Review: A Question of Honor by Charles Todd

A Question of Honor by Bess CrawfordFormat read: ebook provided by Edelweiss
Formats available: ebook, hardcover, large print paperback, audiobook
Genre: Historical mystery
Series: Bess Crawford, #5
Length: 322 pages
Publisher: William Morrow
Date Released: August 27, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

In the latest mystery from New York Times bestselling author Charles Todd, World War I nurse and amateur sleuth Bess Crawford investigates an old murder that occurred during her childhood in India, a search for the truth that will transform her and leave her pondering a troubling question: How can facts lie?

Bess Crawford enjoyed a wondrous childhood in India, where her father, a colonel in the British Army, was stationed on the Northwest Frontier. But an unforgettable incident darkened that happy time. In 1908, Colonel Crawford’s regiment discovered that it had a murderer in its ranks, an officer who killed five people in India and England yet was never brought to trial. In the eyes of many of these soldiers, men defined by honor and duty, the crime was a stain on the regiment’s reputation and on the good name of Bess’s father, the Colonel Sahib, who had trained the killer.

A decade later, tending to the wounded on the battlefields of France during World War I, Bess learns from a dying Indian sergeant that the supposed murderer, Lieutenant Wade, is alive—and serving at the Front. Bess cannot believe the shocking news. According to reliable reports, Wade’s body had been seen deep in the Khyber Pass, where he had died trying to reach Afghanistan. Soon, though, her mind is racing. How had he escaped from India? What had driven a good man to murder in cold blood?

Wanting answers, she uses her leave to investigate. In the village where the first three killings took place, she discovers that the locals are certain that the British soldier was innocent. Yet the present owner of the house where the crime was committed believes otherwise, and is convinced that Bess’s father helped Wade flee. To settle the matter once and for all, Bess sets out to find Wade and let the courts decide.

But when she stumbles on the horrific truth, something that even the famous writer Rudyard Kipling had kept secret all his life, she is shaken to her very core. The facts will damn Wade even as they reveal a brutal reality, a reality that could have been her own fate.

My Review:

The “honor” that is questioned in this story is the honor of the regiment that Bess Crawford’s father, Colonel Richard Crawford, commanded in India in 1908, even though that is now 10 years in the past and England is fighting the Great War in Europe instead of defending the Raj in India. The events of 1908 still cast a pall over the Crawfords and Simon Brandon, the Colonel’s loyal Regimental Sergeant-Major and right-hand man.

In 1908, Lieutenant Thomas Wade was accused of murdering 3 people in England while on leave, then murdering his own parents after returning to India. He was never convicted because he ran away from the military police before he could be bound over for court martial. His body was never recovered, but was reported found over the Afghan border.

It was a disgrace for the Regiment. It was also bewildering in the extreme. Neither the “Colonel Sahib” nor Sergeant-Major Brandon could remember anything about the man they had trained and trusted that marked him as a murderer. But Wade was convicted by his own actions. And there it ended. The British Army did not believe it worth risking lives going into the “no man’s land” to retrieve the corpse of a presumed killer.

Until 1918, when an Indian soldier found Nurse Bess Crawford at an aid station in France and told her that he’d seen Lieutenant Wade serving in the British Army. Then the Indian soldier died, having raked the ashes of the dead past into life again.

Bess, being Bess (if you haven’t read her previous adventures, start with A Duty to the Dead) can’t let it go. But she doesn’t want to worry her parents with it unless it can be proved to actually be something, so she starts with Brandon, as usual. And she uses her home leaves to start investigating the original crime back home.

What Bess discovers is that absolutely nothing is as she originally thought it was. At the heart of this case is an unspeakable crime, and that there, but for the grace of God, went she. And lastly, that the so-called “correct” thing to do and the honorable thing to do may not be the same thing, after all.

Escape Rating A-: Bess is interesting because she does things rather than sitting around and waiting for things to happen to her; she is particularly compelling to watch because she chose a life of doing things at a time when many women of her class did not so choose; she is a trained nurse at a time when most upper middle class women went to parties and waited to get married.

