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Showing posts with label Author Donna Fletcher Crow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Author Donna Fletcher Crow. Show all posts

Friday, March 22, 2013

Book Hauls! A Month of Books for Review!



 
HUGE!!!  MONTH LONG book hauls!!
 
Whether it seemed like it or not, I was away for nearly a month helping my mom get organized and doing some errands for her over February and part of this month.  Meanwhile, the books kept coming in from my dear publishers and authors!  I am so grateful, but am now backlogged with books to read and review, once again.  Here are some of the ones I love, and I think there may be a couple of books I've shown you before, but bear with me....
 
 
Front and center, of course...  I bought this one before it was published, naturally.  My favorite author.  I've yet to start it because I've been catching up on my reviewing commitments, but I'm hoping to get to it later this week.  It's going to be a marathon read.  One of Ms Oates gothic novels!  She can be the new Edgar Allen Poe, you know...
 
A Small Summary:
 
"A major historical novel from "one of the great artistic forces of our time" (The Nation)—an eerie, unforgettable story of possession, power, and loss in early-twentieth-century Princeton, a cultural crossroads of the powerful and the damned.
Princeton, New Jersey, at the turn of the twentieth century: a tranquil place to raise a family, a genteel town for genteel souls. But something dark and dangerous lurks at the edges of the town, corrupting and infecting its residents. Vampires and ghosts haunt the dreams of the innocent. A powerful curse besets the elite families of Princeton; their daughters begin disappearing. A young bride on the verge of the altar is seduced and abducted by a dangerously compelling man–a shape-shifting, vaguely European prince who might just be the devil, and who spreads his curse upon a richly deserving community of white Anglo-Saxon privilege. And in the Pine Barrens that border the town, a lush and terrifying underworld opens up..."
 
 
 
A book that's already targeted to be one of the best of 2013.  I'm so excited to have received this one from Little, Brown!  Here's something about it:
 
"On a cold and snowy night in 1910, Ursula Todd is born, the third child of a wealthy English banker and his wife. Sadly, she dies before she can draw her first breath. On that same cold and snowy night, Ursula Todd is born, lets out a lusty wail, and embarks upon a life that will be, to say the least, unusual. For as she grows, she also dies, repeatedly, in any number of ways. Clearly history (and Kate Atkinson) have plans for her: In Ursula rests nothing less than the fate of civilization.
Wildly inventive, darkly comic, startlingly poignant — this is Kate Atkinson at her absolute best, playing with time and history, telling a story that is breathtaking for both its audacity and its endless satisfactions."


This is a Simon & Schuster book which I can't wait to get into to...exotic and interesting subject, it seems.  The author is one I've been meaning to read.  Here's something about this book:

"THOUGH SHE WAS ORPHANED AT BIRTH, the wild and headstrong Korobi Roy has enjoyed a privileged childhood with her adoring grandparents, spending her first seventeen years sheltered in a beautiful, crumbling old mansion in Kolkata. But despite all that her grandparents have done for her, she is troubled by the silence that surrounds the circumstances of her parents’ death and clings fiercely to her only inheritance from them: the love note she found, years ago, hidden in a book of poetry that had belonged to her mother. As she grows, Korobi dreams of one day finding a love as powerful as her parents’, and it seems her wish has finally come true when she meets the charming Rajat, the only son of a high-profile business family."



I will be reviewing this one in the next month.  It's being touted all over the publishing world and is one to be on the lookout for if you're interested in a new woman protagonist who's a hard line FBI agent.  Thank you to Minotaur Books who sent me this to review!   See this partial summary:
 




















































You have never met an (ex) FBI agent like Brigid Quinn.


“Keeping secrets, telling lies, they require the same skill. Both become a habit, almost an addiction, that’s hard to break even with the people closest to you, out of the business. For example, they say never trust a woman who tells you her age; if she can’t keep that secret, she can’t keep yours. I’m fifty-nine.”

 

Brigid Quinn's experiences in hunting sexual predators for the FBI have left her with memories she wishes she didn’t have and lethal skills she hopes never to need again. Having been pushed into early retirement by events she thinks she's put firmly behind her, Brigid keeps telling herself she is settling down nicely in Tucson with a wonderful new husband, Carlo, and their dogs.

