of the impending doom.”
     “You think it is all a hoax?”
     “Don’t you?”

     A light breeze entered through the open windows of the third-floor life-drawing classroom the following afternoon of September 1, 1939. Marc could not quite figure out if the room at one time had been a drawing room, dressing room, or parlor. The gold leafing of the plaster molds was barely visible. The mirrors held cracks in the gilding. He knew it was not a valuable room; otherwise, it would never have become home to an art class. The entire school might be held within the servants’ quarters, but Marc preferred not to ask and instead allowed his imagination to run wild. “They say in the papers nearly 16,000 children have now left the city,” Marc overheard from a discussion next to him.
     “I believe they are now passing out the gas masks,” another student said in a hushed tone.


A native of California, David received a BA in Philosophy and Religion at Point Loma Nazarene College in San Diego. After returning from a European arts study program, he became interested in the history behind the French Resistance during World War Two. Writing fiction has become his latest way to explore philosophical, moral and emotional issues of life. The Siren of Paris is his first novel. 

For more information about David, visit his website.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Review: The Chief by Monica McCarty

The Chief 
(Highland Guard, #1)
By: Monica McCarty
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Published: March 23, 2010
Genre: Historical Romance
Rating:
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Goodreads
Amazon
Barnes & Noble





AN ELITE FIGHTING FORCE UNLIKE THE WORLD HAS EVER SEEN . . .

Scouring the darkest corners of the Highlands and Western Isles, Robert the Bruce handpicks ten warriors to help him in his quest to free Scotland from English rule. They are the best of the best, chosen for their superior skills in each discipline of warfare. And to lead his secret Highland Guard, Bruce chooses the greatest warrior of all.

The ultimate Highland warlord and a swordsman without equal, Tor MacLeod has no intention of being drawn into Scotland’s war against the English. Dedicated to his clan, the fiercely independent chief answers to no one—especially not to his alluring new bride, bartered to him in a bid to secure his command of the deadliest fighting force the world has ever seen. The treacherous chit who made her way to Tor’s bed may have won his hand, but she will never claim his heart.

Although her husband’s reputation is as fierce as his manner, Christina Fraser believes that something softer hides beneath his brutal shell. But the only warmth she feels is in their bed, in glorious moments of white-hot desire that disappear with the dawn. When Christina’s reckless bid to win her husband’s love goes awry and thrusts them into danger on the eve of war, Tor will face his ultimate battle: to save his wife and to open his heart—before it’s too late.

My thoughts...
It all starts with the "Chief", Tor. There is a secret elite team of highlanders who specialize in certain aspects of battle and Bruce has selected Tor to be their Chief. Bruce knows that Tor isn't going to agree to this easily and hopes that the prospect of a bride might sway his decision. However, Tor wants nothing to do with the secret team nor does he want to make an alliance with the Fraser's. However, Christina's abusive father makes Christina sneak into Tor's chambers while he's asleep so that she can be "caught" in his bed, forcing Tor to do the noble thing and marry her. Not only is Tor now in charge of a group of men that have been his enemies for years but he also has a wife who seems to be more trouble than he bargained for.
 

Christina got on my nerves a lot in this book. Tor will tell her to do something and she will do the exact opposite. It seems like she's always getting herself into trouble and Tor is always getting her out of it. However, Tor is clueless on how to be a good husband. He is gone all day and comes home at night for a shag and then is up and gone before Christina wakes up. So I guess I cannot blame her for exploring on her own. I really liked the fact that even though these two find the other attractive, neither of them are thrilled with their current situation and must over come a lot in order to work in harmony together.
 
Monica McCarty does a great job weaving both the romance and the upcoming war into one good Highlander story.  You get a glimpse at the other men in the Highland Guard and I personally cannot wait to read their stories.

Favorite quote...
Tor is sitting at the table talking with his (ex) leman when Christina walks in.

"He frowned, noticing the glasslike stiffness in Christina's expression and the high color on her cheeks. She looked upset about something. He quickly scanned the room to see whether there was some new womanly touch he was supposed to have noticed."

... guys... they just done get it.



