Showing posts with label romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label romance. Show all posts

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Longing for Home by Sarah M. Eden


Sarah M. Eden

I have the privilege of being a part of the Blog Tour for the new novel by Sarah M. Eden, Longing for Home.  I've actually read several of her books in the last year.  I haven't posted a review in a very long time as you know so I haven't reviewed any of her books on this blog but I have really enjoyed them. I have read Seeking Persephone, Courting Miss Lancaster, Kiss of a Stranger, and Drops of Gold.  They have all been fun, clean Regency style romances that I have really enjoyed.

Sarah, (I'm going to call her by her first name because I think she's cool) has taken a little different approach with her latest book.  This one is set in the Wyoming Territory in 1870 instead of Regency England.  When I discovered this I have to say that I was a little disappointed because I would rather read a book set in Regency or Victorian England way more than I want to read a book set in the western frontier of the United States.  I'm glad I gave this book a chance though because it was just as entertaining as Sarah's other books have been.

Katie Macauley is a young woman from Ireland who ventures out west in hopes that the higher wages offered will help her get back to her family in Ireland and repay debts she feels she owes them.  Upon reaching Hope Springs, Wyoming she finds that it won't be as easy as she had hoped.  Faced with challenges in her new employment that bring up painful memories from her childhood and a community divided by prejudice and hate, Katie struggles in her new situation.  Of course, there are a couple of handsome men to add confusion to the mix.  This is called "A Proper Romance", after all.

I enjoyed this as well as Sarah's other books but I am hoping that she's working on a sequel because there are way too many loose ends to tie up. For those of you who are like me and enjoy a good, clean romance, look for Shadow Mountain Publishing's new branding "A Proper Romance" that you will find on some of their novels.  I think it's a great idea and I look forward to reading more of these historical "proper" romances.




Sunday, May 27, 2012

The Death and Life of Charlie St. Cloud by Ben Sherwood

Genre:  Fiction, Contemporary, Romance
Published:  2004, 277 pp. by Picador USA
Source:  Personal library
Review:  3/5 stars

Brief Summary:  It's hard to give a good brief description of this book without giving away too much.  If you've seen the movie previews you know that Charlie St. Cloud can see and talk to is younger brother who is dead.  I think I'll leave it at that to avoid any spoilers.

My Thoughts:  We read this for my neighborhood book club.  I liked the premise and the ideas the author, Ben Sherwood, put forth about what happens after we die.  I really liked the relationship between Charlie and his brother, Sam.  Their conversations were fun and witty and I enjoyed all the parts when they are together.  I thought the romance part of the book wasn't as well developed but I still enjoyed it.

Recommendations:  I liked this book and it kept me interested but I can't say I would recommend it to many people.  There is a sex scene that isn't really graphic but is still descriptive enough that it made me a little uncomfortable. Not for teens.

Rating:  3.1.3  Unmarried, descriptive sexual relations and moderate profanity.


Thanks for reading!

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Edenbrooke by Julianne Donaldson

Genre: Romance, YA
Published:  Mar. 2012 by Shadow Mountain,  240 pp.
Source:  ARC from publisher
Review:  4.5/5 stars

Brief Summary: (From goodreads.comMarianne Daventry will do anything to escape the boredom of Bath and the amorous attentions of an unwanted suitor. So when an invitation arrives from her twin sister, Cecily, to join her at a sprawling country estate, she jumps at the chance. Thinking she’ll be able to relax and enjoy her beloved English countryside while her sister snags the handsome heir of Edenbrooke, Marianne finds that even the best laid plans can go awry.


My Thoughts:  I have to admit that I read more than my share of romances as a teenager. Some were more than questionable in content and I'm ashamed that I ever read them. In search of cleaner fare, I discovered that there was this sub-genre of romance novels called Regency.  The stories were set in Regency England (early 19th century) and were inspired by Jane Austen's works dealing with the noble and rich, the genteel but poor, gentleman and ladies, rakes and spinsters, the season, the ton, Almack's, London and Bath, manners and propriety.  I loved Regency romances because they were usually clean, romantic, and I loved the world they transported me to.

