Friday, May 31, 2013

Book 21 - "Tell Me the Truth."

*Let me begin by explaining how this book has affected me. I finished reading it late last night. I initially intended to finish the book on Thursday (today). I started it late Sunday night with the intention of reading roughly 100 pages a day. During the first half of this week, I was completely absorbed with the story that's told in this novel. I read it in the bathtub, during cooking and commercial breaks, and late into the night when I should have been sleeping. But I just could not put it down! This book is also a bit "heavier" than most books I read. The language is eloquently crafted, but I did have to take some time to visit the dictionary to decipher some of the words' meanings. This was a challenge for me, but one I gladly was willing to see through.

[And as a side note, I've really learned a lot about myself during this book-a-week challenge I've bestowed upon myself. I've always had a hard time committing to things, especially books (surprisingly). If I had picked this book up last year, I would have put it right back down by page 30. I contemplated doing it this time around as well, but I told myself that because I had started this book and was willing to read my 52 books in 2013 and report on my blog, I was more than capable of plugging through a book that was more difficult to get through than some others. Having finished this book in three days, I've proven to myself 1) that this is a challenge that I can take on, and 2) there will be nothing but rewards for me at the end of the year (and, really, after each book that I finish.)]

Back to the novel - I will review the book in a moment, but as I said, I finished it late last night and wasn't expecting the feelings that were soon going to surface within me. I finished the book, held it in my hand to reflect for a quick moment on all that I has just read (as I do with all books I finish), and gave a quick thanks to the author for giving me something so special. Within an hour after finishing, something very dark began lurking in the corners of my mind. I tried to do something productive - work on my blog, begin a new book, go to sleep, even - but I couldn't. And not only was I thinking about the story but also about the things that make me sad in my own life. I remember walking past our bed to go into the kitchen and I saw that Jay was awake. He couldn't sleep either. When he asked me what was wrong, I broke down crying, telling him how this sort of sadness had come out of nowhere. Being Jay, he told me lie down with him and try to get to sleep, but I could not. I lied in the dark for over an hour just thinking, wondering where my excitement had gone in the short time since I finished reading the novel. I didn't even want to turn the light off, afraid of what was waiting for me in the dark (both in the dark of my house and in the dark of my mind). I drifted off to sleep sometime after three a.m., only to awake from a restless night of terrible dreams.

I in no way regret reading this novel. In fact, this morning I am still thinking about it, wondering if the characters are doing alright. This just goes to show my readers how books can and do affect us in real life.

Book 21: The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield

"Eerie and fascinating." - USA Today

"Readers will feel the magnetic pull of this paean to words, books, and the magical power of story."                       - People

The Thirteenth Tale
(click here to purchase)


Description: Biographer Margaret Lea returns one night to her apartment above her father’s antiquarian bookshop. On her steps she finds a letter. It is a hand-written request from one of Britain’s most prolific and well-loved novelists. Vida Winter, gravely ill, wants to recount her life story before it is too late, and she wants Margaret to be the one to capture her history. The request takes Margaret by surprise — she doesn’t know the author, nor has she read any of Miss Winter’s dozens of novels.

Late one night while pondering whether to accept the task of recording Miss Winter’s personal story, Margaret begins to read her father’s rare copy of Miss Winter’s Thirteen Tales of Change and Desperation. She is spellbound by the stories and confused when she realizes the book only contains twelve stories. Where is the thirteenth tale? Intrigued, Margaret agrees to meet Miss Winter and act as her biographer.

As Vida Winter unfolds her story, she shares with Margaret the dark family secrets that she has long kept hidden as she remembers her days at Angelfield, the now burnt-out estate that was her childhood home. Margaret carefully records Miss Winter’s account and finds herself more and more deeply immersed in the strange and troubling story. Both women will have to confront their pasts and the weight of family secrets... and the ghosts that haunt them still. [GoodReads]


It's actually interesting how I came to find this novel. I was at Barnes and Noble looking for a book with the word Thirteen in the title. It had something to do with a woman returning to her hometown to care for her ailing mother. But a coven of twelve witches in the town are trying to find/retrieve/discover their thirteenth something. I thought this book sounded interesting a few weeks ago when I saw it on one of the tables, but this past Sunday, it wasn't there and I couldn't remember the exact title or author. I asked one of the booksellers if it sounded familiar and she mentioned that it could have been The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield. It had nothing to do with an ailing mother or a coven or anything remotely similar, aside from the number thirteen. The bookseller promised me that it was a great book, and without a second thought, I purchased it.

I knew this book would be a challenge for me, yet when I arrived home and finished Heather Webber's The Root of All Trouble, I jumped right in. Many of the words on the back cover of the novel grabbed my attention: reclusive author, enchanting, storytelling, Gothic, twins, ghosts, etc.

A woman named Margaret is contacted by the very famous author Vida Winter who wants her to write the author's biography. Vida is dying and doesn't have much time. But there's a catch: well over twenty previous biographers took down Vida's story, yet none of them were true. She claimed to be an orphan, an aristocratic child, and a Persian princess, among other things. Vida believed that truth means nothing while storytelling is what reaches people. Obviously, Margaret (who had never even read any of Vida's work) is skeptical that she too will be duped into playing along with another of Vida's stories, but after much thought and proof of Vida's history, she reluctantly decides to take on the task.

I am not going to attempt to summarize this story - that's the beauty of this novel that you will unravel on your own. But I do want to discuss what I really admired about this book.