Saturday, July 7, 2012

Excerpt & Giveaway: The Mine by John A. Heldt

The Mine
By: John A. Heldt
Publisher: Self-published
Published: Feb. 12, 2012
Genre: Historical Fiction


Goodreads
Amazon
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In 2000, Joel Smith is a cocky, adventurous young man who sees the world as his playground. But when the college senior, days from graduation, enters an abandoned Montana mine, he discovers the price of reckless curiosity. He emerges in May 1941 with a cell phone he can't use, money he can't spend, and little but his wits to guide his way. Stuck in the age of Whirlaway, swing dancing, and a peacetime draft, Joel begins a new life as the nation drifts toward war. With the help of his 21-year-old trailblazing grandmother and her friends, he finds his place in a world he knew only from movies and books. But when an opportunity comes to return to the present, Joel must decide whether to leave his new love in the past or choose a course that will alter their lives forever. THE MINE follows a humbled man through a critical time in history as he adjusts to new surroundings and wrestles with the knowledge of things to come.


Excerpt

For the next fifteen minutes, Joel and Linda stood at the edge of the water, arm in arm, and watched dusk turn into night. Neither said more than a few words, but neither had to. Their silence was a source of comfort, not discontent.

The tranquility was broken a moment later, when two couples noisily emerged from the hall. One walked to a shiny black Ford parked near the front of a dirt lot. The other stayed on the deck and propped open an exit, allowing the upbeat sound of "In the Mood" by Glenn Miller to drift across the lawn and drown out a cricket philharmonic.

"You sure you don't want to dance?" Linda asked.

"I'm sure – and not just because I don't want to fall on my face. I'd rather stay out here with you."

"Really?"

"Really." Joel grabbed both of Linda's hands and looked at her face. "Why would you think otherwise?"

"Well, to be honest, I wasn't sure you even wanted to go out. I didn't exactly make the best first impression at Tom's graduation party. I had a little too much celebration," she said, staring at her feet. "And I've noticed you've become rather sweet on Grace."

"I wasn't sure about going out tonight, not at first. But I'm glad we did. You look stunning – breathtaking – and you've been perfect company. I could not have asked for a better date," he said. "As for Grace, I do like her. I like all of you. But I'm here with you now, not her, not anyone else, and I'm very happy to be here."

Joel meant it too. His feelings for Grace had not ebbed a bit, but for the first time in weeks he began to ask serious questions – questions he should have asked at the start. Did he and Grace actually have something? Or was he just a fool holding Paul McEwan's jacket until he returned on leave?

And what about his so-called consolation prize? She had no restrictions and came exactly as advertised: smart, pretty, honest, flawed, and unabashedly interested in the new kid in town. If nothing else, Linda deserved a fair shake and an open mind. The old saying about a bird in the hand began to gnaw.

Joel considered another thing as well. It felt good having a woman in his arms and in his life. It had been two months since he had enjoyed a similar moment with Jana, two months and fifty-nine years. Life as a monk was getting old.

"Are you OK?" Linda asked. She looked at him with soft, expressive eyes, eyes any man could get used to. "You look kind of lost."

He smiled and pulled her closer.

"I was," he said, "but not anymore."

Joel put a hand to Linda's face and took a long look at his Second Impression. He kissed her and, for a few splendid minutes, forgot why he was lost in the first place.



John has graciously offered up an eCopy of his book, The Mine, to one lucky reader!


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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Review: Bridge of Scarlet Leaves

By: Kristina McMorris
Publisher: Kensington Publishing
Published: Feb. 28, 2012
Genre: Historical Fiction
Source: Author
Format: Paperback
Pages: 420
Rating:
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Los Angeles, 1941. Violinist Maddie Kern's life seemed destined to unfold with the predictable elegance of a Bach concerto. Then she fell in love with Lane Moritomo. Her brother's best friend, Lane is the handsome, ambitious son of Japanese immigrants. Maddie was prepared for disapproval from their families, but when Pearl Harbor is bombed the day after she and Lane elope, the full force of their decision becomes apparent. In the eyes of a fearful nation, Lane is no longer just an outsider, but an enemy.