I don't read Regencies much anymore with the exception of the Georgette Heyer novels I've discovered in the last few years so when I got the chance to review Edenbrooke, I jumped on it.  I loved it.  There are a few silly or cheesy parts and it's fairly predictable but overall I still enjoyed every minute of reading it.  The heroine is smart, witty, and completely unaware of her charms.  The hero is very swoon worthy (one of my favorite leading men I've encountered in recent months.)  My 12 year old daughter loved it too so maybe there's still hope that I can eventually introduce her to Jane Austen.  (Right now she rolls her eyes when I mention Pride and Prejudice.)

Recommendations:  I recommend this to anyone looking for a sweet, clean romance.  Don't expect great literature, but you can expect to be entertained.     


Ratings:  2.2.1  As the subtitle says, this is a "proper romance."  There is one part where a woman is threatened in a way that suggests a sexual assault but it's not explicit.


Thanks for reading!

Friday, October 28, 2011

Bath Tangle by Georgette Heyer

Genre: Historical Fiction
Published: Originally 1955, this edition--July 2011
Source: Sourcebooks (publisher review request)
Review: 3.5/5 stars


Brief Summary: Lady Serena is reunited with her former suitor, whom she jilted several years ago, when her father names him, the Marquis of Rotherham, her guardian in his will. Both Serena and the Marquis are hot-tempered and obstinate so quarrels ensue. In true Georgette Heyer fashion, witty-dialogue abounds. The romantic plot thickens as Serena becomes reacquainted with the man she had once loved when she was much younger, who had been sent packing by her father because he was not a good match for her.
My Thoughts:  Georgette Heyer does not disappoint.  Even though Bath Tangle wasn't quite as charming as some of her other books, it still hits the spot when you're looking for that Regency Romance fix.  The plot is pretty predictable but it doesn't really matter.  Even though we know the destination, the journey is always fun.  The hero and heroine are unfortunately not often together in this book but when they are in the same room, the sparks fly with heated arguments and sparring of words that Heyer is famous for.
Recommendations: To all Austen and Regency fans.
Ratings: 1.1.2  Pretty clean read with a smattering of mild profanity.


Thanks for reading!

Monday, February 15, 2010

The Masqueraders by Georgette Heyer





Genre: Romance, historical fiction
Published: Originally 1928, re-edition Feb. 1, 2010, 325 pgs.
Source: Review copy from the publisher, Sourcebooks


Review: 4/5 stars

The Masqueraders is full of love and adventure. It has a slightly different setting than the other Heyer novels I've read as this one is set around 1750, just after the failed Jacobite rebellion. Brother and sister Robin and Prudence Tremaine were part of the rebellion just as they have been part of many schemes and adventures during their lives wandering all over Europe following their father. Now they are returning to London incognito, Robin playing the part of a lady and Prudence as her gentleman brother, while they wait for their father to come for them. High adventure ensues including mistaken identity, sword-fighting, duels, falling in love, highway robbery and more.

This is a fun book with interesting characters and lots of adventure. I knew very early on who would fall in love with whom but it was a fun ride getting to that conclusion. Georgette Heyer has yet to disappoint.

Rating: 1.2.1 Includes some violence but not graphic.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Mr. Darcy's Story by Jane Aylmer



Genre: Jane Austen fan-fiction, romance
Published: 2006, 288 pgs
Review: 4/5 stars
If you're expecting any kinds of twists or turns in this novel told from Mr. Darcy's perspective, then I'm afraid you'll be disappointed. This is a very faithful account of Pride and Prejudice. I haven't read P&P for a few years so I may be mistaken but this felt the closest to the real thing of any Austen fan-fiction I've read. The story was followed faithfully and the flow and wording rang true to me. There were some instances when I thought that the A&E film version may have served as inspiration for the way Jane Alymer interpreted some of Darcy's thoughts and feelings, but overall I was impressed with the way she stayed true to the original.