Vida is an interesting woman. She supports the art of storytelling so much that she has made her own life to be one large story. After Vida and Margaret are properly introduced and settled in with one another, Vida begins to relaying the genealogical history of her family who spent their lives in the Angelfield house. She begins by describing her grandparents, the unusual relationship her mother, Isabelle, has with her uncle, and finally settles in describing her and her twin's childhood at the house.

Vida explains that her real name is Adeline March - her mother had gone away for some time, married an aristocratic man, and gave birth to twins (Adeline and Emmeline) within a very short amount of time since the wedding. Soon after, her new husband passes away and his family disowns Isabelle and the twins, whereupon she returns to her home at Angelfield. Abandoning her twins with the housekeepers, the girls grow into unruly and very different children.

Upon the arrival of a governess who intends to raise the girls properly, she comes up with a reasonable hypothesis: Normally when twins are born, they are split equally down the middle. In the case of Adeline and Emmeline, the girls' traits are split among them. On the one hand, Emmeline is quiet, reserved, and believed to be "retarded." On the other hand, Adeline is dirty, unruly, sneaky, conniving, and cruel. As the girls age, they come into their own individual selves, but with time, the story grows dark, deadly, and extremely psychotic (like most of the characters).

I cannot say any more about the story because I do not want to ruin any of the mystery that Setterfield so beautifully creates.

I think that Margaret and Vida connect so well because Margaret is also a twin, though her sibling died during her birth. I think the relationships in the novel are so important. I learned that no relationship is perfect - people simply move through life doing the best that they can.

Expect one ginormous twist to take place in this story, and brace yourself for an adventure unlike anything you've ever experienced.


Diane Setterfield

Meet the author: Diane Setterfield is a British author whose debut novel, The Thirteenth Tale, became a New York Times #1 bestseller. Before writing, Setterfield studied French Literature at Bristol University and specialized in 20th century French literature, particularly the works of Andre Gide. She taught at numerous schools as well as privately before leaving academia in the late 90s. She lives in North Yorkshire, England with her husband and four cats, and is currently working on her second novel. [GoodReads]

To visit Diane, follow these links:
Facebook Page
GoodReads BIO





 
UPCOMING BOOK: Mrs. Lincoln's Dressmaker by Jennifer Chiaverini
> > > [Jump to this blog!]

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Book 20 - Landscaping [and Investigative] Services, Anyone?

Book 20: The Root of All Trouble by Heather Webber (aka Heather Blake)


The Root of All Trouble
(click here to purchase)
Description: WHEN IT RAINS, IT POURS...
When a spring storm rolls through Freedom, Ohio, landscape designer Nina Quinn expects to get her hands dirty with the mess left behind. But after high winds uproot a tree, revealing the corpse of a man inside its rotted hollow, Nina quickly realizes that cleaning up after Mother nature's fury is the least of her worries. It soon becomes clear that there is no lack of suspects in the man's untimely death. As a shady contractor and philanderer, he'd angered a lot of people before he disappeared, including some of Nina's closest friends. With the help of her police detective ex-husband, a mysterious coroner's investigator, her ex-con employees and her zany neighbors, Nina sets out to uncover a killer...before another victim ends up planted six feet under. [Heather Webber]

To he honest, as much as I love Heather's work, I have not read any Nina Quinn novels yet. But since I received this one straight from the creator herself, and because I wanted to celebrate her new book release, I decided to jump right in. I finished the book the first day I started it because I couldn't put it down.

Now, normally I have an EXTREME-OCD issue with books where there is no possible way for me to EVER read a series out of order. Oh, the horror! What if I missed who's dating who, who did what to who, or who the hell is that?! Nope - I have always started with the very first page of the very first novel of the very first of the series in order to assure myself that I would not miss out on any detail, no matter how big or small. BUT, and this is a very big BUT, with The Root of All Trouble, I couldn't help myself.

I was immediately drawn into the story by some of Heather's outrageously funny characters. For instance, Nina Quinn, our heroine, is surrounded by a whole lot of crazy and deals with it in some pretty quirky ways. Perry and Mario, who love each other very much, seem to find that the important things in life to argue about pertain to secret admirers, home renovation (and decoration), and who gets to have the last word. Mr. Cabrera goes shakily through the novel on what appears to be an endless hangover. And Kevin, Nina's ex-husband, has again begun flirting with her, yet she's not sure she's either ready or in anticipation of that.

It seems as though this isn't the first time that Nina finds herself in the middle of a murder - even though she has nothing to do with the murders, she is very skilled at wiggling herself into the heart of an investigation. Frankly, I enjoy her enthusiasm!

I recently purchased the first of the series on my Kindle and plan to begin working through the series soon. This book (number 7!) has really pulled me in solely through the characters. When I finished the novel, I felt that one day was definitely not enough time to spend with Nina's gang.
My signed copy of
The Root of All Trouble!
*I would offer to lend out any and all books that I own, but I have a VERY strong attachment to my books. Maybe if you left something of value in my possession with you borrow it - a DNA sample, car, social security card, credit card, your child (though I don't want to be responsible (or a babysitter) to him/her, and honestly, I'm not entirely sure you would return my book and pick the mentioned child up!). Sorry! But I can lead you to specific stores and websites where you can purchase books at a discount. I buy most of my books used through Amazon, but I am a firm believer in used book shops and the rewards program through Barnes and Noble (free shipping and lower prices and B&N.com!). Or, you could check them out from that old-fashioned thing called the library, but personally, I need to purchase my own books, bestow my own energy upon them, and then keep them as trophies on my bookshelves!

