Review: The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey

Format read: ebook purchased from Amazon and paperback purchased a long time ago
Formats available: Trade Paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genre: Mystery
Series: Inspector Alan Grant #5
Length: 175 pages
Publisher: Scribner
Date Released: December 1, 1951
Purchasing Info: Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Book Depository

Without leaving his bed, Inspector Alan Grant investigates the evidence in the case of Richard III & the Princes in the Tower, arriving at a convincing solution by means of acute historical detection. A critical piece of evidence in this unabashedly Ricardian tale is the Bill of Attainder brought by Henry VII against Richard III, which makes no mention whatsoever of the princes—certainly suggestive to Grant of their being alive at the time.
Critics point out that this is a work of fiction. Rightly so. Despite that, in the decades since it was printed it’s turned many of the idly curious to devout Ricardianism. Anthony Boucher called The Daughter of Time “one of the permanent classics in the detective field”. Dorothy B. Hughes termed it “not only one of the most important mysteries of the year, but of all years of mystery”.
The title of the novel is taken from Bertolt Brecht’s play Life of Galileo, in which the eponymous hero observes: “Truth is the daughter of time, not of authority.”

My Review:

The last Plantagenet. The last King of England to die in battle. And until last week, very nearly the last King of England whose earthly remains were supposedly missing. (I’ll get back to that)

When the experts identified the skeleton under the car park (a car park!) in Leicester as belonging to Richard III, like so many, I went back to Josephine Tey’s The Daughter of Time. Her book, the story of a laid-up Detective Inspector investigating historical mysteries to keep from going spare, was my first real introduction to Richard.

It left a life-long impression. On my first trip to England, I visited Bosworth Field, the site of Richard’s final battle. (This was not easy on a rail-pass, the train didn’t go to Market Bosworth, and it was not much of tourist destination.)

But Tey’s book, it lived in memory. My copy is so old that I purchased it new for less than a dollar. It’s yellow and brittle at the edges. I wondered if the story would hold up.

Written in 1950, I couldn’t help but wonder a bit about the framing story. Her Inspector Grant has a broken leg, and is in hospital for 6 weeks flat on his back. No television in 1950, and seemingly no radio.

He’s also not drugged out of his noggin. His hands are free, it’s his legs that are non-functional. Yes, he could read a book, and people bring him lots. In fact, his comments on the best sellers of the day are just as sharp and biting as ever.

A few bits rankle to a 21st century reader. Women are nurses or in service occupations, except for Grant’s actress friend Marta Hallard. Men are police, doctors, researchers.

When Grant becomes cranky in his extreme boredom, Marta charms a friend at the Victoria and Albert Museum to create a packet of pictures that illustrate famous historic mysteries.

Grant’s fascination with faces causes him to make a mistaken identification. He finds one face from the pile, and thinks the man should be a judge or an official of some kind. Instead, the man in the portrait is someone who has gone down in history as the quintessence of evil: Richard III.

The story is Grant’s academic investigation, all conducted from the hospital while flat on his back, into the case against Richard. He’s forced to use other people to do all his legwork and research at a time when there was no internet. He doesn’t even seem to have had a phone in his room.

What Grant (and Tey) create is a fascinating look at how history gets made.

I read this the first time in high school, and found that the unforgettable lesson. Whether you finish the book believing that Richard is innocent or guilty, what I was left with was the absolute conviction that history is written by the victors. (It helps to have someone like Billy Shakespeare as your press corps)

Escape Rating A+: There’s always a fear that when you pick up a beloved classic that you haven’t read in a while, that it won’t wear well. Tey was smart to keep the framing story of The Daughter of Time to a minimum–it doesn’t intrude on the historical mystery enough to make the out-of-date details of 1950 jar against the historical discovery, which does not get old.

Just as it did the first time (and the second, third, and possibly fourth) reading The Daughter of Time made me THINK. First about how history is made and shaped by what is recorded. The word history is two words, “his” and “story”. The tale always changes based on who tells it. Or, as one of my former supervisors once put it, “the person who writes the minutes of the meeting controls history.”

I also paid a lot of attention to what people did, and not just what they said. It was a historical lesson learned about what constituted a primary vs. a secondary source that I never forgot when I studied history in college.

It was also fun to see the historic mystery as a police case instead of as dry history. Simpler questions like “where was so-and-so on the night of the king’s death?” or the old chestnut “who benefits?” were very relevant, even when documents were being “interrogated” instead of people.

If you like mysteries, and you’ve never read The Daughter of Time, do. It’s a treat. Especially if you read the fuss about finding Richard III’s bones and wondered what all the fuss was about. Josephine Tey wrote the best explanation you could ever find.

And what I wrote a bit earlier about King’s bones that have or have not been found?  One tiny detail. About the “Princes in the Tower” that Richard, or someone, had killed. Two skeletons were found in the Tower of London in the 1600’s that were decided on not much evidence must belong to the “Princes in the Tower”. In spite of repeated requests, the Church of England is refusing requests to have the bones DNA tested. They’re not sure what to do if the bones turn out not to be the Princes after all!