Although it may seem that her mother is a professional spouse, it becomes obvious over the course of the series that there is a whole lot of profession in that spousing. Mrs. Crawford “followed the drum” and went where her husband was posted. She didn’t sit idly about either, she seems to have kept the English colony running on an even keel wherever they went, and she continues to keep track of the families of all the men who served in the Regiment.

There is a mystery, but this story (and the series) isn’t about the mystery. It’s about the experience. Bess’ perspective as a battlefield nurse in World War I is absolutely fascinating, and the descriptions of conditions in the hospitals both in France and the rehabilitation hospitals back home are intensely detailed. You are there to the point of stomach-churning. War is hell.

It’s ironic that the mystery isn’t about the war, it’s about the peace before the war. Lots of people took advantage of Lieutenant Wade, and no one did a proper investigation. Cui bono? Who benefits? Who benefitted then, and who benefits in 1918?

The answers are a surprise. What makes the story so compelling is that Bess always learns something about herself when she looks into things for someone else. And even when she doesn’t like the answers, she keeps right on looking, no matter what she finds or what trouble she turns up.

***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 9-15-13

Sunday Post

Yesterday turned out to be pretty splendiferous, once the butterflies in my stomach settled down.

Gay Romance Northwest Meet-up LogoI was the Keynote Speaker at the Gay Romance Northwest Meetup yesterday. The conference, and it was very much a writers and readers conference, was held at the Seattle Public Library’s Central Library. The last I heard, the paid attendance was 120, but they were definitely taking at-the-door registration, so there were more people there.

My topic was getting what you want into your local library, or working with your local library to get what you wrote onto the physical or virtual shelves. The Q&A session ran over!!! There’s a very nice summary here, even if I feel funny about being the unnamed librarian.

I stayed for the whole thing. Besides the fact that I got questions and comments at every break and at the happy hour afterwards, this was an awesome event. Also, and one of the interesting things, as far as the writing and breaking into publishing, and questions about diversity and the lack thereof, many of the questions and answers were not dissimilar to things I’d heard at WorldCon a couple of weeks ago.

Becoming a writer and getting published is damn difficult. Period, exclamation point. Diversity is a journey and not a destination. Respectability is something that no genre fiction seems to have achieved, although mystery seems to be closer (for relative definitions of close) than anything else, and LGBTQ romance gets hit with a double-whammy of being both LGBTQ and romance.

One thing struck me, one of the authors (Daisy Harris) said that she wrote m/m romance because it allowed her to write couples who did not follow the alpha male/submissive female paradigm that she had been forced to follow when she wrote traditional m/f romance. Last night I was reading something that I wasn’t planning to review, but it was a couple where the dominant male/submissive female roles should not have occurred, and damn but they did anyway. I’m having a major re-think here.

I hope I get invited back next year.

But back to what else happened this week…

Current Giveaway:

Tourwide Giveaway: $15 Amazon Gift Card + 2 ebook copies of Medium Well by Meg Benjamin

Hellfire by Jean JohnsonBlog Recap:

B+ Review: The Bones of Paris by Laurie R. King
A- Review: Hellfire by Jean Johnson
B Review: Tempt Me, Cowboy by Megan Crane
B Review: Medium Rare by Meg Benjamin + Giveaway
B Review: The Arrangement by Mary Balogh
Stacking the Shelves (58)

Sunset on Summer Fun Blog HopComing Next Week:

A Question of Honor by Charles Todd (review)
The Bridge by Rebecca Rogers Maher (review)
Knight in Black Leather by Gail Dayton (review)
Dangerous Curves Ahead by Sugar Jamison (review)
Sunset on Summer Fun Blog Hop

Review: The Bones of Paris by Laurie R. King

The Bones of Paris by Laurie R. KingFormat read: ebook provided by NetGalley
Formats available: ebook, hardcover
Genre: Historical mystery
Series: Harris Stuyvesant, #2
Length: 432 pages
Publisher: Bantam
Date Released: September 10, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Paris, France: September 1929. For Harris Stuyvesant, the assignment is a private investigator’s dream—he’s getting paid to troll the cafés and bars of Montparnasse, looking for a pretty young woman. The American agent has a healthy appreciation for la vie de bohème, despite having worked for years at the U.S. Bureau of Investigation. The missing person in question is Philippa Crosby, a twenty-two year old from Boston who has been living in Paris, modeling and acting. Her family became alarmed when she stopped all communications, and Stuyvesant agreed to track her down. He wholly expects to find her in the arms of some up-and-coming artist, perhaps experimenting with the decadent lifestyle that is suddenly available on every rue and boulevard.