Other books in the Nina Quinn series:
  1. A Hoe Lot of Trouble (July 2004)
  2. Trouble in Spades (Maya 2005)
  3. Digging up Trouble (April 2006)
  4. Trouble in Bloom (April 2007)
  5. Weeding Out Trouble (August 2008)
  6. Trouble Under the Tree (December 2011)
  7. The Root of All Trouble ( April 2013)
     

To visit Heather, follow these links:

Heather Webber SITE
Facebook


Heather signing my books! (author of
The Good, the Bad, and the Witchy)




UPCOMING BOOK: The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield
> > > [Jump to this blog!]


See also:




It Takes a Witch #1













A Witch Before Dying #2

The Good, the Bad,
and the Witchy #3

Sunday, May 26, 2013

[Previously READ] There's a new witch in town...

Heather Blake's Wishcraft mystery series: #1 It Takes a Witch and #2 A Witch Before Dying

*I'm sure you know by now how AWESOME Heather Blake (aka Heather Webber) is. If you've not had a chance to read my other posting about the Wishcraft series, please do so NOW!

A Witch Before Dying #2
(click here to purchase)
It Takes a Witch #1
(click here to purchase)





















Description(s):

Book 1: Darcy Merriweather and her sister, Harper, hail from a long line of witches who have the power to grand witches using spells. They've come to Enchanted Village in Salem, Massachusetts, to join the family business, buy they soon find themselves knee-deep in murder...
Until three weeks ago, Darcy and Harper were working dead-end jobs and trying to put their troubles behind them. Then their aunt Velma delivered a bombshell: They're actually Wishcrafters - witches with the power to grant wishes with a mere spell. Wanting a fresh start, they head to their aunt's magic-themed tourist town to master their newfound skills.
But their magic fails them when a wannabe witch turns up dead - strangled with Aunt Ve's scarf - and Aunt Ve's sweetheart, Sylar, is found looming over the body. Ve is standing by her man, but Darcy overheard Sylar wish that the victim would disappear - forever. With Harper distracted by her handsome new crush, Darcy is determined to sleuth her way to the truth. But it'll take more than a wish to unravel this mystery... [Obsidian]

Book 2: Darcy Merriweather is Salem, Massachusetts’ newest resident Wishcrafter—a witch who can grant wishes for others. While Darcy isn’t able to grant wishes for herself, she does possess a certain knack for solving problems—including the occasional murder… When Darcy is hired by Elodie Keaton to clean up her missing mother’s disorderly home, the Wishcrafter is certainly up for the task. After all, the motto of her Aunt Ve’s personal concierge service As You Wish is “No Job Impossible.” But beneath the piles of old newspapers and knickknacks Darcy discovers something much more disturbing—Patrice Keaton’s body.
Darcy’s determined to give Elodie peace of mind by investigating her mother’s disappearance and death. Patrice was last seen over a year ago after a fight with her Charmcrafter boyfriend. Was her murder a crime of passion? Or were Patrice’s troubles caused by the Anicula, a wish-granting amulet? Now Darcy has to not only find a killer, she has to find the Anicula— before the power of ultimate wish fulfillment falls into the wrong hands… [Amazon]


I meant it 100% in the other blog when I explained how this series of books helped me get out of a funk that I was buried in. Where do I begin with this series? Well, how about at the beginning?

Last summer (2012), I read Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None. This is, undoubtedly, the greatest mystery novel of all time. I remember first reading it in seventh grade and how much I loved EVERY second of it. I believe this was when my reading-in-the-bathtub-days began, as I first recall bringing this book with me into my great-great-aunt's jacuzzi tub when I was quite young. I decided that I wanted to re-read it (and possibly teach it to my students one day), so I did. I noticed something pretty neat about the mystery genre, so I went back to the bookstore a few days later and picked up a handful of new mysteries. Here's what I picked up:
Can you see a theme going here? Both Cates's and Staab's novels were fantastic - I will be posting about them in the future. But Heather's new series really hit home with me. What's better to a person like Ness than magic, friendly witches, talking animals, family bonds, romance, and mystery? Nothing, absolutely NOTHING! Thus began my very recent obsession with mystery (mainly Heather). And I didn't realize this early on, but I also began reading Charlaine Harris's Sookie Stackhouse novels back in 2007/2008. This stuff was meant for me!

The first book in the series is great. We are just getting to know the Merriweather's and Enchanted Village, and believe me, it's the most wonderful, joyful, and magical place I have ever been to. But as Darcy and her sister are getting acclimated with their new home, a woman who calls herself a self-proclaimed witch turns up dead, and her family's integrity (and freedom) is on the line.

By the time you come to the second novel, things are a little more set in stone. I must also point out that when you begin reading #2, it will seem like you are being reunited with long-lost friends and family members (only the cool ones, of course). [Seeing as I recently read #3 and must wait an ENTIRE year for #4 four to be released, I am currently a very, very sad and pouty little woman.]

I cannot say enough good things about Heather. She really is extremely fan-oriented. At the start of some of her novels, she oftentimes makes it a point to thank her fans in helping her choose names for certain characters and locations throughout the stories. I would also say that if you read her novels and ever have a question, suggestion, or (God forbid, ha ha) a critique, there is no doubt in my mind that she would give you a giant cyber hug and say thanks! I promise that this series is filled with twisty turns, unexpected events, and lovable characters. And if my promise falls short of your very high, unfathomable, and crusty expectations, then you can come kiss my a$$ because I know what I'm talking about here!! :)

The fourth book in the series is due out in May 2014!!!