Rating 1.1.1 Good, clean read.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy by Abigail Reynolds


Genre: Romance, Austen fan-fiction
Published: Jan. 2010, 288 pgs
Source: ARC from Sourcebooks
Review: 4/5 stars
Description on Goodreads:
In this sexy Jane Austen sequel, Elizabeth Bennet accepts Mr. Darcy's first marriage proposal, answering the "What if...?" question fans everywhere have pondered
" I had not known you a month before I felt that you were the last man in the world whom I could ever be prevailed on to marry."
Famous last words indeed! Elizabeth Bennet's furious response to Mr. Darcy's marriage proposal has resonated for generations of readers. But what if she had never said it? Would she have learned to recognize Mr. Darcy's admirable qualities on her own?
Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy follows Elizabeth and Darcy as they struggle to find their way through the maze of their prejudices after Elizabeth, against her better judgment, agrees to marry Darcy instead of refusing his proposal.
I should have paid attention to the "sexy" adjective used to describe this Pride and Prejudice sequel before I read it. That is a very apt description for the detailed sex scenes towards the end of this book. Having said that... I really liked this book. I am embarrassed at how quickly I devoured it soon after receiving it in the mail from Sourcebooks a couple of months ago. By the time I got to the objectionable scenes, there was no way that I could set this book aside (they are in the last quarter of the book). While I don't think Reynolds always captured Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth's true characters, her story of their marriage and struggles to find happiness with each other is compelling and quite a page-turner. Reading this book reminded me again of what a hopeless romantic I am. I am ashamed but I've decided to just be open and honest about it. :)
Rating: 5.1.1 Two detailed sex scenes; it is within a married relationship but it is detailed.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Devil's Cub by Georgette Heyer


Genre: Regency romance
Published: Originally 1932, this edition--1 Nov. 2009
320 pgs.
Review book from Sourcebooks
Review: 4.5/5 stars

Whenever I read a regency romance novel I realize again what a hopeless romantic I am. It comes as a surprise because I'm really quite a practical person, but something about the story of a reprehensible rake changing his life and habits all for the love of a sensible, intelligent girl gets me every time. I know that in real life that kind of thing is completely unrealistic. I would never believe in the real world that a promiscuous womanizer would completely change and become faithful to one woman because he finally found someone he couldn't live without. Give me that unrealistic story in the form of a regency romance, especially a Georgette Heyer novel, and I will swallow it hook, line, and sinker. It's pretty pathetic, I know, but it's my weakness.

As I began reading Devil's Cub I thought I may have found an English rogue that I wouldn't like. The Marquis of Vidal seemed too wicked and objectionable even for me. The heroine, Mary Challoner is so clever, sensible, and unassuming, however, that as she falls in love with the Marquis I can't help but do the same. It really makes no sense to me, this attraction I have for these literary men since I'm not at all attracted to "bad boys" in real life. My husband is about as straight-arrow as they come.

This latest Heyer novel made me want to pick up another immediately. It was predictable yet completely enjoyable with a fast paced story line, clever dialogue, and interesting characters.

Rating: 1.1.1 Includes some mild innuendo, mild violence, and a little language but not enough to warrant a 2 rating in my opinion.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Searching for Pemberley by Mary Lydon Simonsen


Genre: Historical fiction, romance
Published: 1 December 2009, 496 pgs.
ARC

Review: 3.5/5

Simonsen's Searching for Pemberley is not your typical Austen sequel. Set in England after World War II, Maggie is an American working in London when a sight-seeing trip to Derbyshire leads to a friendship with a couple who believe that Jane Austen based her novel, Pride and Prejudice, on real people. The story is multi-generational, includes a few different love stories, including Maggie's, and is a history lesson on both World Wars. I've read a few reviews that have called it a "leisurely" read and I think that is a perfect word for it. The story behind the people who were allegedly the inspiration for the Darcys, Bingley, and Bennets is slowly laid out as the main story about Maggie and the couple, named Jack and Beth Crowell, and their family, unfolds.

I quite enjoyed this book. I have to admit that it was pretty slow going at first and it was probably about page 100 before I started to really like it. Sometimes there seemed to be too many characters to keep track of and I'd come across someone's name and think, who is that? I enjoyed the journal entries written by Elizabeth Garrison and the letters written by William Lacey who were supposedly the real Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy. However, that part of novel was not extensive and the story mainly dealt with Maggie, her love interests and the Crowells. I thought their story was interesting and I really liked the information about the wars and conditions in England during and after the war. I learned quite a bit from that and I appreciated the obvious research that Simonsen had put into writing the book.