As Stuyvesant follows Philippa’s trail through the expatriate community of artists and writers, he finds that she is known to many of its famous—and infamous—inhabitants, from Shakespeare and Company’s Sylvia Beach to Ernest Hemingway to the Surrealist photographer Man Ray. But when the evidence leads Stuyvesant to the Théâtre du Grand-Guignol in Montmartre, his investigation takes a sharp, disturbing turn. At the Grand-Guignol, murder, insanity, and sexual perversion are all staged to shocking, brutal effect: depravity as art, savage human nature on stage.

Soon it becomes clear that one missing girl is a drop in the bucket. Here, amid the glittering lights of the cabarets, hides a monster whose artistic coup de grâce is to be rendered in blood. And Stuyvesant will have to descend into the darkest depths of perversion to find a killer . . . sifting through The Bones of Paris.

My Review:

The dance of death capers to a lively jazz tune beneath the city of lights. You can almost hear the beat take on a frenetic turn as some people realize that the good times can’t possibly last.

It is September, 1929. Jazz Age Paris, and the booming U.S. stock market has made it possible for the thriving artistic expatriate community that became the hallmark of the era to exist, is about to go smash.

In The Bones of Paris, it feels as if Harris Stuyvesant’s hunt for the young American woman, Pip Crosby, brings the crash. There’s a sense of impending doom from the very first page.

It could be because we see the date, and we know.

Touchstone by Laurie R KingHarris Stuyvesant is a private investigator, formerly a member of the American Bureau of Investigation. And yes, that would be the precursor to the FBI. In a previous case (the book Touchstone) Harris breaks with his former employers but stays in Europe as a private operator. Pip’s case brings him back to Paris.

This is the Paris of Hemingway’s Lost Generation. Indeed, Harris not only knows Hemingway, but is careful to lose whenever Hemingway picks a boxing match with him, because Hemingway is a nasty loser but an expansive winner. Ezra Pound, James Joyce and Gertrude Stein appear as background characters.

But it is the artists with whom the story is most caught up. Pip Crosby was an artist’s model. So Harris spends a lot of time investigating the artists’ community in Paris. Particularly Man Ray, Didi Moreau, and the Grand Guignol theatre of naturalistic horror and its proprietor, Le Comte.

Of course, in the Paris of the 1920s, everyone in the artistic community knew everyone. Harris’ investigation feels like stepping back into time, and drinking the night away with the Queen of Montparnasse while listening to Josephine Baker at Bricktop’s.

Harris has a missing American girl to find. He checks in with the police, only to discover that Pip Crosby is not the only missing girl, or the only missing person. Inspector Doucet has begun to fear a pattern, a serial killer, who has gone undetected for at least 18 months.

The argument between them is that the evidence that Harris turns up is generally not obtained by legal means, and the suspects that he fears may be guilty are not people that the Inspector, however dutiful, is predisposed to consider.

Then there is the biggest problem between these two men; Doucet is engaged to marry the woman that Harris once loved. A woman who may be the next target of the killer.

Escape Rating B+: The evocation of the time and place is marvelous. There are a few of the people involved in this story that I’m still trying to determine whether they were real figures or were made up. Didi Moreau is the one I think is fictional, but could have been real.

But for the purposes of the mystery, there were three suspects. One could not possibly have been the murderer because he was a real person and this event simply didn’t happen in his life. Part of the mystery was that it simply took a long time to narrow down that Pip was dead, or admit Pip was dead, and to figure out that they were dealing with a serial killer and who the possibilities might be.

Grand_Guignol_posterThe weaving of real elements into the story made things more chilling. Two features of Paris at the time that are integral parts of the story are the Paris Catacombs and their chilling history, which of course still exist, and the Grand Guignol theatre of horror and comedy.