***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: A Devil’s Touch by Victoria Vane

Format read: ebook provided by the author
Formats available: ebook
Genre: Historical romance, Erotic romance
Series: The Devil DeVere #4.5
Length: 60 pages
Publisher: Victoria Vane
Date Released: February 11, 2013
Purchasing Info:Author’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon

A DEVIL’S TOUCH (The Devil DeVere 4.5) is an erotic romance vignette that can stand alone as a complete story, but also serves to bridge Book #4 THE DEVIL’S MATCH, and Book#5 JEWEL OF THE EAST (forthcoming Salime and Simon’s story)

BLURB:
In her last month of pregnancy, Diana, Viscountess DeVere, has barely settled into her new life and role as “the devil” DeVere’s wife, when her increasingly restlesss husband receives an urgent summons to London. When Diana inadvertently discovers a message he received from a known courtesan with whom he was formerly linked, she fears her marriage is over before it has begun.

My Review:

Just the idea of Ludo “Devil” DeVere attempting to be the perfect husband is enough to constitute the perfect Valentine’s Day present all by itself!

What’s even better is that this delightful Georgian bonbon actually delivers every bit of decadent deliciousness that lovers of The Devil DeVere Series could possibly wish for…and sets us all up for wicked delights yet to come.

On his best day, the Devil couldn’t have maneuvered his puppets any better!

But in this little vignette, Ludo DeVere is definitely not having one of his best days. He has finally found that wedded bliss is actually blissful, provided one is wedded to the right woman. For him, that woman is Diana. Through all of their acquantaince, they have thrown sparks off each other at every turn. Even when they have been at their angriest with each other, the one thing they have never been is bored with each other.

Now Diana is radiantly pregnant with his child. Also about to burst with the child. Ludo is about to burst because the damned doctor says he shouldn’t be bothering Diana for sex. Ludo’s never gone 8 hours without sex, and now it’s been 8 days. And bloody counting.

Diana has no idea what’s wrong with Ludo. She thinks he’s lost interest in her because she’s the size of a small estate. He won’t look at her. He won’t touch her. She’s lonely, bored and afraid.

Not to mention extremely pregnant.

Suddenly Ludo’s best friend Ned arrives and whisks him away to London. Ludo claims it’s an emergency regarding their boyhood friend Simon. Sin has miraculously returned to life after years as an American POW, but Diana fears there are darker motives for Ludo’s sudden disappearance. After he departs, she finds a letter addressed to him from his former paramour Salime, requesting his immediate return to rescue her.

Diana, already afraid for her marriage, and questioning Ludo’s rather recent conversion to marital fidelity after a lifetime of utter debauchery, wonders if he’ll return at all, and whether she’ll be better off (for certain utterly miserable values of “better”) if he doesn’t.

Ned gets a good laugh out of telling Ludo that the doctor was an idiot, which puts Ludo in a tearing hurry to return home, only to find that his wife has lost her rather shaky faith in him.

What lengths will they both have to go to bridge the chasm between them?

Escape Rating A: Reading A Devil’s Touch is like indulging in your favorite decadent dessert. Death by Chocolate perhaps. It is very rich, but perfectly scrumptious, and a small serving is just right!

Unlike Devil in the Making, the first Devilish Vignette, A Devil’s Touch is a complete story with a beginning, middle and end. It takes some shortcuts because we are expected to know all the characters. Even Simon was previously introduced in Devil in the Making.

Part of what makes this fun is that Ludo and Diana are still themselves. Ludo is still trying to stage-manage. He loves Diana, and he wants to do what’s best for her. But rather than discuss it with her, he decides for her, and that’s where the misunderstandammit starts. He gets into a lot of scrapes, and a lot of his scrapes with Diana, that way.

I hope she thinks it’s part of his charm.

The setup for the next book in the series, Jewel of the East, is not-so-subtlely the way that Ludo rescues Salime by arranging for her to care for Simon. He’s stage-managing again. When he does it for other people, it usually works wonders.

We’ll find out in April. But first, it’s time to congratulate Lord and Lady DeVere on the birth of their son. Ludovic Valentine DeVere, born 14 February 1784.

Happy Valentine’s Day.

***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: Iron Guns, Blazing Hearts by Heather Massey

Format read: ebook provided by the author
Formats available: ebook
Genre: steampunk romance
Length: 163 pages
Publisher: Lyrical Press
Date Released: February 4, 2013
Purchasing Info:Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, The Galaxy Express

The West just got a whole lot wilder.

A woman on a mission… Scientific achievement isn’t enough for Violet Whitcomb. Life working alongside her renowned scientist father is filled with intellectual challenges, but what she truly craves is love and adventure. She’s resigned to a fate of academic pursuits…until a fateful trip across the American frontier changes everything. A rogue inventor known as the Iron Scorpion kidnaps Violet’s father and she alone is left to plan his rescue.