Overall this was a pretty good story with interesting characters. I didn't really like the direction it went with the morality/religion/pre-marital sex issues that were brought up so I wouldn't recommend this book for teenagers. It definitely has adult themes.

Rating: 3.1.3 This book contains many sexual situations but not explicit and graphic. Also contains plenty of barnyard language (I didn't think it was excessive, though).

Monday, November 16, 2009

Willoughby's Return by Jane Odiwe


Genre: Romance
Published: Nov. 2009, 352 pgs.
ARC
Review: 3.5/5 stars

Most Jane Austen "sequels" that I've ever seen are about Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy. Willoughby's Return: A Tale of Almost Irresistable Temptation continues the story of Marianne and Colonel Brandon. As the title suggests, Willoughby comes back to the neighborhood and stirs up a little mischief for Marianne. The story is predictable and a little cliched at times but I enjoyed it. I wish that Eleanor had played a bigger part in the book but it was fun to get to know Margaret and Marianne a little more (as seen through the eyes of Jane Odiwe). Marianne has matured and grown a little more sensible but she is still very much the old romantic Marianne. If you like Jane Austen sequels, this one would be a fun choice.

Reading this story about Marianne and wishing that there was more about Eleanor made me wonder about what other people think about these characters. When I read or watch Sense and Sensibility, I'm all about Eleanor and Edward. Marianne is just a side story that I don't care about very much. She kind of bugs me, to be honest, but I love everything about Eleanor. What do you think about Marianne and Eleanor?


Rating: 1.1.1 Very clean read

Saturday, October 17, 2009

The Actor and the Housewife by Shannon Hale


Category: Fiction
Published: 2009, 352 pages
Review: 4.5/5
I liked this book way more than I expected to. I had read a few reviews that made me think that I wouldn't like it. It might have been for that very reason that I was so pleasantly surprised. I laughed out loud so many times that my husband said, "I'm going to have to read that book!" He wasn't around though when it made me cry like a baby. The story is completely implausible but it still highly entertained me. It also made me think about marriage, motherhood, friendship, service, and love. This may sound stupid, but this book made me want to be a better mother and wife. It's a little cheesy and cliched at times but I didn't mind because most of the time I loved it.
Rating: 2.1.2 There are some innuendos and "barnyard" language.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Precious Bane by Mary Webb



Category: Historical romance, classic
Published: 1924
Review: 5/5 stars

I believe that Precious Bane by Mary Webb may be the best kept secret in the world of literature. It could be the most beautiful book I have ever read. I think it is a love story that should be remembered and loved by generations but instead is not very widely known. This may be because it is not an easy book to read. The book is written in the voice of Prue Sarn, a country girl living in Shropshire, England around 1820. She tells the story in dialect and it is not easy to understand. I think I was pretty lost for the first couple of chapters until I started getting used to the language. I had to look up several words and I found that looking them up online was easier because often times the words were spelled differently than they are now or they were obsolete words that aren't used anymore. A regular dictionary wasn't much help in those cases. It didn't take too long though to get caught up in this wonderful story.

Most books I've read that are set during this time period are mainly about the upper-class people or the very poor. Precious Bane is about the working class people, the farmers mostly and other townsfolk and I learned more about their traditions and superstitions. These things play a big role in the story.

I've purposely not said much about the storyline because I think it's best to just let it unfold to the reader. It is not easy reading but I believe anyone who puts in the effort to read this wonderful book will be richly rewarded.