I had not read Touchstone before reading The Bones of Paris. It isn’t necessary to enjoy this book, but now that I know it exists, I want it.

The Bones of Paris is very much a character driven mystery. The character of Harris Stuyvesant, the character of Jazz Age Paris, the character of the murderer, and the characters of the world that is about to change forever.

***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 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: Finding Camlann by Sean Pidgeon

Finding Camlann by Sean PidgeonFormat read: hardcover borrowed from the library
Formats available: ebook, hardcover, paperback
Genre: Historical fiction
Length: 352 pages
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Date Released: January 7, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

An ancient poem and a mysterious burial inspire an enthralling historical and literary quest.

Despite the wealth of scholarship that pretends to offer proof, archaeologist Donald Gladstone knows there is no solid evidence that a real King Arthur ever existed. Still, the great popular tales spun by medieval historian Geoffrey of Monmouth, and embroidered by Chrétien de Troyes, Sir Thomas Malory, and so many others, must have found their inspiration somewhere. A dramatic archaeological find at Stonehenge and the rediscovery of an old Welsh battle poem, buried among the manuscripts of the Bodleian Library, open up enticing—and misleading—new possibilities.

When the beguiling Julia Llewellyn, a linguist working on the Oxford English Dictionary, joins Donald on the trail of clues, their fervent enthusiasms, unusual gifts, and unfulfilled yearnings prove a combustible mix. Their impassioned search for truths buried deep in the past, amid the secret places and half-forgotten legends of the British countryside, must ultimately transform them—and all our understandings of the origins of Arthur.

My Review:

The story begins as that of an archaeologist, Donald Gladstone, who is trying to debunk all of the romanticized legends of King Arthur in a book of popular scholarship. Unfortunately for our poor modern day hero, he isn’t able to say who or what Arthur was, only what he was not. It is not an auspicious start. Readers generally want something definitive, as his editor keeps reminding him.

Like the quest for the Holy Grail, Finding Camlann is a quest story. Donald Gladstone is searching, not for the true cup, but for the true story of the “once and future king”. His search leads him to the historic sources for the Arthurian legend, and he finds them sadly lacking. Hence his difficulty in determining what Arthur was.

But as he continues to delve into the material, he discovers that even misty legends must have a reason for someone to have needed the cloak of their legend for inspiration. Or there really was an ancient document behind the fabrication after all.

Gladstone’s quest is the pursuit of what lies beneath the layers of fiction. We see his research, how each painstaking clue leads to another fragile lead, one century back beyond another. He reveals how history gets made, and how it gets destroyed by mold and rot.

And how pursuing it to obsession can equally destroy a man’s life.

Escape Rating B+: For the reader, Finding Camlann has the feel of armchair research. In some ways, it reminded me a bit of Josephine Tey’s The Daughter of Time, with the notable exception that the researcher in this case was not “laid up”, but the reader does follow his search vicariously nonetheless.

Glyndwr Coronation from Wikipedia
The Coronation of Owain Glyndwr as Prince of Wales in 1404

Although the historical search is for King Arthur, the personages who are also found along the way are equally the historian Geoffrey of Monmouth and Owain Glyndŵr, the last native Welshman to hold the title Prince of Wales. The links between Arthur (also Welsh) and Owain were fascinatingly explored through the research. The way the stories blended, I couldn’t tell how much of the research was “real” and how much fictionalized for the purposes of the story.

And it didn’t matter, it carried me along, marvelously, just like the best of Arthurian legends.

There is a “framing story” here, the contemporary life of Gladstone and Julia Llewellyn, a lexicographer at the Oxford English Dictionary who begins by helping him find a lost poem that might be about Glyndŵr and might be about Arthur. Their friendship is the catalyst for changes in both their lives. The push and pull between them and the others in their orbit often move events.

But it’s the search that haunts the reader and keeps the story pushing forward. At the end, the forward step is into the possibility of glory. Or awakening. But certainly into change beyond imagining. And the author leaves the characters, and the reader stepping into the indescribable, and undescribed, unknown.

