Guest Post by Marion Grace Woolley on the Music of the Night + Giveaway

those rosy hours at mazandaran by marion grace woolleyToday’s guest post is by author Marion Grace Woolley. Her new book, Those Rosy Hours at Mazandaran, is the subject of today’s review. Because the book is a chilling imagining of the life of Erik from the Phantom of the Opera before he went to Paris, music plays an important part of the story. Read on…

On That Note
by Marion Grace Woolley

“[Music is] the purest of all architecture. Buildings are naught but clay and mud, which time eventually reduces them to once again. Scores, now they are designed of an altogether higher material. The universe itself is built on the chords and harmonies of gods.”

When you set out to write the early life of one of literature’s great musical geniuses, as I did in Those Rosy Hours at Mazandaran, you’ve got to learn to strike the right chord.

In 1850s Northern Iran, my two main characters, Afsar and Eirik, share many things in common, except that Afsar has little musical ability, whereas Eirik has mastered music itself.

Part of my researching whilst creating the world of Afsar’s Mazandaran was to look into the instruments of traditional Persian music. Here, I’d like to introduce you to a few of them, and to give you a taste of what they sound like.

250px-79-tone_Kanun_on_the_couchQanun: This is the instrument that Afsar tries to play, with little success. It is a wooden board of strings, played throughout the Middle East and Central Asia, similar to the European zither. It is most commonly plucked by hand, using pointy metal rings on the index fingers, which act as plectrums. You can listen to a sample here.

Chang_(instrument)Chang: Eirik has a harp in his music room in Tehran, which Afsar mistakes for a Persian chang, or Angel Harp.  It is said to have been a favoured instrument of the Shahs of the earlier Sasanian dynasty. There is an evocative example here, which claims that the instrument is around 4,000 years old and originated in Mesopotamia.

Tonbak: This provides the rythm for Persian music. The Tonbak is a wooden drum stretched with sheep or goatskin. Rather than simply hitting the instrument with the flat of their hands, musicians tend to drum their fingers against it, even clicking them, as in this example.

Doudouk_armenienDuduk: Behrang and Emad, the Shah’s clowns in my story, are said to torture this instrument. It is a reed tube, similar to a clarinet, originating from neighbouring Armenia to the north of Mazandaran. It has a very distinctive sound, used to great effect by Hans Zimmer and renowned duduk player Djivan Gasparyan in The Gladiator soundtrack.

One of the nicest surprises that has come through publishing Those Rosy Hours at Mazandaran is that it has been turned into an audiobook. Whilst writing the novel, I included two traditional lullabies, one French and one Persian. Emma Newman, the narrator of the audiobook, took the wonderful decision to sing these songs, and we had them sung by native speakers so that she could learn to pronounce them correctly. I will never forget hearing Nadia Tariqi, our Iranian translator, sing it for the first time. It was only a short couple of lines, but the sound of her singing was instantly evocative in ways that simply reading the words could never be.

It seems strange to say, but music and sound have had such a huge part to play between the pages of this novel.

 