To visit Heather, follow these links:

Heather Blake SITE
Facebook


Heather signing my books! (author of
The Good, the Bad, and the Witchy)

See also:





 
The Good, the Bad, and the Witchy
The Root of all Trouble

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Book 19 - "The circus arrives without warning."

*I must admit: I am always a bit leery of reading books about the circus. Any story containing a circus also contains a great deal of misery (at some point or another). The other night, Jay and I read an article called "The Top 10 Most Horrific Circus Accidents in History," and one story in particular caught my attention. It has to do with the very gruesome execution of an elephant.

"On September 12, 1916, Mary trampled her handler Red Eldridge to death. There are various accounts of what led to the attack—from Eldridge prodding Mary with a stick and infuriating her, to
speculation that she was simply bored.

Mary the elephant
"While Eldridge’s death was tragic and gruesome, Mary’s fate might be even more so. The people of Kingsport, Tennessee demanded retribution for Eldridge’s death, so it was decided that Mary would hang for her crime. On September 13, a crowd of 2,500 people (mostly children) gathered to watch Mary’s execution. Mary was hung from the neck by an industrial crane. However, the chain around her neck snapped and she slammed to the ground, breaking her hip. A heavier-gauge chain was used to hang Mary for a second time, and she swung for half an hour before being dumped in a hastily-dug grave." [listverse.com]

To say the least, this story tore my stomach to pieces, and I was instantly convinced that the circus is definitely not all that it's cracked-up to be (especially in the past when the circus was one of the most magical experiences one could find). Water for Elephants, another novel about the circus, ends with a terrible destruction of a world-famous circus. While the story seemed beautiful, I was left feeling somewhat bored with this author's attempt to present readers with a unique circus experience.

Erin Morgenstern, on the other hand, creates the ultimate world of magic in her novel, The Night Circus. I was extremely impressed with this story and would love for you to pick up a copy for yourself.

Book 19: The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

"Magical. Enchanting. Spellbinding. Mesmerizing." - Associated Press

"Haunts and bewitches on every page... A showstopper." - The Boston Globe

"Erin Morgenstern has created the circus I have always longed for and she has populated it with dueling love-struck magicians, precocious kittens, hyper-elegant displays of beauty and complicated clocks. This is a marvelous book." - Audrey Niffenegger, author of The Time Traveler's Wife


The Night Circus
(click here to purchase)
Description: The circus arrives without warning. No announcements precede it. It is simply there, when yesterday it was not. Within the black-and-white striped canvas tents is an utterly unique experience full of breathtaking amazements. It is called Le Cirque des Rêves, and it is only open at night. But behind the scenes, a fierce competition is underway—a duel between two young magicians, Celia and Marco, who have been trained since childhood expressly for this purpose by their mercurial instructors. Unbeknownst to them, this is a game in which only one can be left standing, and the circus is but the stage for a remarkable battle of imagination and will. Despite themselves, however, Celia and Marco tumble headfirst into love—a deep, magical love that makes the lights flicker and the room grow warm whenever they so much as brush hands. True love or not, the game must play out, and the fates of everyone involved, from the cast of extraordinary circus per­formers to the patrons, hang in the balance, suspended as precariously as the daring acrobats overhead. [erinmorgenstern.com]

I believe I should begin by saying that this is one of the best stories I've read all year (in all of my life, really). The Night Circus puts quite the spin on the classic perception of magic. While most magicians work to make their tricks appear realistic, Morgenstern's characters work doubly hard to make theirs seem more unrealistic. Because the characters are able to make the impossible seem ordinary, simple, and real-life, they must convince others that their work is something that does not bend the rules of the universe. In other words, these magicians do NOT want spectators to know that they are, in fact, real workers of magic.

Let's look for a moment at Celia Bowen, a young girl we meet just after her mother commits suicide. She is left on the doorstep of her father, Prospero the Enchanter (Hector Bowen), who takes her on as a student and teaches her how to focus on her work so that she can strengthen her talents, ultimately becoming the best magician in the world. Since she has the ability to put things back together (such as a broken tea cup), her father continuously breaks make of the bones in her body which she is instructed to heal on the spot. But we learn that Celia does not need her father's knowledge and tests - she has a gift of her own.

Let's turn now to her opponent, Marco A. (I am unable to provide you with any details relating to the "competition," so to speak, because I was not given any insight (nor were the characters) into what exactly was going to happen between Celia and Marco once the great battle begins.) Marco, orphaned as a young child, was also put into a home and raised much the same way as Celia - endless test, tortuous lessons, etc.

Ultimately, this is one great big love story - love of magic, love between people, young love, self-love, unrequited love, forbidden love, and love that appears to each of the five senses.

"A love story for adults that feels luxuriously romantic." - The Washington Post

While this is about Le Cirque des Reves (The Circus of Dreams) as a whole, the stories of many of the characters weave in and out of one another's lives. The idea of Le Cirque des Reves is attributed to Chandresh Christophe Lefevre, an entrepreneur who seeks endless possibilities and new adventures. Also among the first performers include: Ana Padva, a retired Romanian prima ballernia and good friend to Chandresh's mother. She also makes some of the most beautiful gowns for the women involved with the circus; Ethan Barris, engineer and architect of individual sights within the circus (though they are anything but ordinary); the Burgess sisters, Tara and Lainie, can do a little bit of everything; Bailey, a young boy who will stop at nothing to save both his love for Poppet and the circus; and Poppet and Widget, twin performers who work to continue on the work that the circus requires to survive.