A man with a secret… Logan McCoy knows firsthand going up against the Iron Scorpion is suicide, but he can’t let Violet waltz into the villain’s lair alone. She may be a stranger, but she’s also the most compelling woman he’s ever known.

A perilous quest… Their attraction is undeniable, but their alliance turns contentious when Violet insists on including a third partner on their mission: her father’s latest invention and the world’s most advanced automaton, Arthur. The reason for Logan’s resistance isn’t clear until Violet comes face-to-face with the Iron Scorpion’s diabolical devices, and by then, it’s far too late.

CONTENT WARNING: An irresistibly dangerous alpha hero, a heroine whose most prized accessory is her steam gun, an automaton gunslinger…and a villain whose lust for power drives him to evils beyond the scope of humanity.

My Review:

Something about Heather Massey’s Iron Guns, Blazing Hearts evoked some very fond memories of Saturday mornings watching Dudley Do-Right cartoons. In a good way.

Partly it was the serial melodrama.  Violet Whitcomb yearns for adventure, so she reads about it in weekly magazines that provide it for her, one chapter at a time–always ending with the heroine in yet another dreadful scrape, seemingly doomed. (Did you ever wonder where the term “cliffhanger ending” came from?)

Violet is a bluestocking, an educated and intellectual woman, but her father sees her as just another tool to assist him in the creation of his amazing inventions. He has buried his grief at the loss of his wife (and Violet’s mother) in more and yet more work. But he’s prevented Violet from having any life at all. She’s in her mid-twenties, she’s happy to assist her father, but she also wants to have a chance at a family of her own. He doesn’t hear or see her as anything but an extension of himself and his work. He’s not mean, he’s just a workaholic.

On a trans-continental railway journey, Violet discovers the truth of the old adage “be careful what you wish for, you might get it”. A few moments of connection with a dangerous man on the train, a man she nearly throws herself at in her naivete, and then, without warning, the train is set upon by mechanical monsters.

Her father is kidnapped by one of those monsters. Violet’s dangerous and attractive fantasy man becomes her only hope for rescuing her father.

In all innocence, Violet assumes that this man on whom she has pinned all her hopes must be a Pinkerton agent. From her reading of adventure stories, that’s the romantic notion that makes sense to her imagination.

He calls himself Logan, and he reveals very little about his background. What he does say is that her father has been kidnapped by the Iron Scorpion. A man who has perverted the very ground on which he has made his base camp. The man who murdered Logan’s family.

They hammer out an agreement for Logan to guide Violet to free her father from the Iron Scorpion’s evil clutches only once they figure out that Violet’s father is exactly what the Scorpion has been searching for, a man who invents sophisticated automatons. The Scorpion has so fouled his own lands that humans are unable to work for him for very long.

Then Violet insists on bringing another partner. Her father’s finest creation, a fully-functional automaton that she calls “Arthur”.  (If the descriptions of Arthur don’t eventually make you think of Star Trek TNG‘s Data, especially from the episode A Fistful of Datas, I’ll eat my sombrero, or yours)

From the point where Logan, Violet and Arthur take up the trail to the Iron Scorpion’s lair, the story is adventure melodrama at its cheesy, gooey best.

The laconic Western hero with the mysterious past and the concealed motives who is doing the right thing for reasons of his own, but you just know they are not the reasons that they heroine thinks they are.

The naive heroine who has woven a beautiful fantasy about the hero that is doomed to go to smash sooner or later (probably sooner) and who is just so plucky that you hope she gets some of her happy ending. But you also want to shake some sense into her!

And the silent sidekick, who in this case is really, really silent!

Logan is much more competent than Dudley Do-Right ever hoped to be, but also much less on the right side of things. Violet is also more competent than Nell (she not only knows which is the man and which is the horse, she know how to operate a steam engine!)

But Snidely Whiplash was not half as villainous as the Iron Scorpion. Our heroes needed to be a lot more competent than their cartoon counterparts.

Will that be enough to save the day from a very evil inventor? Or will they need a more scientific boost?

Escape Rating B: There is more steampunk than romance in this steampunk romance. That’s okay, they were busy!

Having each chapter prefaced with a quote from one of Violet’s “adventure stories” was adorable. It showed where she was coming from as a character, and made the idea that she kept on believing that Logan was a Pinkerton agent a bit easier to swallow. She had led a rather sheltered life!

Arthur’s growth as a character and as a “person” definitely paralleled Data. Also Logan’s reaction to him. Logan first treats him as a “thing”, and finally at the end, treats him as an asset and acknowledges that they wouldn’t have succeeded without him. It’s a big leap.

I do hope that author does tell Arthur’s future adventures. Data was “fully-functional” after all.

This was fun and froth. It read as if it were one of Violet’s adventure stories come to life, which I think was the author’s intention. If there are more monsters out in this author’s version of the weird West, I’d be happy to read her tales of their vanquishing!