marion grace woolleyAbout Marion Grace Woolley
Marion Grace Woolley is the author of three previous novels and a collection of short stories. In 2009, she was shortlisted for the Luke Bitmead Bursary for New Writers. She balances her creative impulses with a career in International Development; she has worked and traveled across Africa, Australia, Armenia, and a few other places beginning with ‘A’. She is an associate member of the Society of Authors, and is currently at work on her fifth novel.
Follow Marion on Twitter @AuthorMGW

~~~~~~GIVEAWAY~~~~~~

The author is giving away a copy of Those Rosy Hours at Mazandaran to one lucky winner. This giveaway is International!
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Review: Those Rosy Hours at Mazandaran by Marion Grace Woolley

those rosy hours at mazandaran by marion grace woolleyFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genre: Gothic horror
Length: 288 pages
Publisher: Ghostwoods Books
Date Released: February 14, 2015
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

A young woman confronts her own dark desires, and finds her match in a masked conjurer turned assassin.

Inspired by Gaston Leroux’s The Phantom of the Opera, Marion Grace Woolley takes us on forbidden adventures through a time that has been written out of history books.

“Those days are buried beneath the mists of time. I was the first, you see. The very first daughter. There would be many like me to come. Svelte little figures, each with saffron skin and wide, dark eyes. Every one possessing a voice like honey, able to twist the santur strings of our father’s heart.”

It begins with a rumour, an exciting whisper. Anything to break the tedium of the harem for the Shah’s eldest daughter. People speak of a man with a face so vile it would make a hangman faint, but a voice as sweet as an angel’s kiss. A master of illusion and stealth. A masked performer, known only as Vachon.

For once, the truth will outshine the tales.

On her birthday the Shah gifts his eldest daughter Afsar a circus. With it comes a man who will change everything.

My Review:

This is a book that teases so many possibilities, but leaves the reader wondering which, if any, might possibly be true. Because it mixes fictional legend with snippets of history, all viewed through the lens of one girl’s brief and bloody life.

And it might be intended as a prequel for The Phantom of the Opera. Or it might all be a dream of history. You’ll still be wondering at the end.

The story is told through the eyes of Afsar, the oldest daughter of Shah Nasser-al-Din of the Persian Empire in the mid-1800’s. Or is she? For that matter, is he? One of the many mysteries is the identity of the Shah and the time period in which this story takes place. Everything is from Afsar’s point of view, what she sees, what she knows. Her perspective is very Persian-centric, court-centric, and child-centric. At the beginning of the story she is ten, and knows little of the outside world.

The way she learns is very skewed, but then, so is Afsar. She is a child of extreme privilege in a poor country, and is both indulged and restricted at the same time.

She eventually learns that little she believed is strictly true. But the truth about herself is equally obscured. While she is not herself a member of her father’s harem, she is also bound by many of its rules on female behavior, as well as rules for the family of the Shah.

When her father brings her a circus for her birthday, she discovers that the world is both wider and stranger than she has ever imagined. She befriends, or perhaps is sought by, the circus’ master juggler, a young Frenchman known only as Vachon. He has become a juggler, among other things, as a way of using his talents rather than being known for his other salient characteristic – Vachon has the damaged face of a human skeleton. He may be Erik, the Phantom of the Paris Opera, as a very young man.

We guess, when the story ends. But we never know.

Vachon teaches Afsar many things, including the art of using a thrown lasso to pluck items out of the air, and how to drop it around the throat of someone she wants to kill. Afsar discovers that she enjoys the sight of blood and the thrill of killing. She has an indulged child’s penchant for killing those who anger her, and those who she deems are too lowly to be missed. She also kills her father’s political and particularly religious enemies.

But her first kill is out of childish jealousy. Vachon has a friend, and Afsar cannot bear it. So she kills his friend and he, in turn, kills hers. The spiral of death that ensues from that one childishly destructive act binds them together for the rest of her life, as they descend into more elaborate death games, and Vachon creates even more bizarre traps and puzzle-boxes in which to carry them out.

Vachon also changes his name to match one of Afsar’s early victims. He becomes Eirik. The leap from Eirik to Erik is meant to be considered, especially after the end of the story.

Afsar’s bloody trail eventually catches up to her. In irony, it happens not because of crimes she actually committed, but out of revenge for one of her earliest victims. And because she has been so self-indulgent as to think that the rules of the court do not apply to her, and that she will not pay if she breaks them.

But then, much of what Afsar believes of herself and the world around her turns out not to quite be true. It may not even be her story. The reader is left wondering. With a slight shudder of horror.

Escape Rating B: This story is very gothically creepy. It is certainly out of the tradition of children who “go bad” and commit horrific acts without thinking of the consequences to themselves because they are too young to realize that they are not above those consequences, or that they cannot get past them.

Shah Nasser-al Din, 1854
Shah Nasser-al Din, 1854

Afsar believes she is the daughter of the Shah. She isn’t quite old enough, or informed enough, to do the math that would tell her a 22-year-old Shah could not be the father of her ten-year-old self.

Afsar is a mystery to herself and those around her. Keeping herself separate from the other women in the court, thinking herself above them, makes her enemies that eventually bring her down.

Her relationship with Vachon (later Eirik) is part of that separateness. She discovers that she loves to kill. She loves the sight of the blood pooling around her victim. Eirik, equally as lonely as Afsar, shows her both the world outside the palace, and more subtleties in the art of murder.

They come to love each other because they are both equally dark and equally empty. It is both inevitable and ultimately destructive.

The time period in which this story is set is not connected to the wider world within the story itself. Afsar’s frame of reference is completely insular. It is only through comparing events and names to the articles on Persian history in wikipedia that one is able to determine when this story is supposed to take place. I will admit that this drove me a little crazy as I read it, but it does add to the dream-like (or nightmare-like) atmosphere of the story.

Afsar does not see any of her actions as wrong. She knows that she must conceal them, because other people will, but she always feels justified. Or she simply doesn’t care. It adds to the subtle feeling of horror.