Rating: 2.2.1 There are not any descriptions of sex but there is a little sexual content. There is also some violence including cruelty to animals.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale

Category: YA, fantasy, romance
Published: 2007
Review: 4/5 stars
After I finished reading this book I felt stupid when I read the book description on the inside of the jacket cover. It describes the book as a retelling of a Grimms fairy tale "reimagined and reset on the central Asian steppes." Duh! I had spent the first chapters imagining the characters as blond-haired and blue eyed. Then even when there were some sketches of people who looked Asian I had a hard time changing what was in my head. But I should have known from the beginning when it referred to the leaders of the people with the title of Khan that this story was set somewhere like Mongolia long ago. It also calls some areas of the land "the steppes." I think I would have enjoyed this book a little more if I'd had the right pictures in my mind.
I know a lot of people have loved this book and although I enjoyed it a lot, I didn't love it. I think I expected too much because I had heard so many great things about it. I do recommend it but it didn't grab me like I wanted it to.
Rating: 2.2.1 There were a couple of places with nudity that I thought were a little weird. Maybe I'm such a prude that I can't even read about nudity without feeling a little uncomfortable.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Nights in Rodanthe by Nicholas Sparks


Category: Romance
Published: 2004
Audiobook
Review: 3.5/5
I enjoyed this audiobook. It was my first Nicholas Sparks novel and it was pretty much what I expected--fluffy, romantic, kind of sad, a bit contrived--but over all it was an enjoyable read. I will probably read another Sparks book when I'm in the mood for this sort of thing again.
Rating: 2.1.2 This is a guess because I can't remember the details well. There is unmarried sex but it is only referred to, not described, as I recall. There was probably some profanity but nothing very strong.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier



Category: Modern classic, romance, suspense
Published: 1938, 380 pgs.
Review: 4/5 stars


Our book club read Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier back in October with the idea that it was a good one for Halloween. Although it's not especially creepy, there is a sinister feeling to the book. I guess that's why Alfred Hitchcock turned it into a movie. I had tried to read this book when I was a senior in high school. It was an assigned book for my English class and most of the class was struggling to finish it. The night before the test, everyone came to my house and we watched the old Hitchcock version in hopes of getting enough out of it to pass the test. I'm from a really small town and my English teacher's house was just down the block and around the corner. I have a sneaky suspicion that she knew what we were doing. I can't remember what happened with that test. I think I did alright thanks to the movie.

So, this time around, I really read it. And I did enjoy it. I'm not going to say anything about it because if you haven't read and you want to someday, it's better if you don't know anything about it. There is one quote that I just love. I think I can share it without giving anything away.

I am glad it cannot happen twice, the fever of first love. For it is a fever, and a burden, too, whatever the poets may say. They are not brave, the days when we are twenty-one. They are full of little cowardices, little fears without foundation, and one is so easily bruised, so swiftly wounded, one falls to the first barbed word. To-day, wrapped in the complacent armour of approaching middle age, the infinitesimal pricks of day by day brush one but lightly and are soon forgotten, but then--how a careless word would linger, becoming a fiery stigma, and how a look, a glance over a shoulder, branded themselves as things eternal. A denial heralded the thrice crowing of a cock, and an insincerity was like the kiss of Judas. The adult mind can lie with untroubled conscience and a gay composure, but in those days even a small deception scoured the tongue, lashing one against the stake itself.

I can completely identify with that feeling and I think it is so beautifully written. Fun read.

Rating: 1.2.2 (I can't remember exactly what is in this book. There may be a little light profanity and a little violence, thus the 2 ratings.)

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Brief Gaudy Hour by Margaret Campbell Barnes



Rating: 2.2.2
Category: Romance, historical fiction
Published: 1949, 378 pages
Review:
I received Brief Gaudy Hour as a review book from Sourcebooks a while ago and it took me a long time to read it. If it hadn't been a review book I may have abandoned it. I'm not sure exactly why I couldn't get into it at first. It's written well, and although I don't know a lot about the Tudor time period, I understand that Margaret Campbell Barnes was a meticulous researcher, so I could be pretty certain of the validity of this account of Anne Boleyn. I think my problem with the book initially was that I didn't really care for Anne Boleyn and I certainly didn't like Henry Tudor (King Henry VIII). Anne Boleyn was too ambitious and conniving and I didn't like her for much of the book. King Henry was a completely immoral, arrogant jerk in my opinion and it was okay for him to be that way because he was King. That drove me crazy. You are probably wondering, why 4 stars? Well, since it was a review book and I had to finish it, I did, and in the end I liked it a lot. I came to appreciate Anne Boleyn in the end and was moved to tears by her horrible fate. Even though I knew how the story would end, it was still quite suspenseful in parts. I would recommend this book if the Tudor time period interests you or if you want to learn more about it. I haven't read any of Phillippa Gregory's novels but if you have read those and like them I would say that you should definitely read Brief Gaudy Hour .