***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: Lady in Deed by Ann Montclair + Giveaway

Format read: ebook provided by the author
Formats available: ebook
Genre: historical romance
Length: 208 pages
Publisher: Musa Publishing
Date Released: December 7, 2012
Purchasing Info:Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, All Romance

Piety or passion… What’s a lady to do?

Lady Mary Rutherford believed she would live her entire life as a nun. But when King Henry VIII’s reformist movement makes practicing religion a dangerous proposition, Mary is forced to begin a new life with a family she doesn’t know. Worse, she must become lady of the manor, a role for which she feels sorely unprepared.

After a decade of service to his king, Lord Trenton Stanley returns home to find his estate in ruins, his fortune depleted, and his doddering father drooling over Mary—a woman Trent fears has been installed to replace his mother. Trent strives to rebuild his life, but his desire for Mary becomes a serious distraction he can’t seem to ignore.

Though Mary is anxious to prove she’s a worthy lady, she’s tempted by the rakish Trent into deeds most unladylike…

The essence of this story is steeped in the Tudor period. Henry VIII broke up all of the abbeys, monasteries, nunneries–all of the churches and their properties that had been a part of the English way of life for centuries.

There were layers upon layers of reasons for his actions. One overt reason was his desire for a son, and his desire that Anne Boleyn provide him with that son. His first wife, Catherine of Aragon, was undoubtedly past the point of bringing more childen to their marriage. But not past the point of having her many royal connections on the Continent argue vociferously against Henry’s desire to divorce her.

And then, the Church properties in England were very, very wealthy. Henry’s Reformation brought him a lot of gold. Granting former church lands to his followers bought him considerable loyalty.

But there was also a lot of what we now call “collateral damage”. The Church distributed charity to the poor. Mary Rutherford was a tiny microcosm of that damage. She was an upper class woman, orphaned and raised in a convent because there was no where else for her to go.

She was educated and provided for, but not informed as to her eventual fate. She would probably have taken vows if fate, in the form of Henry’s ambitions, had not intervened. Remaining cloistered became dangerous. The family that had formerly provided her living, provided the means for her to remain living by getting her out of the convent and bringing her into their upper-class life. A life for which she had no preparation.

Mary enters a world in shambles.

On the carriage ride to Stanlay Hall, Lord Trenton Stanley sexually assaults her. He doesn’t rape her, he never gets that far. He thinks she’s a whore provided for his amusement on his return from the front lines. No protest from Lady Mary that she is not a doxy registers in his mind. He thinks it’s all part of the game.

Especially since her innocent response to his caresses is favorable. Her lips say no, but her body says yes. Trent is definitely a man of his time and not ours.

This is far from Trent’s finest moment. Trent spends a lot of time laboring under one misapprehension after another, all of which could have been resolved by asking, if not Mary, then his father.

Trenton comes home to find that his world is in ruins. His beloved mother is several months dead of “the sweating sickness” (to this day no one is sure what disease this was), his father is wandering around slightly lost in his mind or his cups, and the estate is going to ruin.

Oh, and he finds out that the woman he nearly debauched is his father’s ward, and that her protests really were the truth.

The story here is about Mary learning to become “Lady Mary”, despite her original intent to become a nun. She thought she would live a cloistered life. That life is over. Instead, she has to embrace the life that she has been thrust into as lady of Stanley Hall. It’s not an easy life. There are privileges, but there are also obstacles, not the least of which is Trenton Stanley’s determination to keep her from becoming involved with anything to do with the lands or the village or anywhere she might actually do some good.

She wants to be his partner, and he pushes her away at every turn. She is also coming to realize that she wants him, even though she is not entirely sure what that will mean. It is a different life than she had imagined for herself. But the life at Stanley Hall is turning out to be a more fulfilling life than she imagined.

Trenton Stanley tries to keep Mary out of temptation’s reach, and doesn’t succeed. First he thinks his father has brought her to the Hall so that she can become his father’s new wife. He is quickly disabused of that notion. Then he tries to keep her from becoming involved with the villagers, but they need a new lady at Stanley Hall, someone to take his mother’s place.

The more involved she becomes, the more Trenton sees that she is the best woman to be his partner, in every way.

There’s only one problem. He’s already pre-contracted to someone else.  A fact he never bothered to tell Mary. Because he knows he doesn’t deserve her.

Escape Rating B: The Tudor era is one that is not often used in historical romance, and after reading Lady In Deed, I’m not sure why. This is a terribly rich period, and it really would be fruitful. There’s so much opportunity for misunderstandings, scandal, and even warfare! England was still fighting the Scots, so there wouldn’t even be a need to go to the continent for deeds of derring-do!

About Lady In Deed in particular, I enjoyed the setting, and I loved the way that Trent, Mary and Trent’s father do pull together and make a family. That worked. I liked that the events of the wider world affected the story, that Mary was there because of the closing of the monateries.