What I love most about this novel is how I am able to see everything that Morgenstern wants me to see. When Celia's father slits each of her fingertips open with a knife and instructs her to mend them immediately, I can feel that pain and anguish that she experiences, see the open wounds slowly disintegrate to nothing, and hear the tears falling down her cheeks as she quietly sobs. When Celia and Marco make love, I feel as if I am falling in love all over again with my own boyfriend. When Marco mentally takes Celia to the boat made out of books that floats on a sea of ink, I can smell the paper and feel the dry wind blowing all around me. And when Bailey is given a crimson read scarf to wear to the circus, I feel nothing but the safety, security, and warmth that he experiences.

Again, please take some time to read through this book. Morgenstern once said that all of her stories have fairy-tale-like elements. This novel is nothing short of the ultimate bedtime story.

Meet the author:
About Erin. The long, first person version:
I’m a Cancerian with a Leo Moon and Taurus rising and yes, I know what all of that means.
I studied theatre & studio art at Smith College.
I grew up in Marshfield, Massachusetts. Steve Carrell now owns the store where I bought penny candy and blue raspberry Slush Puppies as a child. This both amuses and disturbs me.
I was reading Stephen King at age 12 and J.K. Rowling at age 21. This likely speaks volumes about my literary development.
I currently live in Manhattan, previously I lived in various Massachusetts cities. I would still favor Boston sports teams if I cared about sports, but I heart NY so far.
I write. Fantastical, fairy tale-esque things with magic and mystery and tea.
I started querying literary agents in June of 2009. After working with interested agents and revising my manuscript (twice) I signed with my agent in May of 2010. Then I spent a summer in the Revisionland Hotel, and in September of 2010, THE NIGHT CIRCUS sold to Doubleday. The sound you are hearing is my head spinning, still.
THE NIGHT CIRCUS was released in September 2011 in hardcover, and it’s now available in paperback as well. You can probably get it wherever books are sold, as it is sometimes difficult to buy books in places that don’t sell them.
My fiction tends to be location-driven. Nocturnal circuses, subterranean libraries, townhouses dressed up as pirate ships. I got tired of living in Alice’s Wonderland and decided to build some of my own.
Erin Morgenstern
I write 10-sentence flash fiction pieces inspired by photographs that are posted to the blog every Friday. They are fondly known as flax-golden tales.
I paint, though writing is taking priority at the moment. Mostly acrylic-based mixed-media abstract illustration. Which means painting with acrylic paint and adding anything I can get to stick, and it’d be abstract if it were not so illustrative and illustration were it not so abstract. I paint Wonderland-y things and teacups and pigs with wings.
I spent large amounts of the last few years painting a black & white tarot deck. I finished painting it in early 2010. You can purchase a beautiful limited edition deck of the Major Arcana here. (Well, you could. It’s sold out now, but they might turn up on tarot trading sites.)
The complete deck can be viewed at phantomwise.com. I am in the process of finding a publisher for the full 78-card version. It’s slow going. I promise it will be published eventually. Really. Someday. Today is not that day.
I read a lot. I drink absurd amounts of red wine and even more absurd amounts of tea.
I collect jewelry made from old keys.
I rather like the internet (even Twitter!), so I will be polishing and decorating this corner of it for the foreseeable future.
[erinmorgenstern.com]


To visit Erin, follow these links:

Erin Morgenstern SITE
Facebook





UPCOMING BOOK: The Root of All Trouble by Heather Webber
> > > [Jump to this blog!]

Thursday, May 23, 2013

[Rewind to] Book 11 - Something witchy this way comes...

SUPER COOL REAL-LIFE SOMETHING JUST HAPPENED THIS MORNING, so I'm going to start this post with the very kind-hearted Heather and how she fits so nicely into my life.
New book from Heather's
Nina Quinn series
The Root of All Trouble
(click here to purchase)

A couple of weeks ago, I was in a sort of funk that I couldn't really get out of. You'll learn that Heather's Wishcraft series is my favorite-est of all mystery series. During this funk, I continuously thought about how good it felt to be a part of this fictional world, and I picked the book up and went through it, which ultimately took me out of this funk. Also during this time, I messaged Heather to tell her about how much I love her books. Since she signed my previous two Wishcraft novels, I asked (over a month ago) if she could send me a signed bookplate to put inside the third book in the series. In this message, I re-asked for the bookplate.


Heather's note to me :)
Today when I checked the mail, I received a wonderful package from Heather. I was wondering what was so heavy about the package, as I was only expecting the bookplate. When I rushed inside of my house to open the package, I was extremely surprised (and ecstatic) to find that Heather had sent me a fresh copy of her newest book from her Nina Quinn series (signed), a sweet note, and the signed bookplate for The Good, the Bad, and the Witchy. Gosh - she made my day, my week! I'm so blessed to have discovered Heather because she is an author who has really given me something special, both in her writings and through our own interactions.


The sweet note and signed bookplate from Heather.