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

The Host by Stephenie Myer




Rating: 2.3.2
Category: Sci-Fi, Romance
Review: 4.5/5
Earth has been invaded. Parasite like aliens have taken over humans' bodies, not just a few, but almost the entire population. I really liked this book. I liked it quite a bit better than the vampires. It reminded me of aspects of Star Trek: The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine as well as Stargate: SG-1, and that is really cool to me. I don't know if everyone will like the sci-fi nature of this book but I think that most people can still appreciate the characters and their lives. Stephenie Myer seems to have a thing for love triangles because this book has one too. It doesn't really matter because she is a great storyteller and I didn't care that she used the same plot device as she did in the Twilight Series. I've heard some people say that the first hundred pages were pretty slow and hard to get through, but I was hooked from the first page. My husband read it and liked it too. It is a little repetitive at times and it's not perfect but I give it a big thumbs up.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

The Darcys and the Bingleys by Marsha Altman



Rating: 2.2.2
Category: Historical, Romance

Review: 3.5/5

In The Darcys and the Bingleys, Marsha Altman has picked up where Jane Austen left off in Pride and Prejudice. The book is divided into two parts, Book I and Book II. The first book starts a week or so before Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth, and Mr. Bingley and Jane are to be married. Mr. Bingley is nervous about the wedding night and goes to Mr. Darcy for advice (and we come to find out that Darcy is more experienced with women than Mr. Bingley is). Mr. Darcy comes to Mr. Bingley's aid by giving him a book. Now, I looked into this a little (I looked at Wikipedia, so take this information for what it's worth) and it doesn't seem like the part about this book is historically accurate. The book does exist but it wasn't available in English for quite some time after this story takes place. I don't really blame the author too much for this fact, though, of course, she could have been more careful. The introduction of this book does make for an interesting storyline and I'll grant her a little poetic license. Despite the fact that the first part of the book is about ...the "marriage bed," shall we say, there is no graphic material and I would classify it as "clean". The second half of the book, Book II, deals with Caroline Bingley and a love interest for her. Even snobs can find love. :)

So, what did I think of this book? It was an enjoyable read--it was funny in parts and kept me turning the pages. As a sequel to P&P, I can't really say that it was great. If you are a real Jane Austen purist and aficionado, then this book would probably drive you crazy. But for those who really like the characters and don't mind speculating a little about what might have happened after the book ends, this could be a really fun read. Altman tells several stories, including flashbacks, that lead to better understanding of the friendship between Darcy and Bingley. New characters are also introduced that add to the story. For me, I liked the book as long as I wasn't too loyal to my own ideas of what the characters are "supposed to" act like or be. This book is Marsha Altman's idea of who Mr. Darcy is, and it is interesting to read, but that doesn't make him my Mr. Darcy.

I had the opportunity to ask the author a few questions, that I will list below. I have to say that her answers made me like the book more. They made me like her, too. She seems funny and down to earth and I like that. Without further ado, here is our interview:

Me: Ms. Altman, thank you for taking the time to answer a few questions about your new book, The Darcys and the Bingleys. First of all, I am so curious about the dedication in your book. It reads: To the cheetah kid, You don't know who you are, and I don't remember your name, but thanks for the eighteen years of inspiration. I would love to hear the story behind that. Would you mind sharing?
Marsha: Not at all. When I was in third grade, we had a library class where the librarian generally made some attempt to get us to take out books. One day she held up a one-page story with a picture at the bottom someone in my class had a written and went on and on about how he’d written a “book” about a cheetah. I thought, “I can write a longer book than that!” and started writing my first book, which was 24 pages of nonsense about an alien who came to earth. And that’s how I started writing. I wanted to beat that kid. It took 18 years but I think I did it. I don’t remember who he is so maybe he’s a great author now. I hope I wasn’t in school with Michael Chabon and forgot or something.