***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 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 8-11-13

Sunday Post

I’m surprised by how strong a reaction I’ve had to the death of Dr. Barbara Mertz, better known as author Elizabeth Peters (also Barbara Michaels). Probably because the character she created, Amelia Peabody, made such an indelible impression from the first book I Last Camel Died at Noon by Elizabeth Peterslistened to, The Last Camel Died at Noon, undoubtedly helped by the marvelous interpretation of Barbara Rosenblat. The series is written from Amelia’s first-person perspective, and I doubt that anyone was ever neutral. Readers either loved Amelia’s “voice” or couldn’t stand her. She mostly skewered the haters with her steel-tipped parasol.

But in addition to a cracking good adventure, the Amelia Peabody stories always portrayed the long-term romance of a happily married couple who sometimes (often) argued ferociously. They also gave the reader an absolutely fantastic glimpse into the dawn of scientific archeology in Egypt, complete with scalawags, ne’er-do-wells, fortune hunters and thieves. And every season, another dead body to investigate. If you like strong, intelligent and extremely opinionated heroines, start with Crocodile on the Sandbank.

Current Giveaways:

Can’t Help Falling in Love by Bella Andre: one print copy (US only)
Mist by Susan Krinard: one print copy (US only)
Tourwide Giveaway from Lindsay Piper: Prizes include a $25 Amazon gift card and copies of the entire Dragon Kings series so far (ends soon, so hurry)

Blood Warrior by Lindsey PiperBlog Recap:

B+ Review: Blood Warrior by Lindsey Piper
Guest Post from Author Lindsey Piper on “So…Paranormal Romance?” + Giveaway
B Review: The Ides of April by Lindsey Davis
B Review: Mist by Susan Krinard + Giveaway
B+ Review: Can’t Help Falling In Love by Bella Andre + Giveaway
B Review: Omega by Susannah Sandlin
Stacking the Shelves (54)

Lovestruck Blog HopComing Next Week:

The Ashford Affair by Lauren Willig (review)
Baring It All by Megan Frampton (review)
Matchpoint by Elise Sax (blog tour review and guest post)
Storm Force by Susannah Sandlin (review)
Lovestruck Blog Hop

Review: The Ides of April by Lindsey Davis

The Ides of April by Lindsey DavisFormat read: print book borrowed from the Library
Formats available: ebook, hardcover, paperback, audiobook
Genre: Historical mystery
Series: A Flavia Albia Mystery, #1
Length: 352 pages
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Date Released: June 11, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Flavia Albia is the adopted daughter of Marcus Didius Falco and Helena Justina. From her mother, she learned how to blend in at all levels of society; from her father, she learned the tricks of their mutual professional trade. But her wits and (frequently) sharp tongue are hers alone.

Now, working as a private informer in Rome during the reign of Domitian, Flavia has taken over her father’s old ramshackle digs at Fountain Court in the Surbura district, where she plies her trade with energy, determination, and the usual Falco luck. Recently hired to help investigate a fatal accident, she finds herself stuck with a truly awful person for a client and facing a well-heeled, well-connected opponent.

That is, until her client unexpectedly dies under what might be called “suspicious circumstances.” While this is not a huge loss for society, it is a loss for Flavia Albia’s pocket. Even worse, it’s just one of a series of similar deaths for which she now finds herself under suspicion. Before things go from abysmal to worse, Flavia must sort out what is happening, and who is responsible.

My Review:

Silver Pigs by Lindsey DavisThe Ides of April reminds me of the best and worst of the Marcus Didius Falco stories. The reader does have to like the narrator’s voice (in this case Falco’s adopted daughter, Flavia Albia). It takes forever to get both the story and the mystery set up and finally running. Both that story and that mystery are immersed in the daily life of Imperial Rome, which in detail tends to be surprisingly like modern life.

And there is that element of the bear dancing: you’re not surprised it’s done well, you’re surprised it’s done at all. By “it” I mean the concept of a hard-boiled detective series set in Imperial Rome circa 69-79 AD in the case of the Falco series. Or in Flavia Albia’s case, sometime after 81 AD, and Flavia seems to be slightly less hard-boiled, not to mention female.