When her husband is interned at a war relocation camp, Maddie follows, sacrificing her Julliard ambitions. Behind barbed wire, tension simmers and the line between patriot and traitor blurs. As Maddie strives for the hard-won acceptance of her new family, Lane risks everything to prove his allegiance to America, at tremendous cost.



My thoughts...
One word: Mesmerizing!

There are good books, great books and then there are books that move you to no end. I was spellbound from the first page and Kristina McMorris continued to weave her spell hypnotizing me until the very last word.

Maddie is a Caucasian girl who falls in love with her brother's best friend Lane, who is a Japanese American. They keep their relationship a secret from everyone since interracial relations are not accepted. However, when Lane's parents set up an arranged marriage for him, he asks Maddie to marry him and they travel to WA where they can legally be wed and elope. Life couldn't get any better, that is until they wake up the next morning and realize that their lives will never be the same. The bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese has sent everyone into a chaotic mess. All Japanese are shunned and soon are driven from their homes into relocation camps where they "volunteer" their time for scraps of money to live off of. The story that proceeds is one of love, loss, sacrifice and dedication.

The story follows Maddie Moritomo (Kern), Lane Moritomo and Maddie's brother T.J. through all of the trials and tribulations they face. Maddie and Lane must overcome the hatred that the Americans now have for any and all Japanese while T.J ships out to face the war head on. In the 400 pages of the book you watch these characters go from kids who have all these dreams of their future to adults who have seen such devastation and despair but have still managed to rise above it.

This book had me glued to the pages. McMorris wrote so beautifully that I felt like I was there. I balled my eyes out in places and silently cheered when things started looking up. I was so involved in these characters lives that your emotions get tied up in the words easily.

Favorite part...
Maybe because I am a military wife but my favorite part has to do with T.J and Jo (Maddie's best friend).
Right as T.J is about to board the train to ship out to war, Jo shows up all dressed up and the spitting image of what you envision when you think of the women who sent their husbands off to war. All the guys on the train get riled up over the site of Jo and start yelling for him to kiss her. He slides with a kiss on the cheek but Jo sneaks in a kiss and soon everything else is forgotten but Jo. That is until his train starts taking off without him. With a quick kiss he takes off after the train and jumps on, looking back at the girl he is leaving behind.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Review: Dreams of Joy

(Shanghai Girls #2)
By: Lisa See
Publisher: Random House
Published: May 31, 2011
Genre: Historical Fiction
Source: Won
Format: Paperback
Rating:








Reeling from newly uncovered family secrets, and anger at her mother and aunt for keeping them from her, Joy runs away to Shanghai in early 1957 to find her birth father—the artist Z.G. Li, with whom both May and Pearl were once in love. Dazzled by him, and blinded by idealism and defiance, Joy throws herself into the New Society of Red China, heedless of the dangers in the communist regime.

Devastated by Joy’s flight and terrified for her safety, Pearl is determined to save her daughter, no matter the personal cost. From the crowded city to remote villages, Pearl confronts old demons and almost insurmountable challenges as she follows Joy, hoping for reconciliation. Yet even as Joy’s and Pearl’s separate journeys converge, one of the most tragic episodes in China’s history threatens their very lives.

My thoughts...
When Joy finds out that the people she has called Mother and Father all her life are really her Aunt and Uncle and her Aunt is really her biological mother and her father is still in China, Joy is obviously upset. She runs away to China to find her birth father and to help rebuild the new China. Only, when she gets there things aren't really what she thought they would be.

I liked Shanghai Girls and was really interested when this book came out. You have to read Shanghai Girls in order to pick up on a lot of what has happened. Otherwise you won't understand the reasoning behind why Pearl acts the way she does towards China, Z.G (Joy's father) or May. There are some references to the last book and even though I read it, it was so long ago that some parts took me a minute to catch up on.

This story is split between Joy and Pearl. After all, Pearl takes off after Joy to China and tries to bring her home. She goes back to her old family house which is now run down and grimy and waits until she can find Joy. Meanwhile Joy is out traveling the country with her father who is an artist, having an adventure and is totally oblivious to the dangers around her.

