Stacking the Shelves (106)

Stacking the Shelves

I didn’t buy any books this week. Which doesn’t mean I didn’t buy ANYTHING, just not books. The season premieres for TV are staggering out of the gate, so I finally have new episodes of NCIS, NCIS:LA (and the amazingly fun NCIS: New Orleans) to watch.) One of the best things about streaming TV shows is NO COMMERCIALS. And we can watch whenever we want.

When I’m not reading, that is.

For Review:
All That Glitters (Jake & Laura #2) by Michael Murphy
Demons in My Driveway (Monster Haven #5) by R.L. Naquin
Dorothy Parker Drank Here (Dorothy Parker #2) by Ellen Meister
Falling Sky by Rajan Khanna
Gunpowder Alchemy (Opium War #1) by Jeannie Lin
Not Quite Forever (Not Quite #4) by Catherine Bybee
The Red Magician by Lisa Goldstein
Ryder: American Treasure (Ryder #2) by Nick Pengelley
Taste of Treason (Tudor Enigma #2) by April Taylor
‘Til Dragons Do Us Part (Never Deal with Dragons #3) by Lorenda Christensen
Undercity by Catherine Asaro
Witch Upon a Star (Midnight Magic #3) by Jennifer Harlow

Borrowed from the Library:
Designated Daughters (Deborah Knott #19) by Margaret Maron
The Wisdom of Hair by Kim Boykin

Review: The Bully of Order by Brian Hart

bully of order by brian hartFormat read: ebook provided by Edelweiss
Formats available: ebook, hardcover
Genre: historical fiction
Length: 403 pages
Publisher: Harper
Date Released: September 2, 2014
Purchasing Info: Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Set in a logging town on the lawless Pacific coast of Washington State at the turn of the twentieth century, a spellbinding novel of fate and redemption—told with a muscular lyricism and filled with a cast of characters Shakespearean in scope—in which the lives of an ill-fated family are at the mercy of violent social and historical forces that tear them apart.

Keen to make his fortune, Jacob Ellstrom, armed with his medical kit and new wife, Nell, lands in The Harbor—a mud-filled, raucous coastal town teeming with rough trade pioneers, sawmill laborers, sailors, and prostitutes. But Jacob is not a doctor, and a botched delivery exposes his ruse, driving him onto the streets in a plunge towards alcoholism. Alone, Nell scrambles to keep herself and their young son, Duncan, safe in this dangerous world. When a tentative reunion between the couple—in the company of Duncan and Jacob’s malicious brother, Matius—results in tragedy, Jacob must flee town to elude being charged with murder.

Years later, the wild and reckless Duncan seems to be yet another of The Harbor’s hoodlums. His only salvation is his overwhelming love for Teresa Boyerton, the daughter of the town’s largest mill owner. But disaster will befall the lovers with heartbreaking consequences.

And across town, Bellhouse, a union boss and criminal rabble-rouser, sits at the helm of The Harbor’s seedy underbelly, perpetuating a cycle of greed and violence. His thug Tartan directs his pack of thieves, pimps, and murderers, and conceals an incendiary secret involving Duncan’s mother. As time passes, a string of calamitous events sends these characters hurtling towards each other in an epic collision that will shake the town to its core.

My Review:

It drove me crazy trying to figure out exactly where this book takes place. (The disadvantage of an eARC is that there is no map, even if the book has one). I think this stretch of coastline is somewhere between Gray’s Harbor and Cape Disappointment, but that covers a lot of ground.

I cared because I live in Seattle, and picked this book because it takes place in an extremely fictionalized Washington coast at the turn of the last century, around 1900. Early Seattle history is pretty damn colorful to begin with, so I wanted to see how an author would deal with making it even more picturesque. Or even possibly more picaresque.

For me, The Bully of Order is very much of a mixed feeling book. I love historical fiction, and I am always interested in the history of places I live or have lived, so this was all set up to be a two-fer; the parts of the story that aren’t in “The Harbor” (maybe Gray’s Harbor?) are set in Alaska.

The story has multiple viewpoints. Many multiple viewpoints. Narrators switch in and with regularity. And alacrity. To use an old expression, it seems as if everyone has a dog in this hunt.