 
 
 
I thought this was an interesting one sent by Weinstein Books.  For any of us who watched "Little House on the Prairie" we'll remember this little girl...   Here's the summary of the book which you can find on Barnes & Noble or Amazon.
 
"The Glass Castle meets The Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother in this dazzlingly honest and provocative family memoir by former child actress and current Fox Business Network anchor Melissa Francis.
When Melissa Francis was eight years old, she won the role of lifetime: playing Cassandra Cooper Ingalls, the little girl who was adopted with her brother (played by young Jason Bateman) by the Ingalls family on the world’s most famous primetime soap opera, Little House on the Prairie. Despite her age, she was already a veteran actress, living a charmed life, moving from one Hollywood set to the next. But behind the scenes, her success was fueled by the pride, pressure, and sometimes grinding cruelty of her stage mother, as fame and a mother’s ambition pushed her older sister deeper into the shadows."

Other books in that haul:

A White Wind Blew by James Markert:  This one is about a tuberculosis sanatorium in 1920's Louisville, KY, and the "compelling questions about faith and confession, music and medicine, and the resilience of love."   I'll be reviewing this one next week.

Pictures At An Exhibition by Camilla Macpherson:  A WWII novel set in London and the National Gallery of Art..."Can a collection of war-time letters hold the key to happiness?"  Happy to receive this one from the author and Random House/UK

The Monastery Murders~An Unholy Communion by Donna Fletcher Crow:  Fans of Ms Crow will be delighted to have another of her books in this series!  I was.  Thanks to Donna and Lion Fiction. 
 "..From the top of the tower at the College of Transfiguration, voices rise in song.  Felicity's delight turns to horror when a black-robed body hurtles over the precipice and lands at her feet.  Her fiance' Father Antony recognizes the corpse as Hwyl Pendry, a former student who has been serving as Deliverance Minister in a Welsh diocese..."

The Mystery Box edited by Brad Meltzer:  New stories collected by such greats as:  Laura Lippman, Tom Rob Smith, R.L. Stine, Katherine Neville, Karin Slaughter, and many others!  Can't wait to slip into this one!!!  Thanks to Grand Central Publishing!

The Last Telegram by Liz Trenow:  Published by Sourcebooks, this one is about a disaster of a decision a young girl made in WWI that haunted her with grief for many years and how she finally overcame its consequences through love and forgiveness.  (Paraphrased from the book jacket summary.)

Angel Baby by Richard Lange:  "To escape the awful life she has descended into, Luz plans carefully.  She takes only the clothes on her back, a Colt .45, and all the money in her husband's safe.  The corpses in the hallway weren't part of her plan.  Luz needs to find the daughter she left behind years earlier, but she knows she may die trying..."   Sent by Mulholland Books/Little, Brown and Company...I'm excited to read this one.

Snow White Must Die by Nele Neuhaus:  International best seller!  This one was sent to me by Minotaur/St. Martin's Press.  Thanks to Minotaur!  I'm very interested to start this one this week.  It's supposed to be a very scary and super suspenseful thriller about disappearing girls in a small village and a pair of (man and woman) police detectives who solve the case.

Murder As A Fine Art by David Morrell:  Dean Koontz called this author, "An absolute master of the thriller."  It's a historical thriller about the author of "Confessions of an Opium Eater" who is a suspect in a series of London murders.  I'll be reviewing this one next month.  Also a Mulholland/Little, Brown published book.

___________________________________

2nd HAUL!!!!


What could make me happier than a book by my favorite suspense/thriller author?  I don't know...  I just gasped and stomped with pleasure the minute I opened this one from Grand Central Publishing!!  Many hugs and thanks to them.  This is #10 in the Lincoln Rhyme series for those of you who follow.
Here's the summary:

It was a "million-dollar bullet," a sniper shot delivered from over a mile away. Its victim was no ordinary mark: he was a United States citizen, targeted by the United States government, and assassinated in the Bahamas.
The nation's most renowned investigator and forensics expert, Lincoln Rhyme, is drafted to investigate. While his partner, Amelia Sachs, traces the victim's steps in Manhattan, Rhyme leaves the city to pursue the sniper himself. As details of the case start to emerge, the pair discovers that not all is what it seems.
When a deadly, knife-wielding assassin begins systematically eliminating all evidence-including the witnesses-Lincoln's investigation turns into a chilling battle of wits against a cold-blooded killer.