Book 11: The Good, the Bad, and the Witchy by Heather Blake


Heather and I at one of her
book signings, September 2012
"Blake has taken the paranormal mystery to a
whole new fun yet intriguing level."
 - Once Upon a Romance

*While most everyone I know will say that I LOVE to read, very few people know that I also love mysteries. I'll admit, I recently began reading mysteries last summer, but I have fallen hard for them, especially those that focus more on supernatural and/or magical elements. Heather Blake (who also writes as Heather Webber) is my absolute favorite mystery author. The Good, the Bad, and the Witchy is the third book in the Wishcraft Mystery series. (Her previous books in the series include #1 It Takes a Witch and #2 A Witch Before Dying.) Heather is one of the sweetest, most caring women I have ever met, and on top of being one cool chick, she's also a really cool author who puts 110% into her relationships with her fans.

The Good, the Bad, and the Witchy
(click here to purchase)
Description: Darcy Merriweather is Enchanted Village’s newest resident Wishcrafter—a witch who can grant wishes for others. But as Darcy prepares a celebration for a magical florist, she discovers that every rose has its thorns…
When magical florist Harriette Harkette decides to throw a lavish eightieth birthday party for herself, she hires Darcy’s Aunt Ve’s personal concierge service, As You Wish, to plan the soiree. But turning eighty isn’t all Harriette is celebrating—the Floracrafter has recently created the midnight black Witching Hour rose, the first all-natural rose of that color.
Darcy works hard on planning an extravagant celebration that will make Harriette feel like the belle of the ball. But when cake delivery boy Michael Healey—a former employee at Harriette’s greenhouse—is found dead, the celebration takes a turn. Now Michael’s ghost has imprinted on Darcy, meaning that they’re bonded until she can untangle the thicket surrounding his murder—and what exactly it has to do with the Witching Hour rose…. [Amazon]


Heather's Wishcraft series is my absolute favorite in regards to mystery novels. She weaves together a fastistic place called Enchanted Village where magic runs rampant and gathers more tourists than the more historical Salem, MA. Readers meet a number of many memorable characters, the most important being Darcy Merriweather, a woman who's just returned back to her hometown with her younger sister, Harper, in tow. Both Darcy and Harper have recently learned that they stem from a long line of Wishcrafters, those who grant wishes whenever people make them (granting only the positive ones, of course). By the third book in the series, they have established themselves in Enchated Village.

I am not going to say much about the story, but I will comment on some of the other characters. There are a number of familiars (animals who work as links to the spirit world) in the story, including Missy (Darcy's dog), Pepe (the small mouse who works in the cloak shop), and Archie (the bird next door who swaps movie quotes with Darcy), among others. At this point in the series, Darcy is also settling into a warm relationship with Nick and his daughter, Mimi. Heather keeps the romance at bay, but what she does disclose about Darcy and Nick is just enough to leave us ladies wanting more.

Heather introduces another new twist to this book. Rather than simply trying to solve a mystery with tangible items, a ghost named Michael imprints on Darcy after she discovers that he's been murdered. While she is afraid and confused as to what she can do for Michael, she works through any road-blocks she comes across and makes a new friend.

About the author: Heather Blake grew up in a suburb of Boston and enjoys going "home" in her novels. As a young mother, she tried her hand at writing, and she hasn't looked back. Heather lives in the Cincinnati area with her family. She is currently hard at work on her next novel. [Obsidian]

The fourth book in the series is due out in May 2014!!!

To visit Heather, follow these links:

Heather Blake SITE
Facebook



Heather signing my books! (author of
The Root of all Trouble)


See also:

The Root of all Trouble













It Takes a Witch







A Witch Before Dying



Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Book 18 - "Every slave story is a ghost story."

Book 18: Receive Me Falling by Erika Robuck

Receive Me Falling
(click here to purchase)
Description: Every slave story is a ghost story. The haunting words of an historian and former cane worker on the Caribbean island of Nevis launch Meghan Owen on her quest to unlock the secrets of an abandoned sugar plantation and its ghosts. After Meg's parents die in a car accident on the night of her engagement party, she calls off her wedding, takes leave of her job in Annapolis, and travels to land she's inherited on Nevis. A series of discoveries in an old plantation house on the property, Eden, set her on a search for the truth surrounding the shameful past of her ancestors, their slaves, and the tragedy that resulted in the fall of the plantation and its inhabitants. Through a crushing phone call with her lawyer, Meg learns that her father's estate was built on stolen money, and is being sued by multiple sources. She is faced with having to sell the land and plantation home, and deal with the betrayal she feels from her deceased father. In alternating chapters, the historical drama of the Dall family unfolds. Upon the arrival of British abolitionists to the hedonistic 19th century plantation society, Catherine Dall is forced to choose between her lifestyle and the scandal of deserting her family. An angry confrontation with Catherine's slave, Leah, results in the girl's death, but was it murder or suicide? Hidden texts, scandalous diaries, antique paintings, and confessional letters help Meghan Owen uncover the secrets of Eden and put the ghosts to rest. [Amazon]

Meghan Owen is doing quite well for herself. She has a good job, a wedding just around the corner, and extremely wealthy parents. But on the night of her engagement party, her parents are killed in a car accident, leaving Meg in a world turned upside down.

While Meg looks through her father's office, she finds that he owns an old plantation on a large amount of land on the Carribean island of Nevis. As if this isn't enough to deal with, she learns that her father has been laundering money away from clients and is now being sued for over 60 million dollars. She calls off her wedding and takes a trip to the Carribean, hoping to sell the old Dall plantation and all of the land with the hopes of being able to pay off her father's debt.