There is a hunt. Multiple of them.

The story seems to be about Jacob Ellstrom and the complete mess he makes of his life and the lives of everyone around him. He comes to The Harbor with his young wife Nell, and claims to be a doctor. On the frontier, a lot of people claimed a lot of things that weren’t necessarily true “back in the States”, but a doctor is only as good as his self-confidence makes him (and the last patient he saved).

If there is one thing that Jacob Ellstrom doesn’t seem to have much of, it’s self-confidence. He lets everyone else define who he is. His wife thinks he’s a good man, but his older brother bullies him into bad behavior, including racking up massive debts and drinking to the point where he botches his medical practice.

There’s also a conspiracy of silence about his brother’s rape of Nell, Jacob’s wife. Matius Ellstrom is set up to be the embodiment of evil, and he pretty much succeeds at that. Escaping Matias, or running away instead of standing up to him, becomes the driving force in Jacob’s life, Nell’s life, and their son Duncan’s life.

The Harbor is a gritty logging boom town that the reader knows is going to bust; the omnipresent timber woods, do, in fact, run out. The town never gets civilized, and criminal lawlessness is always just one drink too many away.

The miasma that surrounds The Harbor reminds me of the dark atmosphere of Deadwood, but the storytelling in The Bully of Order isn’t nearly as clear. It definitely is just as bloody.

The story is both Jacob’s search for redemption, and Duncan’s search for retribution. At the end, it is left up to the reader to decide whether either of them achieved what they desired.

Escape Rating C+: The language used in the story is lyrical, even when (especially when) the events that are described are heading downward into an increasingly dark and complex history for the characters.

The chorus effect of the number of perspectives reminded me a bit of The Spoon River Anthology; every single person has their own part to play, and their own way of telling their particular bit. I particularly liked Kozmin the Hermit’s tale of the Russian scout who traveled with Baranov during the early days of the Russian outpost in Alaska. The Bully of Order has itself been compared to Russian literature, both in its darkness and the bleakness of its setting and story.

The Bully of Order is not a story for the faint-of-heart; bad men do bad things often for bad reasons, and if anyone escapes a terrible fate, it’s by luck and not by their actions. The Pacific Northwest was a rough and brutal place back then (true stories of the Klondike Gold Rush will make your hair stand on end), but out of that brutality arose the beautiful places that we know today.

The journey, at least as portrayed in The Bully of Order, was often a very dark and very sad one. No good deed, and very few of the bad ones, went unpunished.

TLC
This post is part of a TLC book tour. Click on the logo for more reviews.
***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: Becoming Josephine by Heather Webb

becoming josephine by heather webbFormat read: ebook borrowed from the library
Formats available: ebook, paperback
Genre: historical fiction
Length: 320 pages
Publisher: Plume
Date Released: December 31, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Rose Tascher sails from her Martinique plantation to Paris to trade her Creole black magic culture for love and adventure. She arrives exultant to follow her dreams of attending Court with Alexandre, her elegant aristocrat and soldier husband. But Alexandre dashes her hopes and abandons her amid the tumult of the French Revolution.

My Review:

220px-Josephine_de_Beauharnais,_Keizerin_der_FransenIn history, she’s the one we think of first when we hear the name Josephine. Her full name was Marie Josephe Rose Tascher de La Pagerie de Beauharnais. History refers to her as the Empress Josephine, wife of Napoleon Bonaparte.

Napoleon is the one who named her Josephine; until they met, she referred to herself as Rose. He attempted to remake her just as he tried to remake France after the Revolution and the Terror. It is possible that he was more successful with France.

Rose/Josephine’s early life makes a great novel all by itself, even before Napoleon appears on the scene.

She was a planter’s daughter in Martinique. Her family owned a sugar plantation. Even though this made her a member of the upper crust of Martinique society, the plantation was in debt and money was tight. Her parents sent her to France to marry a rich relative, in the hopes that her husband would then save the family’s finances.

Instead, the man she married turned out to be a bigger spender than her family (and with less excuse) and eventually lost his inheritance and forced his own parents into debt. He temporarily rose with the Revolution, and then suffered an ignominious (and ultimately fatal) fall among the insanity and excesses of the Terror.