The ending, like much of the book, also carries an air of shivering tease. Who was Afsar? Was there an Afsar? How could she be narrating this story? Does Eirik later become the Erik who haunts the Paris Opera? We guess, but we never know.

This story carries an element of seeing something horrible out of the corner of your eye, just like one of Eirik’s puzzle-box palaces. Once begun, I had to see how this one ends, but it definitely creeped me out more than a bit. If that’s your cup of tea, you’ll enjoy the taste of this story. I’ll be over in the corner, shivering.

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***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: Escape Velocity by Jess Anastasi

escape velocity by jess anastasiFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: paperback, ebook
Genre: science fiction romance
Series: Valiant Knox #1
Length: 192 pages
Publisher: Entangled Select Otherworld
Date Released: February 2, 2015
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, KoboAll Romance

Rebuilding his life. And rediscovering love… Ilari, Brannon System, 2436

At first, Dr. Sacha Dalton is simply curious about the prisoner of war admitted to her med-lab…until she sees who it is. For Commander Kai Yang—the commander of the battleship Valiant Knox—has long been thought dead. Killed in action. But after almost a year and half, he’s returned home. Returned to her.Kai is recovering from his ordeal and under the watchful care of Sacha, his childhood friend and the widow of his best friend. Only now, their friendship has grown and deepened into something far deeper, and far more complicated. Yet as Kai’s body recovers, his psyche remains broken. How could he ever be the man he was, and the man Sacha deserves? But an intergalactic war has a way of forcing a man to be the hero he was always meant to be…

My Review:

Before I start critiquing, let me say at the beginning that I had a terrific time aboard the Valiant Knox in Escape Velocity. But because this is science fiction romance, I have a few things that are niggling at me.

The plot of Escape Velocity is relatively straightforward. One of the doctors aboard the space ship Valiant Knox has had the universe’s worst year and a half. Her best friend was declared KIA and her husband was very definitely killed in action.

That best friend, Commander Kai Yang, has had a time equally as bad. He was NOT killed in action. He was captured by the enemy and kept prisoner in their “re-education center”. The CSS are fundamentalists, and not just when it comes to technology. They want to step back from the high-tech universe and go back to their roots, but they don’t seem to care how many spaceships they have to steal along the way in order to fight their more technologically advanced enemy.

The CSS soldiers are real fanatics who don’t seem to care if they die to further their cause, which wasn’t spelled out nearly well enough for me. They’re not winning, but they are not losing either. It’s always difficult to fight an enemy who does not give a damn about his own life as long as he can take you with him. Think suicide bombers on steroids. Or at least the bombs are on steroids.

Kai escapes from prison in a rather grisly, but totally necessary, way. It’s gut-wrenching and heart-rending and totally makes you feel for his pain and his trauma. Which is really important for the rest of the story.

Kai escapes the prison grounds and is rescued by a patrol ship, only to reach the Valiant Knox, a ship he once commanded, to discover that everyone believes he was dead, and that there have been a whole lot of changes while he was gone. Especially changes to himself. Just because he physically escaped that prison does not mean that he has escaped psychologically.

He doesn’t even want to think the phrase “PTSD”, but it keeps staring him in the face and derailing his attempts to return to his old life.

His best friend, Dr. Sacha Dalton, is going through a turmoil of her own. She is absolutely overjoyed to have Kai back, but is still emotionally scraped raw by his presumed death followed by the loss of her husband. When Kai returns, she goes on an emotional rollercoaster of her own.

Kai turns to her, not just as the only friend and trustworthy face, but also as the woman he dreamed of in his cell. Thinking of returning to Sacha was one of the things that kept him alive. But he remembered her as married. Now that she is a widow, Kai is able to let a lot of feelings into the light of day that he would have kept bottled up if Sacha’s husband Elliot had still been alive.

Sacha comes back to life, herself. But starting a romantic relationship with Kai is the right kind of wrong. As a doctor, she knows that Kai needs to focus on his own recovery. He can continue to avoid dealing with his PTSD by getting into a relationship. Sacha knows better but can’t resist, then goes through all kinds of guilt for giving in to emotions that she has been burying since long before Kai was captured.

They both suffer from a massive amount of misunderstandammit as Sacha lets her doctor side get in the way of really listening to what Kai is saying. Not just about their relationship, but about a possible CSS infiltrator he has seen aboard the Valiant Knox.

Sacha thinks his paranoia is just another facet of his PTSD. It takes her almost too long to realise that Kai is absolutely right – both about the infiltrator and about their relationship.

Escape Rating B+: I enjoyed the hell out of this. However, as I read it I couldn’t decide whether this was truly SFR, or whether it was a contemporary military romance cloaked in SFR trappings. It was an excellent military romance about PTSD sufferers and the beginnings of their recovery, but it felt like it could have been contemporary without too many changes. The SFR setting was good, but it didn’t feel integral to the plot. Which makes this a good book for military romance fans to dip their toes into SFR.

I didn’t get enough of a picture of the CSS to figure out exactly what they stood for. They felt like cardboard fundamentalist fanatics of the crazy cult school. Also, the stealing of spaceships was absolutely counter to what they were supposed to believe, and yet they knew how to not just pilot them, but conduct space battles with them to pretty good effect. Those two things felt mutually exclusive, and I need more on what they believe and how the war got to this point.

Where the SF really shone was in the setting. The Valiant Knox was a city in a space ship. It reminded me more than a bit of the Enterprise D and E in Star Trek: The Next Generation, particularly if Ten Forward was transformed into a whole deck of commercial and leisure outlets. Or maybe a cleaned up version of Battlestar Galactica. Or possibly even a Babylon 5 that moved. Kai’s position and the straightening out thereof fit really well into an Starfleet-type bureaucratic framework.

The centerpiece of the story is the relationship between Kai and Sacha. They both have a metric ton of baggage and it gets in the way both of their relationship and Kai’s recovery. Which it probably should. Kai’s PTSD is something he has to learn to manage but will never get over. He isn’t the man he was before he was captured, so he has to figure out who he is now and learn to deal with that. Sacha never really grieved for either Kai or her late husband. She’s numbed herself with work. Kai’s return forces her to come back to life, and just like with a limb that has fallen asleep, the pins and needles are often painful. She has to decide whether she is Kai’s doctor or his friend and lover. As she bounces between those two emotional states, she almost kills their entire relationship.