Me: When did you read Pride and Prejudice for the first time?
Marsha: High school, AP English. It was the only novel we read the entire year that I genuinely enjoyed. Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying I liked, but didn’t enjoy. Woolf’s To the Lighthouse I hated with a fiery passion that has never been matched. There were some others that don’t come to mind, but Pride and Prejudice we were all crazy about, the women in the class at least. The guys were just utterly confused as to why we were so into it. I’d never seen a gender division like that over a book before. I didn’t read Austen for a long time after that – it remained vaguely associated with the emotional trauma that is the American high school experience until I saw the miniseries while on a vacation, years later.

Me: I read Amanda Grange's Mr. Darcy's Diary last year but this is the first continuation of Pride and Prejudice that I've ever read. I still can't quite decide how I feel about the whole concept of adding on to what is already such a perfect novel. What made you decide to write this book?
Marsha: There seem to be three types of people: People who won’t touch sequels/fanfic because Austen is sacred, people who read and enjoy sequels/fanfic because they would do anything to spend a little bit more time with the characters, and people who generally disapprove of sequels but for some reason buy and read them anyway, mainly to have an argument against them it seems.
The inherent problem is that nobody really wants their notion of who the characters are altered, but the whole idea of a sequel (or a diary, or rewrite) is to do precisely that. It’s impossible to do otherwise. It’s a bit like Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle and the observer effect: You change the outcome by measuring it. If you add a single line about Darcy, you’re probably going to contradict someone’s view of Darcy based on their interpretation of
Pride and Prejudice (“Darcy would never go down stairs!”).
I started writing because I wanted to work with the characters, especially Bingley. There’s so much material there, implied by his friendship to Darcy, and yet very few sequels or rewrites give him any ink at all. By presenting my Darcy and my Bingley, I risk running into people who disagree – sometimes rightfully so – about my interpretation, but if that bothered me I wouldn’t have tried to publish an Austen sequel. It’s my hope that the interpretation is at the very least amusing and worth the money they paid for the book.

Me: Have you read a lot of other books that have continued the story of Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth? Do you recommend any?
Marsha: I would say I’ve read them all, but that’s not actually true. Rebecca Ann Collins has 10 books and I never managed to get the Australian versions, so I have to wait for Sourcebooks to release them all. There’s also another retelling by Darcy that’s floating around in out-of-print land (not the one by Slayer, Aylmer, Grange, Street, Aiden, Jeffers or Fasman. There’s another one out there somewhere). And of course I have a few that I was just never able to get through but I do technically own.
Because I own so many and have read so much, I tend to award more points to creativity and ingenuity than adherence to traditional Austen-esque storytelling, which is why I’m such a Linda Berdoll fan. Yes, the book had an obscene amount of sex. It also had funny dialogue, an interesting Wickham plotline, and she could make the most mundane details of running Pemberley (usually a pretty boring topic, actually) interesting. Isabel Moffet is another underrated author. She needs a good editor, but she’s the only one who’s really done an interesting subplot with Mr. Bennet. And Carrie Bebris has her cozy mysteries, which are likeable with the subtle details even if you’re not a fan of Elizabeth having magic powers.

Me: What is your response to those who are critical of these kinds of sequels?
Marsha: …You’re not obligated to read them? I’m surprised people are more up-in-arms about trampling on Austen’s fiction than former smut writer Anne Rice writing Jesus fan fiction.

Me: What kind of research did you do to make this book as authentic as possible?
Marsha: I did go to England and promptly got really sick with whatever virus my dad had, and in a feverish haze saw Chawton, Winchester, and Chatsworth. Aside from that it’s been a lot of books – history, books about interpreting history, and some forays into Regency fiction, though I can really take very little of it at a time. People have a certain conception of the Regency – usually based on Austen’s fiction – that is not necessarily accurate. Polite Society was more of an ideal than an actuality. When choosing between history and Regency fiction traditional, I generally went with history.