He fell under the guillotine. Rose survived several months imprisonment, but her health was broken. After her release and recovery, she met Napoleon. And the rest, as they say, is history.

But instead of a barebones historical account, the author has presented us with a livelier, and often more heartbreaking, story from Rose’s point of view. It’s her story of how she went through the first three decades of her life as Rose, and then turned herself into, or was transformed into, Napoleon’s Empress Josephine.

Ultimately we see Rose as a survivor. She’s always done the best that she can to save her family, her own children, and herself. She is a woman often alone in an age where women were financially dependent on men. So she often uses the men around her to keep herself and her children fed, clothed and housed, and ultimately to secure a future for them.

After her first bitter (and melodramatic) disappointment with her first husband, Rose doesn’t look for love. She looks for security from her many affairs, but seldom finds much. She becomes Napoleon’s Josephine initially for security. He is a boor, but he falls head over heels for her (his correspondence bears this out).

Her tragedy is that she falls for him after he has discovered that she is using him. Their relationship never recovers, and it seems that neither do they.

Escape Rating A-: We see the entire story through Rose/Josephine’s eyes. She shares her inner thoughts on her life as she lives it, and her reasons and choices. It is as if she is telling her story to the reader personally, and we live it vicariously through her eyes.

It can be difficult to make a known historical character sympathetic, especially when history has already formed its opinion.

I’ll confess to wondering at points where Rose’s descriptions of her own behavior, particularly when she is being self-sacrificing, did not make her slightly more beneficent than she was in real life. But then, when we tell stories on ourselves, we often emphasize the good we have done, and discount the self-serving.

(Rose’s stories about life under the Terror reminded me a bit of The Spymistress. Different war, but same concept, a woman living under an occupation trying to do the best she can for the prisoners of that war.)

Because this is Rose/Josephine’s personal story, we see how she treats other people, and how they treated her, through her eyes. Sometimes she is soap opera melodramatic. Sometimes she is petty and even cruel, or at least thinks those thoughts.

At the end, what we feel is how very human she was. She steps from the pages of history and comes alive.

TLC
This post is part of a TLC book tour. Click on the logo for more reviews.
***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 8-31-14

Sunday Post

To everyone in the U.S., happy 3-day weekend! It’s marvelous to think that there’s a whole other day before it’s back to waking up to the alarm clock and having to get ready for work. It’s a whole ‘nother day to read.

Preview of upcoming events, so far, this week’s books are fantastic!

Current Giveaways:

No Limits by Lori Foster (U.S. only)

lock in by john scalziBlog Recap:

A+ Review: Lock In by John Scalzi
C- Review: The Girl in the Road by Monica Byrne
B Review: No Limits by Lori Foster
Q&A with Lori Foster + Giveaway
B- Review: Her Last Whisper by Karen Robards
A- Review: Doctor Who: Engines of War by George Mann
Stacking the Shelves (102)

 

light up the night by ml buchmanComing Next Week:

The Bees by Laline Paull (review)
Becoming Josephine by Heather Webb (blog tour review)
The Bully of Order by Brian Hart (blog tour review)
Light Up the Night by M.L. Buchman (review + giveaway)

Stacking the Shelves (100)

Stacking the Shelves

After I read The Hexed this week, I realized how much I’d been missing by not getting into Graham’s Krewe of Hunters series. So I started picking them up everywhere. I think the series is going to be my next binge-reading. The Hexed was just so much chilling fun!

Not that I didn’t pick up a few other titles this week, as usual…

For Review:
After the War is Over by Jennifer Robson
Alex (Cold Fury Hockey #1) by Sawyer Bennett
Archangel’s Shadows (Guild Hunter #7) by Nalini Singh
Artful by Peter David
The Betrayed (Krewe of Hunters #14) by Heather Graham
The Bully of Order by Brian Hart
Core Punch by Pauline Baird Jones
Empire of Sin by Gary Krist
Fish Tails by Sherri S. Tepper
Five Days Left by Julie Lawson Timmer
Hope Burns (Hope #3) by Jaci Burton
House of the Rising Sun (Crescent City #1) by Kristen Painter
Liar, Temptress, Soldier, Spy by Karen Abbott
Lives in Ruins by Marilyn Johnson
Mort(e) by Robert Repino
Martyr (John Shakespeare #1) by Rory Clements
A New York Christmas by Anne Perry
One of Us by Tawni O’Dell
Reaper’s Stand (Reapers MC #4) by Joanna Wylde
The Red Book of Primrose House (Potting Shed #2) by Marty Wingate
Ryder (Ayesha Ryder #1) by Nick Pengelley
Spirited Away (Psychic Detective #3) by Angela Campbell
Truth or Dare (Dare to Love #1) by Mira Lyn Kelly