I did think that Trent’s contracted marriage and the breaking of the contracted was a bit over-the-top. Trent and Mary had enough strikes against them without his witch of a fiancee thrown into the party. While pre-contracts were a feature of Medieval society, that one was broken too easily, and Trent’s betrothed was too much of a caricature shrew.

But all-in-all, I enjoyed this Tudor romance and hope that more romance authors will follow Ms. Montclair’s lead back to the Tudor era.

~~~~~~TOURWIDE GIVEAWAY~~~~~~

Ann will be awarding a $30.00 Amazon GC to a randomly drawn commenter during the tour.

***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.

Celebrating Saint Valentine Blog Hop

Celebrating St. Valentine Giveaway Hop

#CelebratingValentine

Share a Valentine’s Day moment!

 

This Giveaway Hop was organized by Reading Romances!

I’m going to tell you a little story about our first Valentine’s Day together.

You see, we were actually supposed to be spending it apart. We both traveled for our jobs, and I was supposed to out of town that week. I think upstate New York. Galen was in the office. We were pretty bummed. Well, I was pretty bummed. Guys don’t make as big a deal about these things.

We had tickets to see The Producers with Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick. This was the pre-Broadway run in Chicago at the Cadillac Palace. I don’t know how I scored tickets. Just lucky, I guess.

Sort of lucky.

During intermission, I left our seats. We were on the mezzanine. Coming back, I tripped and sprained my ankle. Pretty badly.

Make that really badly.

But this was the pre-Broadway run of The Producers. It was sold-out. If we’d left, there were NO LATER TICKETS. Except in New York.

By the time the show was over. I had a teensy little problem. I couldn’t walk. My ankle was  totally wrecked. And we were on the mezzanine. Those were great seats. And totally inaccessible.

Eventually, the paramedics showed up, after the theatre had emptied. They had to…insert embarrassment here…take me down in a fireman’s carry. It is not as much fun as it sounds having four people carry you because you were too stubborn to leave the theatre.

But the show was fantastic!

And my trip to Upstate New York got cancelled. I really couldn’t walk without a cast for several days. But there was a downside.

We lived in a third floor walk-up. Galen had to fetch and carry for me for a week. So we got to be together after all for our first Valentine’s Day!

That’s my Valentine’s story. What’s yours?

What you can win here: $10 US Amazon Gift Card

Number of winners:1

How to enter:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 


The Sunday Post AKA What’s On My (Mostly Vitual) Nightstand? 2-10-13

Just like yesterday’s Stacking the Shelves post, this particular Sunday Post is going to be on the short and hopefully sweet side.

I’ve got strep throat, and I pretty much feel like crap on toast. The only people happy about this development are the cats. I make a much better heat source with a fever of 102°.

(Yes, I’ve been to a doctor, it really is strep, I’m taking antibiotics, and the fever is coming down. I’ll be back in the office, no longer contagious and mostly human on Tuesday. Meanwhile, I’m sick as the proverbial canine. And why is it dogs in that idiom, anyway?)

But what happened this week that was much more fun?

There’s still plenty of time to take a ride on The Great Steampunk Romance Airship Tour, sponsored by The Galaxy Express. The Tour stopped here at Reading Reality on February 5, but do check out the tour schedule at TGE to discover all the marvelous places you can go and climb aboard.

The full (very full in fact) schedule for last week:

A- Review: Silent Vows by Catherine Bybee
Guest Post by Author Catherine Bybee + Giveaway
Guest post: The Great Steampunk Romance Airship Tour + Giveaway
B Review: Redeeming Vows by Catherine Bybee
B+ Review: Treacherous Temptations by Victoria Vane + Giveaway
Guest Post by Victoria Vane + Giveaway
B+ Review: The Slayer by Theresa Meyers
Stacking the Shelves (33)

And all the giveaways are still open except Catherine Bybee’s. So you still have time to get in the running for some terrific books!

Speaking of getting in on the ground floor for some fantastic books, what about this week? I have two events scheduled this week.

Monday, February 11, will be the first day of the Celebrating Saint Valentine Blog Hop, sponsored by Reading Romances. Since this hop is celebrating Valentine’s Day, it will run through the Valentine’s Day weekend. Reading Reality will be giving a $10 Amazon Gift Card as a prize (pick your own fantastic books) But there are over 60 authors and bloggers participating. LOTS of fantastic books and prizes to chose from!

On Tuesday, I’ll be reviewing Lady in Deed by Ann Montclair as part of a tour from Goddess Fish. Interesting historical romance from the Henry VIII period, not one that often gets used in historical romance, so it was a nice change-of-pace. There is a tourwide giveaway with this one.

And for the rest of the week, a couple of surprises. I did want to review one of the steampunk books from The Great Steampunk Romance Airship Tour before the tour ended, so I’ll be reviewing Heather Massey’s own Iron Guns, Blazing Hearts.

I also treated myself this weekend. I re-read an old favorite in honor of the determination that those bones they discovered under a Leicester car-park really do belong to Richard III. I was more than pleased to discover that Josephine Tey’s The Daughter of Time still holds up to the bright spot it has kept in my memory.

Stacking the Shelves (33)

Short stack this week. The blogger has, of all things, strep throat!

