Historical



                               

equal of the sunHistorical figures such as Elizabeth I, Catherine the Great, or Queen Victoria are fascinating to study, given that these women overcame great odds both societally and culturally to reign with great influence on their times, but strong female figures from other parts of the globe are less well known. From Iranian author Anita Amirrezvani comes a book of historical fiction that shatters many of these stereotypes, a look at the life of Pari Khan Khanoom, a princess living in Iran in the second half of the 16th-century, who was brilliant, strong, powerful, manipulative, and ultimately shut out of power by the insecure men who surrounded her.

Equal of the Sun is told from the point of view of Pari’s closest advisor, the eunuch Javaher. It offers a fascinating glimpse into life in the royal palace during the late 1500s, a time of opulence and poverty, of perfumed rooms and open sewers. Javaher, as a eunuch, has access to all the palace–both the women’s quarters and the court of the Shah. He and Pari together make a formidable duo–she with her education, position, and hunger for power; he with his loyalty, access, and cunning.

Javaher is an unusual eunuch. His father was a highly-placed court official, who was accused of treason and summarily executed. To prove his loyalty to the court, Javaher has himself castrated at the age of 17. Now he’s highly-placed and well regarded, with a two-fold aim–to serve the Shah, as stated, but also to find the truth and revenge his father’s killing. As he was castrated relatively late in life (most eunuchs were created as children), he still has sexual desires, and there are some rather interesting scenes.

Pari was raised as her father the Shah’s favorite child and closest adviser. When he dies suddenly without naming an heir, she moves into intrigue, doing her best to control and manipulate which brother will be chosen to reign and which one will allow her the most freedom to influence things from behind the scenes. She is a powerful and intelligent woman, constantly thwarted by norms of the day that allowed women no overt power and influence. Pari isn’t always the most sympathetic of characters, which I liked as it rang true. She is arrogant and manipulative and cunning, but she’s right in believing that she is the most qualified to lead. Equal of the Sun is as much about court politics as it is about the daily lives of its characters, and offers a fascinating glimpse into a world that is very foreign to modern eyes.

 



                               

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A Spear of Summer Grass

5M4B disclosure

a spear of summer grassA Spear of Summer Grass by Deanna Raybourn is dripping with the adventure that you’d expect from an African story.

Publisher’s description:

Beginning in Paris at the height of the roaring twenties, socialite Delilah Drummond experiences a scandal big enough to make her oft-married mother exile her to Kenya until gossip subsides. As a dissolute expat, she indulges in gin and jazz records, cigarettes and safaris, and in the heart of darkness, she finds a love worth fighting for.

If you blend glamour from The Great Gatsby and romance from Out of Africa, you are beginning to grasp the stunning new novel that is A Spear of Summer Grass.

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Take, Burn, or Destroy

Take Burn or DestroyIt took awhile for me to get into Take, Burn, or Destroy by S. Thomas Russell.  I was looking forward to the novel set in 1794 that features Captain Charles Hayden aboard the HMS Themis out on orders from the British government to find and destroy a French frigate.  The story has amazing premise, but I slogged through the first six chapters and over 100 pages as it detailed the ship sailing through fog for three days trying to elude two French frigates tracking it.

The chapters were long, and it seemed to me that not much happened.  The boats played a very slow game of cat and mouse, Captain Hayden bemoaned what had happened to drive his love away from him, and that was about it.

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On Reading: An Author’s Thoughts on Self-Publishing

jennienashA cool thing about being a book reviewer is sometimes being able to chat offline with authors whose books I enjoy. If I read and review one of his or her books, especially when I really like it, then he or she will often offer me the next book that comes out, and sometimes we get friendly via email. At the very least, I go on a list where I know I’ll hear about the next project. I love that.  Jennie Nash is one of those authors for me.  I wrote about that, as well as linking to my reviews of her other novels, when I reviewed her latest novel Perfect Red.