Purchased from Amazon:
Kodiak’s Claim (Kodiak Point #1) by Eve Langlais
The Majat Testing by Anna Kashina
Sacred Evil (Krewe of Hunters #3) by Heather Graham
Unbound by Cara McKenna (review here)

Borrowed from the Library:
The Evil Inside (Krewe of Hunters #4) by Heather Graham
The Heart of Evil (Krewe of Hunters #2) by Heather Graham
Phantom Evil (Krewe of Hunters #1) by Heather Graham

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 8-10-14

Sunday Post

The flavor text of the week is family. We’re back East again, visiting Galen’s family this time. Also inspiring his guest post yesterday about Silly Cat Books, complete with picture of one very silly cat. (We miss our girls, even as we worry what they are destroying in our absence!)

One of this week’s tour books, 2 A.M. at the Cat’s Pajamas, is set in Philadelphia. We’re not far from there, but I think the book’s Philly is a bit more magical than the real version.

We’ll see…

Current Giveaways:

Diamond Accent Devil Heart with Wings Pendant in Sterling Silver and a $25.00 Amazon gift card from Jane Kindred
Inamorata by Megan Chance (paperback)
$25 Gift Card from Alibi Publishing

master of the game by jane kindredBlog Recap:

B+ Review: The Yankee Club by Michael Murphy + Giveaway
B Review: Inamorata by Megan Chance + Giveaway
A- Review: Blades of the Old Empire by Anna Kashina
B Review: Hard Knocks by Lori Foster
A Review: Master of the Game by Jane Kindred + Giveaway
Guest Post: Silly Cat Books

Unbound by Cara McKennaComing Next Week:

2 A.M. at The Cat’s Pajamas by Marie-Helene Bertino (blog tour review + giveaway)
Unbound by Cara McKenna (review)
The Sweet Spot by Stephanie Evanovich (review)
The Hexed by Heather Graham (blog tour review + giveaway)
An Unwilling Accomplice by Charles Todd (review)

Review: Inamorata by Megan Chance + Giveaway

inamorata by megan chanceFormat read: ebook provided by NetGalley
Formats available: ebook, paperback, audiobook
Genre: historical fiction; fantasy
Length: 421 pages
Publisher: Lake Union Publishing
Date Released: August 1, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Book Depository

American artist Joseph Hannigan and his alluring sister, Sophie, have arrived in enchanting nineteenth-century Venice with a single-minded goal. The twins, who have fled scandal in New York, are determined to break into Venice’s expatriate set and find a wealthy patron to support Joseph’s work.

But the enigmatic Hannigans are not the only ones with a secret agenda. Joseph’s talent soon attracts the attention of the magnificent Odilé Leon, a celebrated courtesan and muse who has inspired many artists to greatness. But her inspiration comes with a devastatingly steep price.

As Joseph falls under the courtesan’s spell, Sophie joins forces with Nicholas Dane, the one man who knows Odilé’s dark secret, and her sworn enemy. When the seductive muse offers Joseph the path to eternal fame, the twins must decide who to believe—and just how much they are willing to sacrifice for fame.

My Review:

There is a hunger that lurks in the shadows, waiting impatiently to feast on its right and proper prey.

The hunger is monstrous, but is not necessarily evil. It bargains with its victims, and once struck, the bargain is fulfilled to the letter.

In return for providing an already talented artist with the inspiration and the vision to create on masterwork of towering genius, the muse takes, in return, everything that made the artist who he was.

The death that usually follows is not the monster’s fault. The bargain is kept.

