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See What I Have Done

August 16, 2017

see

No one is free from the stain of darkness in Sarah Schmidt’s See What I Have Done. Which may not be surprising because the novel is about Lizzie Borden and the death of her father and stepmother. If somehow you made it through childhood without hearing the rhyme about her, you’ll have to google it yourself. I, for one, was mildly obsessed. Mostly because the thought of a child ... Read More...

8 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 19th century, Atlantic Monthly Press, book clubs, debut, family, historical fiction, mystery

It’s Monday, August 7th: What Are You Reading?

August 7, 2017

Monday

Hello, Monday! Once again, I’ve gone with a photo that represents where I’d like to be reading. For whatever reason I have always wanted a hammock, but none of the houses I’ve ever lived in had hammock-friendly backyards. My reading seems to be falling along those lines—wanting something I don’t have or can’t find. I’m heading back to historical fiction this Monday because it ... Read More...

13 Comments
Filed Under: Feature, Reading Tagged: 16th century, 19th century, England, historical fiction, New England

Victoria: A Novel

November 21, 2016

In 1837, barely after turning eighteen, Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent became the queen of England. She stood a mere 4’11” tall and had led a life largely isolated from society. For modern day readers it is almost incomprehensible to imagine that a tiny teenager could rule one of the most powerful and widespread empires in the world. Thankfully, author Daisy Goodwin’s ... Read More...

5 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 19th century, England, historical fiction, royalty, St. Martin's Press

News of the World

November 16, 2016

news of the world

  Jefferson Kidd is a reader. Not like you or me, but an elderly, retired Army captain who earns his living by riding through Northern Texas in 1870, stopping in towns to read the major newspapers to the townspeople. His is a solo act until he meets a man in Wichita Falls who has recovered a little girl kidnapped four years ago by the Kiowa Indians after they killed her ... Read More...

9 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 19th century, historical fiction, William Morrow

The Queen of the Night by Alexander Chee

November 2, 2016

queen of the night

    Alexander Chee’s new novel, The Queen of the Night works well as the chilly fall nights begin because you will need to settle in to really enjoy this massive piece of entertainment. This is not a book to skim through, like any grand diva, attention must be paid. And this Chee does by creating a world overflowing with the sumptuous and the over-the-top for ... Read More...

2 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 19th century, historical fiction, Mariner Books, Paris

The Queen of the Night

February 17, 2016

queen of the night

  Alexander Chee’s new novel, The Queen of the Night works well for cold winter reading because you will need to settle in to really enjoy this massive piece of entertainment. This is not a book to skim through, like any grand diva, attention must be paid. And this Chee does by creating a world overflowing with the sumptuous and the over-the-top for Lilliet Berne, one of ... Read More...

9 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 19th century, historical fiction, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Paris

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