While the attack by the CSS forces everyone to get their heads out of their asses and face the real threat, I wish that there hadn’t been an accidental pregnancy involved. It felt a bit too deus ex machina as far as fixing their relationship was concerned. I also question whether a military organization would put Kai back in command so easily, considering the way his PTSD manifests. If they are that desperate for experienced commanders, there is way more wrong with the war effort than we have seen so far. And I want to see it.

So I can’t wait for the next book in this series, Damage Control. I hope that it answers my unanswered questions.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: The Homecoming by Robyn Carr

homecoming by robyn carrFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: paperback, ebook, audiobook, large print
Genre: contemporary romance
Series: Thunder Point #6
Length: 352 pages
Publisher: Harlequin MIRA
Date Released: August 26, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

At the age of nineteen, Seth Sileski had everything. A superb athlete and scholar, handsome and popular, he was the pride of Thunder Point. Destined for greatness, he lost it all in a terrible accident that put an end to his professional football career when it had barely begun. The people in his hometown have never forgotten what might have been.

Seth has come to terms with the turns his life has taken. But now he’s been presented with an opportunity to return home and show his father—and the people of Thunder Point—he’s become a better, humbler version of his former self.

Winning over his father isn’t the only challenge. Seth must also find a way to convince his childhood neighbor and best friend, Iris McKinley, to forgive him for breaking her heart. With his homecoming, will Seth be able to convince the town, his family and especially Iris that he’s finally ready to be the man who will make them all proud?

My Review:

I ended up reading this very late one night last week. I had just finished the book for Friday’s review at The Book Pushers and I really wanted something that would be lighter and have a happy ending. (That particular book was compelling but exceedingly dark, grim and twisted, and turned out to be not my cuppa). So I wanted to read about mostly good people who fix something in their world and find their happiness.

Robyn Carr’s Thunder Point series has always delivered, and The Homecoming was no exception – thank goodness!

one wish by robyn carrI have reviewed the entire Thunder Point series so far, and next week I’ll finally be caught up to One Wish. But first, we have The Homecoming.

The one word titles for this series (so far) have always encompassed a facet of the main character and/or the plot. In this case, it is Seth’s Sileski’s homecoming. In high school, Seth was a star football player, and everyone expected him to have a stellar career in the pros. He was even drafted while still in college, and signed with the Seattle Seahawks. Then tragedy struck, in the form of testosterone poisoning and a career- ending car accident. Seth was going 80 in a 50 zone in his new Ferrari and t-boned a middle-aged man who ran a stop sign, driving while asleep from working overtime on a second-shift.

Seth’s career was over. The damage from the accident left him with a shattered leg. Although many surgeries and extensive rehab later, he was able to walk again, football was out of the question. Still, Seth was lucky. Oscar, the driver he hit, was left a quadriplegic, with a wife and children still to support, and no hope of ever working again.

Unbeknownst to everyone, Seth gave the remainder of his signing bonus to Oscar and his family, even though Seth won the civil suit. He was young and in comparatively better shape. He still had options. Oscar didn’t.

Seth took those options and finished his education in law enforcement. Then he had to apply, and apply, and apply for a job in the Sheriff’s Department. While he passed the physical every time, his limp made the Department nervous about his ability to chase down criminals. Eventually, they gave into his persistence, and signed him on as a Deputy. They were never sorry, and Seth found his calling.

Thew Newcomer by Robyn CarrA calling which has finally brought him back home to Thunder Point. Sheriff “Mac” McClain has been promoted to Lieutenant and transferred to the central office in Coquille. (Mac and Gina’s story is told in The Newcomer, reviewed here). Thunder Point needs a new Deputy Sheriff to run the substation, and Seth wants to come home. He wants to try to make peace with his father before its too late. And he wants to re-connect with the girl who got away. He just doesn’t know that he threw her away, and she still hasn’t forgiven him.

Iris and Seth were best friends from the age of 4 to the age of 17. There was only one thing wrong with that friendship – Iris fell in love with Seth, and Seth took her for granted and used her as a sounding board whenever he had problems with a girlfriend. Iris thought friendship was all she could get, until one night she dragged an extremely drunk Seth out of a party, and he cried on her shoulder because his girlfriend had cheated on him and they had broken up. In his drunken state, Seth never remembered that he invited Iris to the prom, and that they had taken each other’s mutual virginity.

Iris had had enough. For one weekend, she was over the moon with happiness – then Seth crushed her without a second thought. He blacked out most of the events of that night. Iris never forgot.

This reader is grateful that the author did not go the “secret baby” route. There were no physical consequences to that night, only emotional ones.

Now that Seth is back in town for good, he wants to figure out where his relationship with Iris went so horribly wrong, so that he can get things back on track. But he doesn’t want to be just best friends anymore. Iris is the one woman he has never been able to forget, and this time, he wants a chance at forever.

He just doesn’t know how much crow he’s going to have to eat first.

Escape Rating A-: I just plain loved this one. I recognize that some of that was “right book at right time”, but I still had so much fun that I was up until 3:30 am because I wanted to finish it.

Thunder Point is a place where everyone seems to get a second chance at love. Sometimes its a second chance with a first love, and sometimes its just a second chance they think they don’t deserve (sometimes both), but the good folks all get a chance to find their happily every after, even if they seriously blew it the first time in one way or another.

Iris is a terrific character. She’s a high school guidance counselor because she wants to help kids, and because the guidance counselor when she went to Thunder Point High was a useless waste of space. Iris was not the most popular or beautiful girl in high school (most of us aren’t) and she wants to watch out for the kids and give them the kind of help and advice she didn’t get.