There are a number of artistic geniuses, in art, in letters, in music, who produced one final towering masterpiece, and then died or faded. Keats, Byron, Schumann, Vivaldi, Canaletto, Shelley. Great artists who burned out young, whether they died or not.

What if their great inspirations came from a single source, despite the differences in time and place? What if John Keats’ Lamia was all too real?

The beautiful decay of 19th century Venice is the perfect backdrop for this story of love, corruption and inspiration.

Odile Leon has sold her soul for a chance to be remembered. Quite literally sold her soul. Once every three years, she must find an artistic genius, sung or unsung, and make him a legend. In return for artistic immortality, that artist must sell his own soul to her as his muse.

In Venice, Odile is brought to bay by one man she toyed with but did not consume, and an artist who has already found his muse, in the person of his twin sister.

Nicholas Dane is obsessed with stopping Odile, in the hopes that she will return his poetic talent. Joseph and Sophie Hannigan are bent on outrunning the salacious rumors that follow them, and finding the perfect showcase for Joseph’s magnificent artistic talent.

Odile needs a victim, before it is too late. But her long life has not prepared her to face that it is already too late, not just for her, but for all of those she has drawn into her web.

Escape Rating B: So much of this story operates in the shadows, and those shadows give it its sense of creeping horror and dark need.

In atmosphere, it reminds me a bit of Lauren Owen’s The Quick (reviewed here), but the motivations behind the monstrousness are different. In The Quick, the society only wants to make vampires out of the “right sort” of people, and others are pawns, toys or food. Their complete sort of self-centeredness feels evil on multiple levels.

Although both stories are set in the same era, the monstrousness of Odile is not necessarily evil. Many artists of all types would think their lives were a reasonable trade for otherworldly inspiration and artistic immortality. She offers a bargain, and she keeps it. Admittedly, her victims are often too much in her thrall to refuse.

Odile is a succubus, but a very particular one. She maintains her life by sucking out their talent. In return they live forever, or at least achieve immortal renown.

Nicholas Dane hounds her from city to city, believing that if he prevents her feeding, she will be destroyed. He is both right and wrong, in a way that he pays for dearly. Because Odile fixes her sights on the twin brother of the woman he loves.

And Sophie can’t live without her brother, or vice versa.

The relationship between Sophie and her brother Joseph both fascinates and repels everyone they meet, including Odile and Nicholas. We’re never 100% certain, but readers are intended to find more than a hint of V.C. Andrews’ Flowers in the Attic in the Hannigans’ backstory.

It’s obvious that they mean too much to each other, but nothing is ever confirmed. That background becomes part of the rotting decadence of Venice.

The story starts out slowly, and switches between multiple points of view with every chapter. But we still only explore each party’s surface thoughts, and not the secrets they keep from themselves as well as each other.

This story gets darker and darker as it leads to its conclusion. It haunts, and makes you want to brush off lingering traces of the web, both at the same time. The story is definitely a case of atmosphere over action, but I couldn’t go to sleep without finishing it. And had a difficult time sleeping afterwards.

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

Megan is giving away a paperback copy of Inamorata to one lucky winner (US/Canada)! To enter, use the Rafflecopter below.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

TLC
This post is part of a TLC book tour. Click on the logo for more reviews.
***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 7-27-14

Sunday Post

This almost turned out to be “city” week at Reading Reality. Monday’s Maxwell Street Blues is very Chicago, and Invisible City takes place in a part of New York City that is, well, invisible. Until, of course, it isn’t.

I’m still suffering from “Con hangover” after Detcon. We had an awesome time and I want to go back. And I’m bummed that we couldn’t manage LonCon this month. The Hugo voting is this week, and I’m starting to look forward to next year in Spokane. Which doesn’t quite sound right, but it’s a WorldCon, so it’s all good.