This a captivating story about a mother's love for her child and the depths that you will go to to protect them. I enjoyed this story quite a bit and even though Joy annoyed me through the majority of the book by how naive she was being, the second things clicked for her, you started to see the woman that she will become.

Favorite quote...
"The first person who tasted crab must have also tried spider, but realized it was not as good to eat."



Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Review: To Wed a Wild Lord

(Hellions of Halstead Hall #4)
By: Sabrina Jeffries
Publisher: Pocket Star
Published: Nov 22, 2011
Genre: Historical Romance
Source: Galley Grab
Format: eBook
Page: 384
Rating:
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Drowning in guilt over his best friend's death seven years ago, Lord Gabriel Sharpe, the Angel of Death, knows his only hope at redemption is a race against a shocking opponent.

Shrouded in darkness for the past seven years, the infamous racer Lord Gabriel Sharpe is known to accept every challenge to race thrown at him. When his next challenge comes in the form of his late best friend's sister, Virginia Waverly, Gabe is shocked. Yet she presents just the opportunity Gabe needs--marriage to fulfill his grandmother's ultimatum and ensure his inheritance. What he didn't count on was needing her love
.

My thoughts...
This is the fourth book in the Hellions of Halstead Hall series but it is great as a stand alone as well. Actually, it is the only book of the series that I have read and I was not clueless as to what was going on at all. Sabrina catches you up on the ultimatum that Gabe's grandmother made that in order to get their inheritance, he and his siblings must get married by the end of the year.

Gabe is nicknamed the Angel of Death for the way he recklessly races which wound up killing his best friend Roger... who just so happens to be Virginia's late brother. He sets out to marry Virginia to make amends but Virginia wants nothing to do with him other than to race him at the Turnham Green, same track that killed her brother. She wants to prove to him that he isn't as superior in racing as he thinks he is. Gabriel makes a wager that they will have a trial race first at a safer course of her choosing and if she wins he will race her at Turnham Green but if he wins she will allow him to court her.

Favorite quote
"I've had seven months to find a wife, sweetheart, and you're the first woman I've even considered. Do you want to know why? You rouse my blood. I have no other way to describe it. I'm not a poet. I'm not good with pretty compliments, and God knows I have little to offer except a possible inheritance. But I promise that at least in the bedchamber, I can make you happy. Perhaps that doesn't count for much, but people have married for less."



Saturday, September 3, 2011

Review: Theodora: Actress, Empress, Whore

* We are having a giveaway for this book HERE
* Giveaway ends on September 6th!


By: Stella Duffy
Publisher: Penguin Group
Release Date: Sept. 27, 2011
Genre: Historical Fiction
Source: Publisher
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
Rating: I liked it.
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Daughter of an actress and a bear keeper for the Hippodrome of Constantinople, Theodora was trained as a dancer, singer, and actress who performed on the stage and in the bedrooms of anyone who could afford her, from the time she was a child. Her skills as a comedic orator endeared her to both rich and poor, noble and common, so much so that she was exhausted by the time she was 16 years old. An invitation to be the mistress of the new governor of Apollonia in Libya came as a welcome surprise and an opportunity to create a new, more socially acceptable life for herself. But when Theodora finds herself cast off in a few short years, she must make her way back to her beloved Constantinople.



My thoughts...
I didn't know anything about Theodora beforehand, so I went in with a clean slate. The writing is more like a biography with a little bit of story telling mixed it. I felt like I walked away with a great deal of knowledge about her in the end. It wasn't my cup of tea but as a whole I liked the story. The author did a huge deal of research for this story. There was a lot of attention to detail and one can appreciate how much work the author put into writing this whether you like the book or not.

I don't want to go into too much detail because it will give things away but the story starts off with Theodora at a young age preforming on stage with her mother and two sisters. The story follows her as she ages and her life changes. Going from actress, whore, mistress and finally she comes out on top as being an empress. She starts off as this sweet little girl who protects her sisters and turns out to be an arrogant woman almost. Which is understandable with the hand that life had dealt her. This story really takes you on a journey through her life.

Favorite Quote
"I saw you once, years ago, at a dinner. You were a child and you stopped your little sister from being punished, you were the keeper and she the bear. You were magnificent. As you are now."