On the other hand, unlike her father, Flavia seems to have been raised to the business from the point where the Falcos adopted her. She has an outsider’s perspective on Rome and its citizens, and she feels the need to be independent and productive.

While Flavia (and Falco’s) occupation as an informer or inquiry agent may seem anachronistic, Flavia’s employment in particular doesn’t seem that way. Women in this time period had more independence than in many later periods until our own.

The case itself is interesting because it’s based on a snippet of real history. There was a mysterious “needle-poisoner” who apparently was never caught. So Flavia Albia’s introduction is one potential scenario.

But what we see is Flavia making her way. We do not see her formidable parents, and that’s probably a good thing. They remain supportively in the background, as they should. This is her story. Flavia is standing on her own two feet, even when they sometimes lead her astray.

There is definitely a part of this case where she is very much led astray. But she gets herself back on track before the end.

And, like so many of the stories starring her parents, once she gets back on track, the adventure (and misadventure) whips up to a page-turning pace before all the loose ends are tied up.

Escape Rating B: Flavia Albia’s story is one that rewards an initial investment of time and tracking of all the dramatis personae. Flavia has a large adopted family, and there are a number of friends and frenemies who are tracking her, not just because of her own cases, but as leftovers from her parents’ salad days. Keeping everyone straight takes a bit of doing.

This is a classic mystery in the sense that all the clues are laid out for the reader, but it is necessary to piece them together. I figured out who probably “done it” but not the motives for quite a while.

A big part of what makes this story interesting is Flavia Albia herself. Her point of view may seem, or may be, a bit 21st century, but it is in keeping with her mother’s perspective. Also, Flavia Albia is an outsider who has the veneer of an insider. It makes her a good investigator. She’s also an interesting woman because she is independent.

She makes mistakes, and then sees them and grows from them.

One thing I wonder about for the future. She forges an interesting working relationship with the runner, who of course, is more than he first appears. It reminds me a lot of the early days of Falco’s relationship with Helena Justina. I wonder…

***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 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 8-4-13

Sunday Post

Is it just me, or is summer slipping by amazingly fast? I just scheduled a blog tour for October 30! Who wants to think about Halloween when it’s still summer?

Seafair Logo 2013This is our first summer in Seattle, so we spent yesterday at one of Seattle’s summer traditions. This weekend is Seafair weekend. That’s Sea as in Seattle, not sea as in ocean. It is an air & water show, but the action is on Lake Washington, not the Pacific. It was loads of fun and we’ll probably do it again next year.

Private Duel with Agent Gunn by Jillian StoneBlog Recap:

B Review: The Darwin Elevator by Jason M. Hough
B Review: Silent Warrior by Lindsey Piper
B Review: Caged Warrior by Lindsey Piper
C+ Review: Troll-y Yours by Sheri Fredricks
B+ Review: Absolution by Susannah Sandlin
B+ Review: A Private Duel with Agent Gunn by Jillian Stone
Stacking the Shelves (53)

Blood Warrior by Lindsey PiperComing Next Week:

Blood Warrior by Lindsey Piper (blog tour review)
Guest Post by Lindsey Piper + giveaway of Blood Warrior
The Ides of April by Lindsey Davis (review)
Mist by Susan Krinard (blog tour review + giveaway)
Can’t Help Falling in Love by Bella Andre (blog tour review + giveaway)
Omega by Susannah Sandlin (review)

What’s happening in your week?

 

Stacking the Shelves (52)

Stacking the Shelves

It’s summer. It’s kind of hot out, even here in temperate Seattle, to the point where we’re debating between more fans and just breaking down and getting an air conditioner for the bedroom.

But I’m seeing (and getting) not just winter review books from NetGalley and Edelweiss, but books for next Spring! The Revenant of Thraxton Hall has a publication date of March, 2014. I’ll admit to being puzzled. If it’s complete enough for even an eARC, why wait nearly 8 months to publish?

Sometimes, ours is really not to reason why. Just to read and review.