This beautiful little book was sent by the author and Viking Press.  I love it...  Here's a summary:





















































"A magical debut about an enchanted house that offers refuge to women in their time of need
Distraught that her academic career has stalled, Alba is walking through her hometown of Cambridge, England, when she finds herself in front of a house she’s never seen before, 11 Hope Street. A beautiful older woman named Peggy greets her and invites her to stay, on the house’s usual conditions: she has ninety-nine nights to turn her life around."

A new historical fiction by one of the best authors in the genre, Barbara Kyle.  Kensington Books brings this copy and I'm so thrilled to have it.  My 2nd favorite queen is Mary Queen of Scots...a close tie with Elizabeth I.  :]   I'll be reviewing this one very soon!  

Summary bit follows:





















































"Following her perilous fall from a throne she'd scarcely owned to begin with, Mary, Queen of Scots, has fled to England, hoping her cousin, Queen Elizabeth, will grant her asylum. But now Mary has her sights on the English crown, and Elizabeth enlists her most trusted subjects to protect it.

Justine Thornleigh is delighting in the thrill of Queen Elizabeth's visit to her family's estate when the festivities are cut short by Mary's arrival. To Justine's surprise, the Thornleighs appoint her to serve as a spy in Mary's court. But bearing the guise of a lady-in-waiting is not Justine's only secret."

OTHERS IN THIS HAUL:

The Baker Street Translation (A Mystery) by Michael Robertson:
Sent by Minotaur/St. Martin's this one has lots of Holmes inclusions and is one of the series written by Mr. Robertson.  The Heath brothers, lawyers, lease the famous residence of Sherlock Holmes and are caught up in a modern mystery including an heiress, an actress and everyone in between.   Library Journal says: "The characters here are charming and the tone is  humorous...Recommended for Robertson devotees and cozy mystery enthusiasts."



 
Finally, I thought this one an intriguing one sent by request from the author who is an award-winning one for her previous book, "Miriam the Medium."  One of the best of new contemporary women's authors, Jillian Medoff (I Couldn't Love You More reviewed here last year) says about this book, "Whip-smart, funny, and all-too-relatable, Kaylee's Ghost will stay with you long after you've turned the last page."  Isn't the cover pretty?  I'm looking forward to trying it for review in the Summer.
 
 
So Ends My Humongous Haul for February and So Far in March.
 
I'm grateful to the Publishers and Authors Who Have Entrusted Me with Their Books for Review...
 
 
What do you think?  Which ones interest you?  What are you reading?
 
 
Deborah/The Bookish Dame


Monday, September 17, 2012

"Glastonbury: A Novel of the Holy Grail" by Donna Fletcher Crow ~ Historical Treat!

 
SUMMARY

GLASTONBURY
A Novel of The Holy Grail
New Release, Ebook Format

The Holy Grail lies somewhere in Glastonbury!
When Joseph of Arimathea and his little band of pilgrims sought asylum from Roman persecution they fled to Glastonbury—and carried with them the most sacred relic in all of Christendom.
This tiny, sheltered corner of Britannia—this holy "Isle of Avalon"—was also a place of refuge when King Arthur and his knights fought off the invading barbarian hoard. And it became Arthur's final resting place.
Centuries later, the discovery of Arthur's bones in Glastonbury sparked a great flowering of the faith and magnificent building—after a devastating fire nearly obliterated the work and worship of centuries.
Then, after the last abbot of Glastonbury was dragged to his death atop the Tor, the Abbey's splendid arches were left to crumble. Yet they stand today—as beacons of hope for the future.
Two millennia of history and legend intertwine around Glastonbury's broken arches. And through it all—through ages ancient and modern—the faithful have sought to answer the same question that Arthur asked: Where is the Holy Grail?