For Review:
Anything for You (Coming Home #2.5) by Jessica Scott
The Dragon Healer (Dragon Knights #1.5) by Bianca D’Arc
Heart of Iron (London Steampunk #2) by Bec McMaster
Keeping Secrets in Seattle by Brooke Moss
Lush (Delicious #3) by Lauren Dane
The River of No Return by Bee Ridgway
Sinner’s Heart (Hellraisers #3) by Zoe Archer

Purchased:
Maiden Flight (Dragon Knights #1) by Bianca D’Arc

Review: The Slayer by Theresa Meyers

Format read: ebook
Formats available: ebook, mass market paperback
Genre: Western steampunk paranormal romance
Series: The Legend Chronicles #2
Length: 353 pages
Publisher: Zebra Books
Date Released: April 3, 2012
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Book Depository

Brothers Winchester, Remington, and Colt know the legends–they were trained from childhood to destroy demon predators, wielding the latest steam-powered gadgetry. It’s a devil of a job. But sometimes your fate chooses you. . .

Chasing Trouble

Winn Jackson isn’t interested in hunting nightmares across the Wild West–even if it’s the family business. Unlike his rakehell brothers, Winn believes in rules. As sheriff of Bodie, California, he only shoots actual law breakers. That’s what he’s doing when he rescues the Contessa Drossenburg, Alexandra Porter, a lady with all the elegance of the Old World–grace, beauty and class. And then he sees her fangs.

Alexandra isn’t just some bloodsucking damsel in distress, though. She’s on a mission to save her people–and she’s dead certain that Winn’s family legacy is the only way. Luckily, aside from grace and class, she also has a stubborn streak a mile wide. So like it or not, Winn is going to come back with her to the mountains of Transylvania, and while he’s at it, change his opinions about vampires, demon-hunting, and who exactly deserves shooting. And if she has her way, he’s going to do his darnedest to save the world. . .

This Slayer is not in high school, and there’s no one named “Spike” involved.

Although strangely enough, there IS a Hellmouth, or near enough, and Winn Jackson needs to close it. He’s also crazy enough to get himself involved with a vampire.

So there are a few coincidences.

But Winn’s vampire is Countess Drossenburg. She’s helping him find one-third of the Book of Legends. Not out of the goodness of her no-longer-beating heart.

But because if the Archdemon Rathe opens the Gates of Nyx, he’ll enslave all the humans, and the vampires will lose their food source.

Enlightened self-interest is a powerful motivator, even for vampires. Vladimir, Alexandra’s cousin, emperor, and betrothed (in pretty much that order or importance to her) sent her to America to bring the oldest brother of the Chosen to Europe.

Why? To find the part of the Book that Rathe’s allies had stolen from Vlad’s castle.

Winn decides to go along for the ride. Not because he believes that he and his brothers are the Chosen, but because he’s still their big brother, and he still needs to protect them.

And because he finds Alexa tempting as hell, in spite of her being Darkin, and his sworn enemy as a Hunter. He needs her to find that damn book.

Anything to stop Rathe.

Alexa hasn’t felt anything since her husband died, two centuries ago. She does not want to be tempted by this Hunter who sees her as an ememy. But adventuring with Winn makes her feel something she hasn’t felt in centures. Winn makes her feel alive.

Alexa wants to step aside from the temptation he represents, but Vlad orders her to protect Winn. Alexa obeys, in spite of the prophecy that says she will betray all she holds dear, and will die at the hands of the one she loves.

Will it be worth the cost? Can they stop Rathe before it is too late?

Escape Rating B+: The Book of Legends series is an absolutely grand adventure of the Indiana Jones school of death-defying deeds and thrills and chills on every page. I would say it’s a fantastic lark, except that the fate of the world hangs in the balance.

The beginning of the story runs in parallel to The Hunter (reviewed here). It shows exactly the same events, just told from Winn’s point of view instead of Colt’s, so there is a bit of repetition. The Slayer even uses the same dialog. It’s good for the story that this doesn’t go on too long.

Winn’s story branches off when Winn leaves on the Countess’ airship for Europe. Then things get really interesting, but there are similarities to the previous book in the series.

The theme of unresolved sexual tension does ratchet up the stress in both books. These two people are not supposed to get together! So they resist mightily throughout the story, only giving in very late in the game. While it made sense in both Colt’s and Winn’s books, I hope Remy’s story follows at least a slightly different path.

I adored the ship and crew of Le Renaud. When Winn and his vampire need to return to America, they find an all-female pirate ship to take them back. Every scene with the pirates was terrific! I think we’ll be seeing more of them, because of some backstory, and that’s going to be fascinating.

Meyers definitely puts the steam in steampunk, as the cover blurb says, but it’s more than that. This adventure romps across Europe, and gets more inventive and more wild with every mile it travels. Whew! what a blast!

***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.

Guest Post by Victoria Vane + Giveaway

My very special guest today is Victoria Vane. Victoria has just published Treacherous Temptations, her latest revel in the mad, bad and dangerously decadent Georgian Era. I’ve asked Victoria to tell us why she loves the Georgian Era so very, very much. (I will say that it seems to love her back. Her Georgian-Era romances are fabulous!)