The subplot in this story is about a girl who is being abused, but won’t admit it. Iris is tenacious at figuring out who the abuser is, and handling it properly even though she knows it is going to make a big stink and possibly cause her trouble. I also liked that all the officials involved did the right thing, regardless of the possible consequences to themselves. This is a town where everyone steps up when needed.

There’s also a minor subplot, or at least a thread that keeps floating around, that being at the pinnacle of success in high school is not necessarily a recipe for adult success or happiness. Seth recognizes that while the accident was definitely a blow, he may have come out of it a better person. Iris is certainly better adjusted and more successful than the girl she envied so much in high school.

I liked the way that Iris and Seth finally got together. Seth didn’t remember what had happened, and Iris hadn’t told him. While he needed to eat several helpings of “humble pie”, Iris needed to admit that she was holding him responsible for something that she had an equal share in. They were both 17 and dumb. It happens. She was also afraid to trust him again because he did take her for granted back then. He had to show that he had changed, that he wasn’t still that same boy.

The other heartwarming part of the story involves Seth’s relationship with his dad. Their lack of communication had led to all sorts of assumptions that needed to be straightened out. The scenes where the light finally dawns were warm, sweet and grumpy all at the same marvelous time.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 2-15-15

Sunday Post

The Share the Love Giveaway Hop ends today! So if you haven’t yet taken a look at some terrific blogs, and entered for a chance at a $10 Gift Card, now’s your last chance.

Valentines Day was yesterday, and my true love and I gave each other a cold. Or the flu. In any case, the downside of living with someone is that you share communicable diseases. Like colds. We’st still dropping Kleenex like snow falling over carpet.

On the other hand, we did get the cats something for Valentines Day. We finally got them a Katris. Cass has been waiting for us to get some, because her cats love it and the thing is awesome. Here’s a cute kitty picture™ of the first exploration.

our cats on katris

Current Giveaways:

$10 Amazon or B&N Gift Card in the Share the Love Giveaway Hop
$120 Amazon, iTunes or B&N Gift Card from Allison Pataki and Simon & Schuster

The Accidental Empress by Allison PatakiBlog Recap:

B+ Review: The Promise by Robyn Carr
A- Review: Obsession in Death by J.D. Robb
B Review: Death of Yesterday by M.C. Beaton
A- Review: The Accidental Empress by Allison Pataki
Guest Post by Author Allison Pataki on Writing About Sisi + Giveaway
C+ Review: Death of a Liar by M.C. Beaton
Stacking the Shelves (122)

 

 

dreaming spies by laurie r kingComing Next Week:

Dreaming Spies (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #13) by Laurie R. King (review)
Escape Velocity by Jess Anastasi (review)
Those Rosy Hours at Mazandaran by Marion Grace Woolley (blog tour review)
In Flames by Richard Hilary Weber (blog tour review)
The Homecoming (Thunder Point #6) by Robyn Carr (review)

Stacking the Shelves (122)

Stacking the Shelves

Happy Valentine’s Day!

And speaking of lovely presents, a couple of boxes of books appeared miraculously this week. Sourcebooks sent me an interesting pack of literary fiction and nonfiction, and Harper sent The Bookseller, which looks utterly fascinating. I’m finally digging my disorganization out of two weeks of barely scraping by. Just as soon as we got back from Chicago, I came down with what Galen calls “con crud”. It’s the cold/flu combination that one gets after airplane trips and conferences.

I got a lot of reading done, but I’m still catching up to myself on writing it all up!

For Review:
The Bookseller by Cynthia Swanson
The Girl Who Wrote in Silk by Kelli Estes
Her Wild Hero (X-Ops #3) by Paige Tyler
The Interstellar Age by Jim Bell
Jam on the Vine by LaShonda Katrice Barnett
Phoenix in My Fortune (Monster Haven #6) by R.L. Naquin
Pieces of my Mother by Melissa Cistaro
The Rhyme of the Magpie (Birds of a Feather #1) by Marty Wingate
Rock Hard (Rock Kiss #2) by Nalini Singh
The Shattered Court (Four Arts #1) by M.J. Scott
A Touch of Stardust by Kate Alcott
Under a Dark Summer Sky by Vanessa Lafaye
Way of the Warrior by Suzanne Brockman, et al.
Whiskey & Charlie by Annabel Smith

Purchased from Amazon:
Unbound (Magic Ex Libris #3) by Jim C. Hines

Review: Death of a Liar by M.C. Beaton

death of a liar by mc beatonFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: hardcover, ebook, audiobook
Genre: mystery
Series: Hamish Macbeth #31
Length: 272 pages
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Date Released: February 3, 2015
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Sergeant Hamish Macbeth is alarmed to receive a report from a woman in the small village of Cronish in the Scottish Highlands. She has been brutally attacked and the criminal is on the loose. But upon further investigation, Hamish discovers that she was lying about the crime. So when the same woman calls him back about an intruder, he simply marvels at her compulsion to lie. This time, though, she is telling the truth. Her body is found in her home and Hamish must sort through all of her lies to solve the crime.

My Review:

The Hamish Macbeth series is still fun in small doses, but this one could have doubled as an episode of House, because everybody lies.

The story begins with a woman who claims to have been brutally attacked and raped, but there’s no evidence. She also doesn’t want Hamish to call in the local doctor, and we soon find out why – the woman not only has not been raped, she’s a virgin. There’s no evidence of any crime whatsoever, but there is a lot of evidence that the lady is a pathological liar. Because the call is in a relatively remote village, Hamish is not pleased by this waste of police time, especially when it is his.

While the desire is normally to believe the victim, in this case it is simply not possible. The doctor provides Hamish with a long list of lies that the supposed victim has told. She isn’t making stuff up to protect herself, she simply can’t stop herself from lying. She has mythomania.

So when she calls Hamish again to report a murder, he understandably doesn’t believe her. In this case, we have a woman who cried wolf. And just like the story of the boy who cried wolf, this woman is telling the truth, just this once. And she dies for it.

death of yesterday by mc beatonAs usual, nothing about this crime is exactly as it appears. Hamish starts out investigating a lonely death and finds himself poking into a religious cult that is fronting for both a long con and a drug running gang. He eventually gets to the right perpetrators, and most importantly finds the money, but it takes more than the usual number of red herrings, and proceeds nicely through the Macbeth series standard formula (see Wednesday’s review of Death of Yesterday for a description of that formula.)

While the journey in this series is always fun, the humor and in jokes are more fun if you’ve read some previous books in the series. But not too many.

death of a policeman by mc beatonEscape Rating C+: I read three of the Hamish Macbeth books in a row, after not having read one for several years. In addition to Death of Yesterday (see review) I also read Death of a Policeman (I got it from the library and did not review it).