But while Meg is in Nevis, she gets the feeling that she is not alone. Upon exploring the old plantation mansion, she plunges into a search-and-find on the plantation's dark past, one that is continuously calling out to her.
Written in the same beautiful language as Call Me Zelda, Robuck presents readers with two stories in one. The chapters alternate: all odd chapters deal with Meg in the present, and all even chapters take us back to the early nineteenth century where we meet Christine Dall, a strong-willed woman who practically runs her aging father's plantation. Sugar plantations are booming and slavery is a way of life. But between working alongside her always-drunk father, fighting off the dashing Edward who longs to marry Christine just so he can take over her plantation, and contemplating the pros and cons of the new abolitionist movement sweeping across all of Europe, Christine slowly begins losing her grip on life. She also learns that she is much more in sync with the slaves on her plantation than she thought.

I thoroughly enjoyed this novel (though not as much as Call Me Zelda, as I believe that it will be hard to top) and grew to respect the female characters greatly. I was disheartened to learn of the plantation's disintegration, but I believe that Meg was able to bring peace to the crumbling plantation and it's inhabitants.

If you found Frederick Douglass's writings, Uncle Tom's Cabin, or any other works that use slavery as their subject, then you should absolutely give this novel a chance. I've always been fascinated by slavery's history, and this novel really put the extremeties of slavery into a modern-day perspective.


To visit Erika, follow these links:

Erika Robuck SITE
Facebook




Erika Robuck (author
of Call Me Zelda)





UPCOMING BOOK: The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
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Books 16 & 17 - A Fitzgerald Combustion!

Book 16: The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

*I wanted to group these two books because together, they both focus on the tumultuous marriage between Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda.

SPOILER: I only talk extensively about this novel because it is a classic and I feel certain that most people have come across it at some point in their lives.

The Great Gatsby
(click here to purchase)
Description: The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s third book, stands as the supreme achievement of his career. This exemplary novel of the Jazz Age has been acclaimed by generations of readers. The story of the fabulously wealthy Jay Gatsby and his love for the beautiful Daisy Buchanan, of lavish parties on Long Island at a time when The New York Times noted “gin was the national drink and sex the national obsession,” it is an exquisitely crafted tale of America in the 1920s. [Amazon]

I remember reading this novel during my Junior year in high school, but I don't feel as though I (or any other students my age) were really able to enjoy and appreciate it for what it really is. I remember a couple of things: the two eggs, new/old money, the dashing Gatsby and the very beautiful Daisy. What I do not remember is the web of tangled relationships among the characters, which makes for some fantastic reading.

Upon beginning the novel, I thought it was a very simple story, something that Hemingway might write (please do not yell at me for referring to Hemingway as simple). Nick Carraway is a young man working in bonds who moves next door to Gatsby's extravagant mansion. Though there are rumors spread around about Gatsby from the beginning of the book, readers do not actually meet him until Nick does in Chapter 3. I really enjoyed how Fitzgerald kept Gatsby behind a curtain if you will until just the right moment (during a party he is throwing on his property).

I find it extremely romantic that Gatsby, who grew up in poverty and cheated his way to the top of the social ladder, worked for five years to make his life just how Daisy, the love of his life, would want it. There's also something very beautiful and symbolic about the green light (his "dream") at the end of Daisy's property that he can see from his own home. As the novel progresses, Gatsby learns (or, I should rather say, denies) that once he has obtained his dream (Daisy), the green light which he clung so tightly to no longer has any magical qualities of a future with Daisy.

The relationships in this novel are out of this world. Of course, there is the rekindled love of Daisy and Gatsby (which ended five years earlier when Gatsby "goes off to the war" and ends again at the end of the novel). Daisy is really Nick's cousin, and she tries to put him together with Jordan, a professional golfer (who I really liked!). Daisy's own husband, Tom, has yet another woman on the side, Myrtle, while Myrtle's husband, Wilson, is both oblivious and terribly wrong about her infidelity. In the end, Nick leaves Jordan in New York and returns to the Midwest, Daisy goes back to Tom and they move yet again, and Wilson murders Gatsby and then takes his own life after Daisy accidentally kills Myrtle with Gatsby's car (which leads Wilson to think that Gatsby is both the other lover and the murderer).

F. Scott Fitzgerald
I stayed up real late on Friday, May 10th finishing the novel. I cried my eyes out after learning about Gatsby's unfortunate end, Nick's shattered view of life, and the destruction of New York during the roaring 20s due to the ending summer that the characters have lived through to the fullest. I cried, and then I cried some more, and I remember having a hard time falling asleep because I wanted to save Gatsby, to tell him that just because his dreams were unattainable, he could still try to make a new life for himself. I lied away in bed, contemplating one last question I had burning inside of me: Had Gatsby not been murdered by Wilson, how could the story have been different?

Meet the author: F. Scott Fitzgerald was one of the major American writers of the twentieth century -- a figure whose life and works embodied powerful myths about our national dreams and aspirations. Fitzgerald was talented and perceptive, gifted with a lyrical style and a pitch-perfect ear for language. He lived his life as a romantic, equally capable of great dedication to his craft and reckless squandering of his artistic capital. He left us one sure masterpiece, The Great Gatsby; a near-masterpiece, Tender Is the Night; and a gathering of stories and essays that together capture the essence of the American experience. His writings are insightful and stylistically brilliant; today he is admired both as a social chronicler and a remarkably gifted artist. [Wikipedia]

**I also went to see the film version of The Great Gatsby, and it was simply perfect. It was 100% true to the book (which I always prefer over differences between the two).