Why I Love the Georgians (Redux) by Victoria Vane

As a historical romance author, I am often asked why I swim against the Regency tide. My reasoning has two parts. While I adore Regency romances and cut my first romance teeth on Georgette Heyer (still my all-time favorite author) my best loved stories have always been Heyer’s less popular Georgian works— The Black Moth, These Old Shades, The Masqueraders, Devil’s Club, and Powder and Patch. The Regency just doesn’t hold me in thrall the way the paradoxically naughty, bawdy, glitzy, and glamorous Georgian era does.

From almost as early as I can remember, I’ve had a particular fascination with the 18th century— the clothes, the manners, the art and the music, and the longer I have studied it, and the deeper I have delved, my interest has only magnified. The compulsive gaming, hard drinking, and fast living Georgians did everything to excess! And while it may be surpassed in its hypocritical character by the Victorian era with its puritanical social mores coupled with an underworld swimming in opium dens, in my mind, the smoky, gritty Victorians just can’t hold a literary candle to the gleaming gilt of the Georgians!

I think much of it is that we can’t take the Georgians (at least the aristocrats) at face value, for the face they presented to the world was often (literally) a painted façade. Yet, they were still able to mock themselves for it as evidenced by the satirical nature of the popular art and literature. Moreover, almost nothing was better appreciated in this jaded society than a quick wit, which oftimes alone served to elevate some of the lowliest people to the company of nobles.

In my exploration of this golden epoch, people like William Hogarth and Henry Fielding have been my guides, and in addition to consistently incorporating many real people into my stories as secondary characters, historical figures have also served as models for my fictional heroes and heroines. (Frederick, Baron Baltimore was a very loose model for Ludovic DeVere in the Devil DeVere series. Philip, Duke of Wharton inspired Hadley Blanchard in Treacherous Temptations, and the real Mary Edwardes served as a very close model for my own heiress in the same book.

My second reason for seeking my fame and fortune amongst the Georgians began as simply an endeavor to find my own niche—to stand out as a historical author amongst a flooded pool of genuine talent. I sought to do this by learning everything I possibly could about my chosen period. For four years, I have immersed myself in study of the history, politics and art, reading diaries, memoirs, and stage plays, all while listening endlessly to Baroque music.

I have done this in my endeavor to give my era life and breath, to enrich my stories in the most vivid possible way by bringing to them elements of historical reality. I have recently expanded upon this notion of vivid and elaborate world building by commissioning digitally rendered illustrations for my books that I hope will excited readers and enhance the reading experience. (More scene depictions and character portraits are available on my DeVere fan site.)

In all of this I have come to feel very much at home in Georgian England, as if I truly understand them—as if I actually belong there. And just as Georgette Heyer did with the Regency, it is my dearest desire to call the Georgian era my own.

About Treacherous Temptations

A reluctant heiress resigned to her fate… Mary Elizabeth Edwardes has one of the largest fortune’s in England, but has no desire to leave her quiet country existence… and even less to acquire a husband she cannot choose for herself.

A dissolute nobleman bent on retribution… Trapped in a duplicitous existence since scandal destroyed his fortune and family name, Lord Hadley Blanchard has spent the better part of a decade posing as a disaffected exile while spying and seducing in the service of the English Crown.

A dangerous game of seduction, and intrigue… When summoned from abroad by a former lover, Lord Hadley perceives an opportunity for vengeance at last. By employing the full measure of his seductive charm, he woos the ward of the man who destroyed his life, little knowing that winning Mary’s fortune will mean risking his own treacherous heart.

Purchase at Amazon.

About Victoria Vane:A lover of history and deeply romantic stories, Victoria combines these elements to craft romantic historical novels and novellas for a mature reading audience. Her writing influences are Georgette Heyer for fabulous witty dialogue and over the top characters, Robin Schone , Sylvia Day, and Charlotte Featherstone for beautifully crafted prose in stories with deep sensuality, and Lila DiPasqua for creative vision in melding history with eroticism.

You can find Victoria at:

Website | DeVere Fan Site | Blog | Facebook | Twitter

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

Victoria is kindly giving away a digital copy of any title from her backlist.

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Review: Treacherous Temptations by Victoria Vane + Giveaway

Format read: ebook provided by the publisher
Formats available: ebook
Genre: Historical Romance
Length: 181 pages
Publisher: Entangled Publishing
Date Released: January 19, 2012
Purchasing Info:Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble

A reluctant heiress resigned to her fate… Mary Elizabeth Edwardes has one of the largest fortune’s in England, but has no desire to leave her quiet country existence… and even less to acquire a husband she cannot choose for herself.