I certainly enjoyed reading this series again. Hamish is an interesting character, and the townspeople of Lochdubh are by turns eccentric and charming, sometimes both at the same time.

Hamish is unusual in that he is a relatively young man who has come back to an area where the young people are mostly leaving. A fact that does not help his love life, which he constantly bemoans. He would like to settle down and get married, but his options in Lochdubh are simply limited.

At the same time, he is an unambitious man in an ambitious world. He doesn’t want a promotion, because any rank above Sergeant would take him out of Lochdubh and into the city of Strathsbane, which is a cesspit in general and Hamish just doesn’t want to live in a city. He likes his small cottage with his dog and his cat and the various livestock he keeps. He loves the pace of small-town life, and feels duty-bound to use his office to help the people of the county.

But he constantly bemoans his lack of romantic options, and continually reflects back on the two women he has been unsuccessfully engaged to. Unfortunately for him, they both return to his life just often enough to keep him from totally moving on. Thirty one books into the series, readers want some resolution to the poor man’s dilemma.

And speaking of Hamish’s dilemmas, he is an unconventional cop in a force that needs conformity and convention. Because he does the job, and does it well, he is able to hang onto it. But he drives his superiors bonkers. He’s not respectful, he doesn’t care about the status quo, and he doesn’t want a promotion or recognittion, so they don’t understand him or trust him.

Speaking of his superiors, one of the things that started to get to me was the Blair/Daviot dynamic. DCI Blair is Hamish’s immediate superior. The problem is that Blair is inferior in every way, and resents Hamish for showing him up at every turn. Human nature says that because Hamish lets Blair take the credit, Blair feels even more inferior and more angry about it.

The one thing Blair is good at is being properly deferential (read that as subservient) to Superintendent Daviot, his boss. Daviot knows that Blair is not merely useless, but an active detriment to solving crimes, but he keeps on defending him and letting him remain in his job in spite of his obstruction of justice and tampering with evidence. And his on the job drinking.

Daviot is equally culpable, for refusing to allow any investigations into his own friends and fellow club members, even when the evidence clearly points in their direction. The symbiotic and toxic relationship between Blair and Daviot has been going on a bit too long. I want someone to pay, and someone in a higher position to recognize that one of them (Blair) has to retire (or be hospitalized). Their behavior is negligent if not criminal, and it’s frustrating to see it continue in book after book without being addressed.

So three Hamish Macbeths in a row is probably my limit for a while. I hope the author introduces some changes to the formula in future books.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Guest Post by Author Allison Pataki on Writing About Sisi + Giveaway

Please welcome back Allison Pataki, who recently published the fascinating fictional biography The Accidental Empress (reviewed here).

How I came up with the idea to write about Sisi in ‘The Accidental Empress’
by Allison Pataki

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Years ago, I was traveling through Austria and Hungary and the Czech Republic with my family. I am Hungarian-American by descent; Pataki is an odd-sounding and, yes, Hungarian last name. The purpose of the family trip was to visit the places from where our relatives had emigrated, almost a century earlier. This took us, then, to the lands of the former Habsburg Empire—the former realm once labeled on maps as Austria-Hungary.

While on this trip, I kept seeing striking images of the same beautiful young woman. She had this quizzical smile, this rich chestnut hair curled in these elaborate hairdos. I saw her face at every gift shop, museum, even in restaurants and hotels.

The Accidental Empress by Allison PatakiI asked someone who she was and the response was that she was “Sisi,” the most beloved of all Habsburg Empresses. I heard just a bit about Sisi’s epic and tragic life—about the legends that she grew her hair to the floor, that she was considered the most beautiful woman in the world, that every other foreign ruler at the time was in love with her. I sensed that she was a combination of Princess Diana and Marie Antoinette and Catherine the Great and so much more.

I read about how Sisi didn’t mean to seduce her sister’s fiancé the emperor, but did, at the age of 15. Just enough to whet my appetite! I went home and dug in, reading everything I could about Sisi’s story; what I found astounded me. Hers is a story of love triangles, love, lust, betrayal, and so much more. It’s an incredibly human story, told against a glittering and beautiful—yet dangerous and duplicitous—backdrop.

Sisi presided over the golden era of the Habsburg Court, in an age that gave us advances in culture and the arts and architecture, as well as advances in science and politics. Her family gave us the castle that we all know of as “The Walt Disney Castle.” Her family gave us the waltz and Wagner’s Ring Cycle and Klimt’s paintings. Sisi ruled at the time that a young Doctor named Sigmund Freud was just down the street in Vienna inventing the practice of psychoanalysis. And this reign of Sisi and Franz Joseph takes us right up to the doorstep of World War I. Her heir was the man who was assassinated (Archduke Franz Ferdinand), prompting her husband to declare war and setting off World War I, the greatest armed conflict the world had known to that point.

We’ve read about Anne Boleyn and the Tudors. We’ve read about Marie Antoinette at Versailles. We’ve read about the Medici in Italy and the Tsarinas in Russia, and yet, Sisi’s story is more compelling and complex than all of those, I believe.
I think people will really enjoy diving into the world of Sisi and the Habsburg Court.

In Sisi’s case, history is even juicier than any fiction I could have dreamed up. I was hooked—and I hope readers will be, as well.

View More: http://triciamccormack.pass.us/allison_selectsAbout Allison PatakiAllison Pataki is the author of the New York Times bestselling and critically-acclaimed historical novel, The Traitor’s Wife. She graduated Cum Laude from Yale University with a major in English and spent several years writing for TV and online news outlets.The daughter of former New York State Governor George E. Pataki, Allison is currently working on her second novel, The Accidental Empress, to be published by Simon & Schuster in February 2015.

A lover of history, Allison was inspired to write The Accidental Empress by her family’s deep roots in the former Habsburg empire of Austria-Hungary. Allison is the co-founder of the nonprofit organization, ReConnect Hungary. She is a regular contributor to The Huffington Post and FoxNews.com, and is a member of The Historical Novel Society. Allison lives in Chicago with her husband.

To learn more about Allison, visit her website or follow her on Twitter, Facebook, or Goodreads

 