Stacking the Shelves Reading Reality July 27 2013

For Review:
Blind Justice (William Monk #19) by Anne Perry
The Boleyn Deceit (Boleyn Trilogy #2) by Laura Andersen
Choose Your Shot (Long Shots #5) by Christine D’Abo
Dangerous Seduction (Nemesis Unlimited #2) by Zoë Archer
Deadshifted (Edie Spence #4) by Cassie Alexander
Dreams of the Golden Age (Golden Age #2) by Carrie Vaughn
Getting Rowdy (Love Undercover #3) by Lori Foster
Heaven and Hellsbane (Hellsbane #2) by Paige Cuccaro
I Only Have Eyes for You (Sullivans #4) by Bela Andre
Lord of Snow and Ice by Heather Massey
Never Deal with Dragons (DRACIM #1) by Lorenda Christensen
The Revenant of Thraxton Hall by Vaughn Entwistle
Shadow’s Curse (Imnada Brotherhood #2) by Alexa Egan
Soul of Fire (Portals #2) by Laura Anne Gilman

Checked Out from the Library:
Baskerville by John O’Connell

Stacking the Shelves (49)

Stacking the Shelves

Until Friday, it was starting to look like I wasn’t going to get any review books this week. Then the new Ether Chronicles book popped up in Edelweiss (YAY!) and the 3rd Sullivans book finally arrived in the mail (tour date is set, it’s always a relief when the book shows up)

Now I just need to plan my reading for my trip to the American Library Association conference next week. I try so hard not to pick up print ARCs. Plus there are all those long plane rides to consider. Lots of potential reading time!

Stacking the Shelves June 22 2013 Reading Reality

For Review:
Can’t Help Falling in Love (Sullivans #3) by Bella Andre
Skies of Gold (Ether Chronicles #5) by Zoe Archer
Unleash the Curse (Imnada Brotherhood #1.5) by Alexa Egan

Purchased:
Blood and Betrayal (Emperor’s Edge #5) by Lindsay Buroker
Forged in Blood I (Emperor’s Edge #6) by Lindsay Buroker
Trying to Score (Assassins #2) by Toni Aleo

Borrowed from the Library:
A Beautiful Friendship (Stephanie Harrington #1) by David Weber
Fire Season (Stephanie Harrington #2) by David Weber and Jane Lindskold
The Ides of April (Flavia Alba #1) by Lindsey Davis
Stoker’s Manuscript by Royce Prouty

The Sunday Post AKA What’s On My (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 6-9-13

Sunday Post

I finally went to see Iron Man 3 yesterday. Fun, cool, and better than Iron Man 2, but still not quite as much fun as the first Iron Man. If you like superhero movies, go. Sit through the credits, because there’s an Easter Egg, and it’s priceless.

Winner Announcement:

The winner of the $10 Amazon Gift Card, the For the Love of Mythology Blog Hop prize here at Reading Reality, is Renata S.

Jack Absolute by C.C. HumphreysCurrent Giveaways:

Big Sky Summer by Linda Lael Miller (paperback, US only)
Gaming for Keeps by Seleste deLaney (ebook, INT)
Jack Absolute by C.C. Humphreys (3 paperback copies, US only)

The Yard by Alex GrecianBlog Recap:

B+ Review: Big Sky Summer by Linda Lael Miller
Q&A with Author Linda Lael Miller + Giveaway
A- Review: Deadly Games by Lindsay Buroker
B Review: Gaming for Keeps by Seleste deLaney
Interview with Author Seleste deLaney + Giveaway
A Review: Jack Absolute by C.C. Humphreys
Sneak Peak at The Blooding of Jack Absolute by C.C. Humphreys + Giveaway
A Review: The Yard by Alex Grecian
Stacking the Shelves (47)

A Beautiful Heist by Kim FosterComing Up This Week:

Against the Wind by Regan Walker (blog tour review)
A Beautiful Heist by Kim Foster (blog tour review, author interview and giveaway)
Heart of Obsidian by Nalini Singh (review)
South of Surrender by Laura Kaye (blog tour review, guest post and giveaway)
SEAL of Honor by Tonya Burrows (blog tour review, guest post and giveaway)

What are you looking forward to this week?