Back-to-You-Blog-TourCurrent Giveaways:

Back to You by Jessica Scott (paperback)

Winner Announcements:

The winner of the $10 Amazon Gift Card in the Summer Reads Giveaway Hop is Michelle B.
The winner of Blade of the Samurai by Susan Spann is Jo C.
The winner of Until We Touch by Susan Mallery is Blair S.

truly by ruthie knoxBlog Recap:

C+ Review: The Forever Man by Pierre Ouellette + Giveaway
A+ Review: Written in My Own Heart’s Blood by Diana Gabaldon
A+ Review: Truly by Ruthie Knox
B Guest Review: Star Trek: The Original Series: The More Things Change by Scott Pearson
Interview with Author Jessica Scott + Giveaway
Stacking the Shelves (98)

maxwell street blues by marc krulewitchComing Next Week:

Maxwell Street Blues by Marc Krulewitch (blog tour review + giveaway)
Invisible City by Julia Dahl (review)
The Virtues of Oxygen by Susan Schoenberger (blog tour review + giveaway)
The Maharani’s Pearls by Charles Todd (review)
The Winter King by C.L. Wilson (blog tour review + giveaway)

Stacking the Shelves (98)

Stacking the Shelves

This is pretty much the last two weeks. Lots of interesting stuff. I’m feeding my Sherlock Holmes addiction with not just one but two anthologies, and I bought the Brenda Cooper books just for the covers. (I have the cover of The Diamond Deep on the Detcon t-shirt).

Speaking of Detcon, I bought (or rather Galen bought for me) One-Eyed Jack by Elizabeth Bear. I adore her Promethean Age series (start with Blood and Iron) because it’s one of the best Fae/Earth crossover series I’ve ever read. I’m beyond thrilled that it’s continuing after a 6-year break!

For Review:
Dangerous Calling (The Shadowminds #2) by AJ Larrieu
The Devil in Montmartre by Gary Inbinder
Gentlemen Prefer Curves (Perfect Fit #3) by Sugar Jamison
Hard to Hold On To (Hard Ink #2.5) by Laura Kaye
In the Company of Sherlock Holmes edited by Laurie R. King and Leslie S. Klinger
Left Turn at Paradise (Antiquarian Book Mystery #2) by Thomas Shawver
Lethal Code by Thomas Waite
The Lodge on Holly Road (Life in Icicle Falls #4) by Sheila Roberts
The Magician’s Land (Magicians #3) by Lev Grossman
Slow Hand (Hot Cowboy Nights #1) by Victoria Vane
Two Hundred and Twenty-One Baker Streets edited by David Thomas Moore
While You Were Away by D.J. Davis
Wild (Ivy Chronicles #3) by Sophie Jordan

Purchased:
The Creative Fire (Ruby’s Song #1) by Brenda Cooper
The Diamond Deep (Ruby’s Song #2) by Brenda Cooper
Into Tolari Space (Tales of Tolari Space #0.5) by Christie Meierz
The Marann (Tales of Tolari Space #1) by Christie Meierz
One-Eyed Jack (Promethian Age #5) by Elizabeth Bear
Worth the Weight (Worth #1) by Mara Jacobs

Review: Written in My Own Heart’s Blood by Diana Gabaldon

written in my own hearts blood by diana gabaldonFormat read: ebook purchased from Amazon
Formats available: ebook, paperback, hardcover, audiobook
Genre: historical fiction; time travel romance
Series: Outlander, #8
Length: 849 pages
Publisher: Delacorte Press
Date Released: June 10, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

1778: France declares war on Great Britain, the British army leaves Philadelphia, and George Washington’s troops leave Valley Forge in pursuit. At this moment, Jamie Fraser returns from a presumed watery grave to discover that his best friend has married his wife, his illegitimate son has discovered (to his horror) who his father really is, and his beloved nephew, Ian, wants to marry a Quaker. Meanwhile, Jamie’s wife, Claire, and his sister, Jenny, are busy picking up the pieces.

The Frasers can only be thankful that their daughter Brianna and her family are safe in twentieth-century Scotland. Or not. In fact, Brianna is searching for her own son, who was kidnapped by a man determined to learn her family’s secrets. Her husband, Roger, has ventured into the past in search of the missing boy . . . never suspecting that the object of his quest has not left the present. Now, with Roger out of the way, the kidnapper can focus on his true target: Brianna herself.

My Review:

The title is much too long, but completely evocative of the story, assuming that the heart in question belongs to Claire Elizabeth Beauchamp Randall Fraser (and briefly Grey).

outlander mediumIf the above recital of names requires explication, please start this series at the very beginning, with Outlander. If you enjoy historical fiction, you’ll be extremely glad you did.