~~~~~~TOURWIDE GIVEAWAY~~~~~~

Thanks to Allison Pataki and Simon & Schuster, one lucky winner will receive a $120 gift card to the ebook retailer of their choice (Amazon/B&N/iTunes)! Please enter via the Rafflecopter form. Giveaway is open internationally.

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For more chances to win, please visit the other stops on the tour.

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Review: The Accidental Empress by Allison Pataki

accidental empress by allison patakiFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, ebook, audiobook
Genre: historical fiction
Length: 512 pages
Publisher: Howard Books
Date Released: February 17, 2015
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

New York Times bestselling author Allison Pataki follows up on her critically acclaimed debut novel, The Traitor’s Wife, with the little-known and tumultuous love story of “Sisi” the Austro-Hungarian Empress and captivating wife of Emperor Franz Joseph.

The year is 1853, and the Habsburgs are Europe’s most powerful ruling family. With his empire stretching from Austria to Russia, from Germany to Italy, Emperor Franz Joseph is young, rich, and ready to marry.

Fifteen-year-old Elisabeth, “Sisi,” Duchess of Bavaria, travels to the Habsburg Court with her older sister, who is betrothed to the young emperor. But shortly after her arrival at court, Sisi finds herself in an unexpected dilemma: she has inadvertently fallen for and won the heart of her sister’s groom. Franz Joseph reneges on his earlier proposal and declares his intention to marry Sisi instead.

Thrust onto the throne of Europe’s most treacherous imperial court, Sisi upsets political and familial loyalties in her quest to win, and keep, the love of her emperor, her people, and of the world.

With Pataki’s rich period detail and cast of complex, bewitching characters, The Accidental Empress offers a captivating glimpse into one of history’s most intriguing royal families, shedding new light on the glittering Hapsburg Empire and its most mesmerizing, most beloved “Fairy Queen.”

My Review:

If the combination of The Traitor’s Wife (reviewed here) and The Accidental Empress tell us that the author has a penchant for writing historical biographies of young women who are thrust (or thrust themselves) into influential positions for which they are not exactly suited, then this reader is all for it.

The Traitor’s Wife shows the American Revolution through the eyes of a young woman who tries to bring it down. The Accidental Empress shows us the fall of the long-reigning Hapsburg dynasty of Austria. While we don’t see it in this book, Elisabeth’s life and trials lead in a slightly crooked line to World War I.

In some ways, Elisabeth’s story feels as if it happened in the Middle Ages. Her life as the Austrian empress shows a world that had not changed since the Hapsburgs first came to power in the 15th century. At the same time, the rest of the world is in the midst of the Victorian Era, with its explosion of revolutions and industry. Elisabeth was born in 1837, just months after Victoria took the throne in England.

But as I read this not-too-fictionalized biography of Elisabeth of Austria, the person she reminded me of most was Princess Di.

Like Diana, Elisabeth married at a relatively young age. She was only 15 when she met Franz Joseph, the emperor of Austria. When they married, Elisabeth was 16 and suddenly thrust into a “family business” of empire for which she was not prepared. Elisabeth was a member of the nobility in Bavaria, but had been raised in a particularly liberal (some may read that as neglectful) household. Finding herself in the midst of a court that thrived on rules and victimized any who deviated, Elisabeth was lost.

Her marriage was not just a love match, but even called a fairy tale romance. She met the Emperor because her older sister was considered a suitable match for Franz Joseph. However, when the families met, Elisabeth stole his heart. Unfortunately, she had more competition for that heart than she could have imagined.

Elisabeth of Austria 1867
Elisabeth of Austria 1867

Franz Joseph’s mother Sophie chose Elisabeth’s older sister Helene because she was shy and retiring and would not challenge her for control of Franz Joseph or insert herself into the political realm where the Archduchess Sophie ruled. Elisabeth was neither shy, nor biddable, nor retiring, and did not expect to share her husband with his mother. Elisabeth also expected that her husband would respect her opinions, or at least let her ease his burdens by discussing them with her.

Sophie, and expert in passive-aggressiveness, froze Elisabeth out of everything except the expectation to produce an heir, and managed to make it all seem like Elisabeth’s fault. Elisabeth, at 16, is no match for an experienced political operative like Sophie, and it takes her 14 years to achieve some kind of separate peace for herself. When this book ends, Elisabeth is only 30. As tumultuous as her life is up to that point, it seems as if it should have taken longer. It certainly must have felt like an eternity to her.

So this is the story of Elisabeth’s marriage, it’s failures and it’s successes, and her difficulties in making a place that is truly hers in a world that is changing, set amongst a hidebound court that refuses to see that the world is changing around it.

She is every bit as compelling to the reader, as she clearly was to her own people during her lifetime.

Escape Rating A-: Just like in The Traitor’s Wife, The Accidental Empress is also the story of two women. In this case, those women are Elisabeth and her domineering mother-in-law, Sophie. And while it seems as if their intense rivalry must be part of the fictionalization, it doesn’t seem to be. The worst things that are inflicted on Elisabeth are taken straight from letters and diaries of the time. (The Victorian Era in general is very well documented)

Some readers will want to shake Elisabeth for not having stood up for herself more effectively sooner. We tend to expect 21st century sensibilities from our heroines. But Elisabeth was living in the mid 19th century, and when she becomes empress she is only 16. She also goes into the battle unprepared, while Sophie had been a political operative and the power behind the throne for decades.