A dissolute nobleman bent on retribution… Trapped in a duplicitous existence since scandal destroyed his fortune and family name, Lord Hadley Blanchard has spent the better part of a decade posing as a disaffected exile while spying and seducing in the service of the English Crown.

A dangerous game of seduction, and intrigue… When summoned from abroad by a former lover, Lord Hadley perceives an opportunity for vengeance at last. By employing the full measure of his seductive charm, he woos the ward of the man who destroyed his life, little knowing that winning Mary’s fortune will mean risking his own treacherous heart.

Treason, rebellion, espionage, government-backed Ponzi schemes. Dead scapegoats. Live corrupt officials. Incest.

Some of it even happened.

Victoria Vane is an expert at weaving the soiled threads of actual Georgian-era events into a tapestry that proves yet again that foul deeds can wear a fair face. Behind the glittering masks of the aristocracy lurked the corruption that the later Victorian era’s compulsive prudishness was a reaction against.

The Georgian era was a revel.

Two of the events that lay behind the story of Treacherous Temptations were real, historic events. After the Hanoverian kings, in the person of George I, took the throne of Britain, there were a series of rebellions in favor of James Stuart, and later his son Charles. History calls his son “Bonnie Prince Charlie”. The rebellions are known as the “Jacobite Rebellions” and they cost Scotland dearly. The breaking of the clan system in the Highlands was one of the results. (If you want to read more about the Jacobite Risings, invest some time in Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series. The first three books cover it in glorious detail.)

The Scots did not want “German Georgie” on the throne. They paid in blood. Spying on them paid in cash.

The government-backed Ponzi scheme was also historic fact. Bernie Madoff was small time compared to the South Sea Bubble, because the South Sea Bubble started off as a government investment. It was supposed to reduce the cost of the national debt by investing in trade with South America. There was just one problem–at that point in history, all South American Trade was controlled by Spain, and Britain was at war with Spain. There was also a pesky problem with insider trading.  (Some things never change)

As our story begins, Hadley Blanchard is summoned home after nearly ten years spying on the Jacobite court in exile. This was a dangerous game for him. If he was caught by the Jacobites, they would have killed him. If he was caught in England delivering messages to either his paymaster or to any of the exiled court’s contacts, he had his choice of being executed for treason or killed on sight.

His paymaster would not have protected him, and he knew it. He was living by his wits, and time was probably running out.

About that summons home, it comes from his stepmother. Funny thing about that, she’s also his lover. Or she was. That both is and isn’t as bad as it sounds. They are about the same age. But, it was the sight of the two of them together that caused his father to kill himself instead of her.

The old man definitely shot the wrong person.

And his father’s death was terribly, terribly convenient for the other officers of the South Sea Company. Dead men make very handy scapegoats. Hadley was all of nineteen at the time. He lost his home, his estate, his title, and his income. The government gave him a small stipend and sent him on his way. Disgraced by proxy.

He wants it back. He wants his home back. He wants his self-respect back. He knows that his father was not the engineer behind the South Sea Company collapse. Hadley knows that the man currently paying him to spy on the Jacobites is responsible. He just can’t prove it.

Until fate throws Mary Edwardes in his lap. Literally. The woman whose father purchased his former estates. quite legally. The woman who is now the ward of his enemy, along with her fortune.

All he has to do is seduce her and marry her. He doesn’t even have to like her. It would be so much easier for him if he didn’t like her. If he didn’t care.

But Mary Edwardes seems to actually like him, not just want him. He’s practiced at making women want him. Having someone like him, that’s different. It’s more than novel. It makes him feel like there might be a future, and not just revenge.

Except that he’s not remotely worthy of a woman like Mary. And he still has to make her see that he’s better than any of the alternatives that her guardian will sell her to, even after she finds out the awful truth about him.

Escape Rating B+: Treacherous Temptations has a number of elements of the “perils of Pauline” type of story. Mary Edwardes does seem beyond innocent, even naive. She is nineteen, not sixteen. It’s not that she doesn’t know about sex, it’s that she doesn’t know about people. Sir Richard, her guardian, is selling her to the highest bidder. Lady Barbara is not her friend. Human nature is the same all over. Even in her village there would have been people who were rotten, and nineteen is well out of the schoolroom.

But it’s Hadley’s journey that fascinates. He grows from being a besotted boy in the prologue to a man who has had enough and needs to find a way out. His redemption is the story that we’re following. He needs to throw off his last tie to Barbara, his dependence on Sir Richard’s money, and finally stand up for himself by saving Mary. Hadley pulling himself out of the gutter is the story.

And it’s a damned good one.

~~~~~~TOURWIDE GIVEAWAY~~~~~~

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***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.