Consider all of this as spoilers to the Starz Outlander TV series that starts next month. Just as with The Game of Thrones, someday, if the series is successful, TV will catch up to the books.

By the time of this particular story, it is 1778, and Claire and Jamie are caught in the midst of the American Revolution. Even though Claire is a time traveler, she only remembers the bare outlines of 18th century American history. The Colonials obviously won in the end, but who won which battle is not something she ever studied in medical school.

Claire and Jamie live their 18th century lives one day at a time, doing their best to survive. Life, however, has a way of throwing them curveballs, ones almost as big as the trip through the standing stones that brought Claire back to the 18th century in the first place.

scottish prisonerWritten in My Own Heart’s Blood begins just where An Echo in the Bone left off, five years ago. (Waiting for the next book in this series is awful).

At the end of Echo, Jamie has just returned to the colonies after a trip to Scotland, a trip where he was reported dead. Claire is married to Lord John Grey (see The Scottish Prisoner (reviewed here) for more on Grey) as a way of being protected from accusations of sedition against the British. As Grey is homosexual, it was assumed that this would be a marriage entirely of convenience. It was, mostly, emphasis on mostly.

So Jamie comes back to find out that his wife has married one of his best friends, and takes Grey out to beat him to a pulp. A beating that Grey feels he not only deserves, but actively encourages. The results, however, leave Grey wandering around the Pennsylvania countryside with severe injuries. He finds himself batted, and battered, back and forth between the rival Colonial and British forces as he alternately conceals and reveals his identity in an attempt to return home.

Meanwhile, Jamie returns to Philadelphia and gets dragooned into the Colonial Army as a General, based on his experience in Europe as well as in the Colonies. Claire follows him as a surgeon while they repair their slightly strained relationship.

And in the 20th century, their daughter Brianna faces multiple kidnap attempts as she tries to figure out where and when the best place will be to raise her children, all while her husband in lost back in the 18th century on a wild goose chase for their son.

All anyone wants to do is go home, if they can just dodge the armies and other forces against them; and if they can figure out exactly where that elusive “home” might be.

Escape Rating A+: Okay, I’ll say upfront that I love this series, and have since the very first book, over 20 years ago. This series is sprawling and awesome and sprawlingly awesome.

Written in My Own Heart’s Blood was the perfect book to read on a 5-hour flight. I didn’t finish the 800+ pages, but I was enthralled every step of the way, both mine and Claire’s.

After 8 books in the series, what continues to fascinate, at least this reader, are the closely intertwined relationships among all the participants. Family and friendship make incredibly strong bonds, and in this story we see how close everyone has remained, even across three centuries and three generations.

The story encompasses not just Jamie and Claire, but also his nephew Ian, his natural son William, Bree and Roger in the 20th century, and every member of both families. And it’s all so enthralling that each person plays their own separate and completely needful part in the narrative. Including John Grey and his family from the British military side.

Not only is every story part of every other, but we get a glimpse at the time before Outlander started through Roger’s wild goose chase in the 1730s, and we see the genesis of characters who have fallen by the wayside. Even Bree’s 20th century stepfather manages to send an important message back from the grave.

Following the American Revolution from the ground is bloody, gory, frightening and amazing. Claire’s perspectives of the battles, from her position as a medico, give the entire scene a “you are there” feeling that keeps you on the edge of your seat. We meet some of the towering figures of the Revolution, like Washington and Benedict Arnold, only to discover that they were human and fallible (especially Arnold!) but still amazing.

I hope that Claire gets to meet Ben Franklin, I think it would be hilarious.

But speaking of hilarity, the story definitely has it’s lighter moments. The humor and occasional sarcasm laced through Claire’s 20th century observations of the 18th century are often snort-chuckle funny. The characters are so familiar that the humor in many situations comes through wonderfully.

If you have an interest in any of the periods that this series covers, if you enjoy historical fiction laced with romance and in the midst of a sprawling family saga, try Outlander. (If the size of the books alarms you, the first seven are available in an ebook bundle.)

I can’t wait to visit with Claire and Jamie again. The story does not (thankfully) end on a cliffhanger, but one is left with the intense feeling that there is much more yet to come!

***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.