And most of us are much more capable of figuring out what we want and standing up for ourselves successfully at 30 than we are at 16.

At the beginning, I said that Elisabeth reminds me of Princess Di. Like Diana, Elisabeth came from minor nobility, and had been raised without the extreme rules and regulations of the court. The Imperial Court was a rigorously controlled environment where the denizens were constantly watched for signs of weakness. Franz Joseph was raised in the “family business” of empire, just as Prince Charles was raised in the Windsor family business of royalty.

diana and charlesAlso both were considered fairy tale matches, with the royal marrying an extraordinarily beautiful young woman from the minor nobility. There were stories about the love match in both cases. Like Diana, Elisabeth was expected to present a pretty face for the empire, and her people were expected to follow her fashion sense and love her for her beauty. Both women were tasked with providing the proverbial “heir and a spare” and got pregnant relatively quickly.

And last but definitely not least, both women discovered that they had to share their husbands with another woman who had made a place in his heart long before their advent on the scene. Three is always a crowd, whether that third is a lover or a mother.

Elisabeth usually called “Sisi” by her friends and admirers, is a fascinating woman. Her fictionalized story brings her alive and makes her empathetic for contemporary readers. Her story seems both ancient and modern, a woman trying to make her own way in a world that she is not ready for, and is not ready for her.

Her legacy lives on. She is still a popular figure in Hungarian history. And it was the assassination of her nephew, the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, that served as the opening salvo of World War I.

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***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: Death of Yesterday by M.C. Beaton

death of yesterday by mc beatonFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: paperback, hardcover, ebook, audiobook
Genre: mystery
Series: Hamish Macbeth #29
Length: 272 pages
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Date Released: March 26, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Scottish Highland Sergeant Hamish Macbeth disbelieves summer student Morag – she lost memories of her pub night and sketchbook – until she turns up dead. As does witness, layabout Fergus. In Cnothan, “sour locals” take “pride in keeping themselves to themselves”, to keep their jobs at the Gilchrist dress factory. In past amorous attentions and police politics lie answers.

My Review:

death of a kingfisher by mc beatonIt’s been a while (see review of Death of a Kingfisher, here) since I read one of the Hamish Macbeth series, and I had forgotten how much fun they are. At least in small doses.

At the beginning of each story, someone dies. That someone is inevitably an outsider to Lochdubh or at least to Sutherland. This relatively unpopulated portion of the Scottish Highland couldn’t afford to lose as many locals as generally get killed off in the course of one of the books.

Also, most of the action in this one takes place in the nearby village of Cnothan, a place that Hamish has never liked and has never seemed welcoming to anyone at all. The villagers do an all too good job of “keeping themselves to themselves” in the face of outside intrusion. Which makes pretty much everyone we are introduced to in this story not terribly sympathetic, as well as generally obstructing a police investigation.

This story takes place during the depths of the Great Recession, not that the economy in this remote area is all that fantastic at the best of times. But the recession plays into the story, as the murder(s) that occur are all wrapped up in the one bright economic light in the rather dour Cnothan area. A clothing factory has opened nearby, courtesy of a government project to bring jobs to the Highlands. No one wants to say anything about anything that might put the future of their employer at risk.

And it definitely is at risk. The first murder victim is a totally unliked and unlikeable young woman named Morag Merrilea, and she is anything but merry. She claims to have been drugged while sketching at a local bar, and blacked out. She is such a bitch about the town and her job and all the people near her that Hamish decides she must have been drunk and simply refuses to admit it.

This isn’t one of his brighter moments. Everything that happens in the rest of the story hinges on Morag’s sketchbook, and exactly what she saw that she shouldn’t have. But Hamish is too busy, first mooning over the gorgeous sister of one of his suspects, and then avoiding her after he discovers that her beauty is even less than skin deep to figure out what is really going on.

Interference from both Detective Chief Superintendent Blair and his boss, Superintendent Peter Daviot, also causes this case to go through a lot more twists and turns than should be necessary to reach its conclusion. Blair, as always, does his level best (which sometimes isn’t very level) to get Hamish removed from the case if not the entire police force, and Daviot can’t imagine that any of his elite “friends” could possibly be involved in anything sinister.

Until Hamish proves that some of them very definitely are.

Escape Rating B: I have a soft spot in my heart for this series; it was one that I used to listen to on audio back in the days when I had long commutes. Mysteries are perfect for audio, it’s incredibly awkward to fast forward to the end, especially when you’re driving.

The town of Lochdubh and Hamish’s life lend themselves to a slow and leisurely reading (or listening) pace. Not much happens in Lochdubh, until suddenly there are bodies everywhere.

The stories do follow a kind of formula. First there’s a body. Then there’s a case that either nobody wants to investigate or that Blair takes away from Hamish because Hamish is way smarter than he is. In the end, Hamish lets Blair take the credit because he doesn’t want to be promoted away from Lochdubh.

There are generally a lot of red herrings. Both because Blair usually gets Hamish out of the way by sending him on a wild goose chase, and because Daviot refuses to allow an investigation into his friends and the members of his club, who often turn out to be at the bottom of something nasty.

Blair usually gets hospitalized for either his heart or his alcoholism, and Detective Inspector Jimmy Anderson is put temporarily in charge. Anderson lets Hamish get the job done until Blair is back on the scene and mucks up everything.

Hamish either gets involved with some woman he shouldn’t or one of his two previous loves reappears to mess him up again. Sometimes both. In this case, both.

This is a series where the journey is way more important than the destination. I generally enjoy this particular journey, the countryside is beautiful and at least some of the locals are friendly.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.