F. Scott & Zelda Fitzgerald


Book 17: Call Me Zelda by Erika Robuck

* The morning I finished The Great Gatsby, I went to the book store hoping to find another novel by Fitzgerald or something else set in the 1920s (I'm quite a fan of flappers, illegal drinking, and the secrets of those living in the early twentieth century!). I really had no idea which book I was going to purchase. The first table I walked over to was the "New in Paperback" table. Ironically, the first book I noticed was titled Call Me Zelda, and I knew instantly that it was about THE Zelda Fitzgerald. Upon further inspection of the book, I learned that author Erika Robuck took very factual information from the Fitzgeralds' lives and wrote a novel, a story, about them, focusing solely on Zelda. I knew I had to have this book and walked out of the store with it.

Description: Everything in the ward seemed different now, and I no longer felt its calming presence. The Fitzgeralds stirred something in me that had been dormant for a long time, and I was not prepared to face it....
 
Call Me Zelda
(click here to purchase)
From New York to Paris, Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald reigned as king and queen of the Jazz Age, seeming to float on champagne bubbles above the mundane cares of the world. But to those who truly knew them, the endless parties were only a distraction from their inner turmoil, and from a love that united them with a scorching intensity.
When Zelda is committed to a Baltimore psychiatric clinic in 1932, vacillating between lucidity and madness in her struggle to forge an identity separate from her husband, the famous writer, she finds a sympathetic friend in her nurse, Anna Howard. Held captive by her own tragic past, Anna is increasingly drawn into the Fitzgeralds’ tumultuous relationship. As she becomes privy to Zelda’s most intimate confessions, written in a secret memoir meant only for her, Anna begins to wonder which Fitzgerald is the true genius. But in taking ever greater emotional risks to save Zelda, Anna may end up paying a far higher price than she intended.... [Amazon]

I could not wait to get home and begin reading this book (but first, I had to finish Gatsby, of course!). Just holding this book in my hands allowed me to step into the lives of F. Scott and Zelda. During the 20s, men were thought to be more important than women. That being sad, I was glad that someone finally gave Zelda a voice of her own (no matter how much of it was true or not).

The story begins immediately when we meet Nurse Anna, the story's protagonist and narrator. I was first confused as to why Zelda was not telling her own story in first person, but I soon learned that her story seems much more distraught/crazy/hopeful/sad/ecstatic when we are in contact with Zelda through someone else's eyes. On page one, we learn that Zelda is being checked into Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at John Hopkins University Hospital (Baltimore, Maryland) because of her schizophrenia, anxiety, and bipolar disorders, something that Zelda factually suffered from in her real life and throughout her marriage to F. Scott.

As a nurse, Anna knows how to set boundaries between herself and her patients, but something in Zelda disables her ability to step back. As Zelda reveals more and more about herself, Anna learns that what's making her attach herself to Zelda is the fact that she, too, has suffered her own tragedies - her husband has gone missing in the war more than fifteen years ago and her young daughter passed away suddenly after catching a deadly illness. Alone, frightened, and on the brink of giving up, Anna relates much more to Zelda than she ever thought possible.

Zelda, on the other hand, opens up to Anna only, and soon Anna's life solely becomes caring for Zelda. After Zelda leaves the hospital to live at home with her husband and their daughter, Scottie, Anna resigns from her position at the clinic to work full-time with Zelda. Whereas she used to go out with her brother, Peter, (who's studying to be a priest) and spend one weekend a month at her parents house outside of Baltimore, Anna begins spiraling further down with Zelda into the dark world within the Fitzgerald home. Fitzgerald, while he cares deeply for Zelda, is an alcoholic who steals Zelda's own writings and uses them in his novels. Another fact that I should point out is that Zelda did publish her own writings against Fitzgerald's wishes in which she describes their unwinding marriage, and some of the content within her private journals can be found in his novels, word-for-word. Likewise, Fitzgerald describes his version of their marriage in his novel, Tender is the Night, which I hope to read in the near future.

What more can I say about the book without giving anything away? It is a story of deep, enduring love, relationships (both supportive and toxic), second chances, and redemption. I love historical fiction because when I read it, I am really put directly in the middle of a scene that once took place in the past.


Erika Robuck
Call Me Zelda is not a book that you want to pass up. Even if it doesn't seem to be your cup of tea, give it a shot. This has probably been the best book I've read this year. I've come to admire this author so much that I've even read Robuck's first novel, Receive Me Falling (another historical novel which I will blog on later). Her second novel, Hemingway's Girl, is sitting on my "to read" pile beside my bed. And you guessed it - it, too, is historical fiction about Hemingway and his relationship with another woman. Robuck is currently working on her fourth novel about Edna St. Vincent Millay, one of my very favorite authors.

Meet the author: Erika Robuck self-published her first novel, RECEIVE ME FALLING. NAL/Penguin published her second novel, HEMINGWAY'S GIRL, and will release her forthcoming title, CALL ME ZELDA on May 7, 2013. Erika has an historical fiction book blog, and is a member of the Historical Novel Society and the Hemingway Society. [Amazon]

To visit Erika, follow these links:

Erika Robuck SITE
Facebook





UPCOMING BOOK: Receive Me Falling by Erika Robuck
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