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Leaving Everything Most Loved: Maisie Dobbs

leaving everythingThe latest installment in the Maisie Dobbs series finds Maisie exploring an Indian subculture that is just beginning to appear in London. It’s 1933 and Mahatma Ghandi has begun his work in India, far off rumblings that barely intrude on the consciousness of most Londoners. Closer to home, a man named Hitler has been appointed chancellor of Germany, but again, very few are concerned about what’s happening in Europe. Meanwhile, Maisie is feeling restless. Her employee, Billy, who was badly beaten up in the last installment, has returned to work but it’s obvious he’s not really well yet. The body of an Indian woman, clad in a bright sari and shot right through the red bindi mark on her forehead, is found floating in a canal in a poorer area of London.

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And Then She Fell

I love it when I find an author who writes books I enjoy reading and is a prolific author, especially when the books are light reads.  Stephanie Laurens has been a favorite of mine since I found her when scanning through available titles on my online library.  Stephanie has created an entire population in London of heroes and heroines who find their true loves in the early 1800s in London.  And Then She Fell is the latest book following the Cynster clan where Henrietta finds her hero.

So yes, this is a romance novel.  And yes, I enjoy reading it.

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Highlander Most Wanted

Highlander Most WantedSpring has officially arrived, not just in name but actually – dare I say it? – in weather, too.  For me, that means I tend to read lighter books, as I spend a lot of time outside supervising the wee ones as they ride bikes or play tag or hide and go seek outside.  I want something that will keep me interested but not so deep that I can’t put it down or remember the characters when I am finally able to pick it back up again.  Highlander Most Wanted by Maya Banks fits that model perfectly for me.

I enjoy historical fiction, especially that set in England and Scotland.

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Beautiful Ruins

In 1962, in a village so small it’s not even on the map of Italy, a woman arrives by boat in search of quiet and discretion. Pasquale Tursi, owner of the only hotel in Porto Vergogna, is creating a beach in hopes of attracting tourists, and instantly falls for the tall blonde American. Dee is an actress working on Cleopatra, filming in Rome, has been told she has stomach cancer, and is waiting for a man to come and meet her.

Fast forward to Hollywood in the present day.  Claire Silver has to deal with her strip club-loving boyfriend, her boss, a Hollywood legend whose surgically altered face doesn’t match his aging body, and pitches for movies and reality TV shows from anyone who has ever met the man.

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The Crooked Branch {Review and Giveaway}

I’m a big fan of historical fiction, with one of my favorite locations and time periods being New York City during the mid 19th century, when thousands of Irish immigrants arrived, fleeing the famed potato famine.  But the famine itself is a subject that’s not well-covered, so I was happy to receive The Crooked Branch, the second novel by the talented Jeanine Cummins,  for review.

Click over to 5 Minutes for Mom for my full review of The Crooked Branch and a chance to win this wonderful book.

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Crossing on the Paris

crossingontheparisCrossing on the Paris by Dana Gynther takes a look at three women who are each crossing the sea on the ship called the Paris, from France to New York in 1921.

Julie Vernet is taking the opportunity of a lifetime to get out of her small French town, setting out after landing a job onboard the ship. After being on board just a short time, she’s not sure she’s cut out for a life as a low-class working girl on the seas, but she doesn’t want to give up on adventure either, and there’s no way she’s going back home.

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Perfect Red {Review and Giveaway}

Perfect Red features some of a booklover’s favorite things — publishers, one writer chasing the story that won’t let go and another writer searching for the next big hit, and a passionate independently-owned bookseller. I loved these details! These themes and an interesting historical setting makes a good story great. It takes place amidst 1950′s McCarthy-era persecution of suspected communists that hit the arts community especially hard.

Lucy Lawrence is a top editor’s secretary, but she has dreams of writing. She comes alongside him, helping him to hide a secret that interferes with his ability to do his job, hoping to gain more of an “in.” When the handsome author TJ Wright meets her, he calls her his muse.

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The Orchardist

Amanda Coplin’s debut novel The Orchardist was released in August to critical acclaim, quickly rising up the bestseller lists. I added it to my to-read list, so when we were offered this powerful novel to promote the paperback release, I knew this was my chance to see what the fuss was about.

Talmadge lives a quiet life tending to his orchards, selling his fruit at the market, smoking in companionable silence with horse wrangler Clee and occasionally taking a meal in town with local healer Caroline Middey. When two girls, filthy, young, and pregnant, steal some of his fruit, he lets it pass, and then feeds them when they appear in his orchard.

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