Me: Do you plan to write more books and make this the first of a series? Is there a second book in the works?
Marsha: Books 2 and 3 are written and under revision. Wikipedia led me massively astray the first time around, which is especially bad because book 2 ventures out into Europe and book 3 into Asia (briefly). The story is planned out through ten books. Then they all nearly die of exhaustion of having been put through the gamut of ten books. I’m not very easy on my characters.

Me: I'm always curious about authors' reading habits. What have you read lately and what did you think?
Marsha: This is where I’m supposed to lie and say I have all of the great classics of literature well-thumbed and dog-eared on my desk, right? And I carry my leather-bound edition of Austen’s six novels everywhere I go?
Remember that TV show Forever Knight? About a vampire cop in Toronto? No? Well, they wrote some tie-in novels and I’m just finishing off the third. It’s definitely better than the first two. Before I got into those I was reading
Decency and Disorder: 1789-1837 by Ben Wilson, a nice find while I was in England. I’m generally reading something along those lines. Writing historical fiction leaves very little time for reading actual fiction. Instead you’re reading some that ends the title with a time period specified in dates. I think the next on the list is Religion and Revolution in France: 1780-1804. Oh, and I’m always reading the Mishnah, a second-century code of very, very boring Jewish law. When my grandfather died I said I would read it 40 times, and I’m on 18 ½ or so. I have to reach 20 by November to be on schedule, so if something shows up in my writing about how touching the metal ring on a tent that held a corpse makes a priest unclean to eat the Temple fruit offering for twenty-four hours makes it into my Pride and Prejudice stuff, that’s why. Also the priest might be a cop who is also a vampire.

Me: Thanks again for taking the time to answer my questions. I wish you great success with your debut novel.
Marsha: Thank you for reading and reviewing.
Doesn't she sound great? I used her first name in the interview above because she feels like a friend now. I hope that's okay with her. If any of you get a chance to read this book, I'd love to hear what you think.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Breaking Dawn by Stephenie Meyer


Rating: 3.2.2
Recommended audience: Mature teen to adult
Category: YA, fantasy, romance

Review: 4/5

First off, let me say that I really liked this book. It was engrossing, unpredictable (to me, anyway), and a really fun ride. I want to be very careful about spoilers so I'm going to try to not go into too much detail, but I do want to talk a little about some of the problems I had with this book without giving too much away. As a married woman, I can read this book without blushing and I can understand that these relationships are fictional and they don't resemble real relationships in the real world. That may seem very obvious but when I think back to myself as a teenager, I realize that I wasn't always able to make that connection. If you had asked me about it, I would have responded that I was very mature for my age and of course I understood that vampires are not real and that human relationships are not like those of superhuman, immortal vampires. (Duh!) In reality though, I think my perceptions of life and relationships were greatly influenced by the books that I read and, unfortunately, not always in a good way. I'm just a little concerned about the millions of teenage girls that are reading these highly entertaining books. Do they understand that they can't fall asleep every night in their shirtless boyfriend's arms without getting into trouble? Do they understand that they can love someone without being completely obsessed with them? Do they understand that's it's not right to string along a male best friend when you are engaged to another man? Anyway, there's more but I don't want to get into that because it would give away part of the plot, but you probably get my drift. I wouldn't say that teens shouldn't read this, but I think a good conversation about it with a parent is definitely a good idea.

Again, with all that being said, I thought this was a good book. It may be that I'm taking it all way too seriously and my concerns are really not a big deal. What do you think?

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Friday's Child by Georgette Heyer




Rating: 1.1.1

Recommended audience: Teen to adult

Category: Romance, historical, regency

Review: 4/5

Georgette Heyer was an amazing writer. This is the third of her many books that I've read and I continue to be impressed with her. She really did her research about the Regency time period in England and it shows in her books. The other two Heyer novels I've read were both about spinsters finding love, while this one is about a very young girl and her foray into society, her many missteps, and of course, falling in love. Though there is not laugh-out-loud kind of humour, I think this book is very funny. The characters are interesting, likable, and believable and the dialogue between them is a high point of the book. I recommend Friday's Child to anyone who wishes that Jane Austen had written more books.