 
PARTICULARS OF THE BOOK :
Genre:  Fiction/Historical Fiction
Author:  Donna Fletcher Crow
Find her:  Donna
 
ABOUT DONNA :
 


 
Donna Fletcher Crow is the author of 36 books, mostly novels dealing with British history. The award-winning Glastonbury, an Arthurian grail search epic covering 15 centuries of English history, is her best-known work. A Very Private Grave, Book 1 in the Monastery Murders series, is her reentry into publishing after a 10-year hiatus. Book 2, A Darkly Hidden Truth, will be out this fall, and she is at work on Book 3, An Unholy Communion, scheduled for 2012.
The Elizabeth & Richard Mysteries is a romantic intrigue series using literary figures as background: Dorothy L Sayers in The Shadow of Reality and Shakespeare in A Midsummer Eve's Nightmare.
Her newest release in the ebook field is Lord Danvers, a Victorian true crime series: A Most Inconvenient Death, Grave Matters, and To Dust You Shall Return.
The Daughters of Courage, Kathryn, Elizabeth and Stephanie is a pioneer family saga based on the stories of Donna's own family and other Idaho pioneers in the Kuna, Nampa and Boise area.
Donna and her husband live in Boise, Idaho. They have 4 adult children and 10 grandchildren. Donna is remembered by Idahoans with long memories as a former Queen of the Snake River Stampede, Miss Rodeo Idaho and runner-up for Miss Rodeo America. She is an enthusiastic gardener.


THE BOOKISH DAME INTERVIEWS MS CROW :

Hello, again, Donna!  I'm so happy to have you visit "A Bookish Libraria" again with another of your exciting books.  Every time you come out with a new book I'm first in line to read it.  Thrilled to be interviewing you!  Let's get started~


Thank you so much, Deb. I’m delighted to be back with you. I absolutely loved my earlier visit to A Bookish Libraria! (http://ning.it/Kkl2kN)
 

1) First of all, please tell us a special something about what makes you "tick."  When you aren't writing, what are you doing? (Aside from being a mom)

 

Well, yes, being a wife, mom and grandmother is a huge part of the picture, but I suppose my passion for England has always been a major driving force of my life. My love for English history, literature and landscape certainly played a major part in my writing GLASTONBURY, A Novel of the Holy Grail.

 

2) You chose a specific genre, a place and time to write about, what made you choose it?

 

I can’t really say I chose to write an epic, that more just happened. I first envisioned a six-book series, then I read Edward Rutherfurd’s SARUM and saw how my story would work perfectly in that format.

 

As to place, so many things came together to make me focus on Glastonbury: my lifelong love of the Arthurian legends, my fascination with William Blake’s poem Jerusalem:

                        And did those feet in ancient times,

                        Walk on England's mountains green…

                        Till we have built Jerusalem

                        In England's green and pleasant land.

 

3) Bronte or Austen?  Hemingway or Hawthorne?  Why?

 

Austen, Austen, Austen! First last and always. Since I was a teenager. The delight of her humorous understatement, her wry observations of human nature, the wonderful people she creates, the peace and beauty of her world. . .

 

Actually, I’ve just returned from doing an extensive research trip to the places where Jane lived. It will serve as background for my next Elizabeth & Richard Mystery.

 

4) In your opinion, what makes a book a great one?

 

I choose my books first of all for their background. I want a well-developed setting so that I can feel that I am there— living the story with the characters. I need the author’s style to have a flow to it that doesn’t pull me out of the fictive dream. That is the experience I strive to deliver for my readers as well.

 

5) Which author(s) most influenced your love of books from childhood? 

 

I was an only child growing up on a farm so I simply read everything I got my hands on, starting with HEIDI, BAMBI, THE BOBBSEY TWINS. . . It was really discovering the English classics, though that fired my passion. Starting, oddly, with WUTHERING HEIGHTS (which I still don’t understand), then Dickens, George Eliot, and the sublime Jane.

 

6) Read any good books in the past 6 months?

 

A JANE AUSTEN EDUCATION by William Deresiewicz was the best nonfiction I read. I enjoyed returning to an old favorite Barbara Pym with EXCELLENT WOMEN, I’m currently reading an excellent historical crime novel HANGMAN BLIND by Cassandra Clark.

 

7) Choose 4 guests from any era for dinner.  Who would they be and what would you choose for a topic of conversation?

 

Well, no surprise here, they would all be English authors: Jane Austen, Barbara Pym, G. K. Chesterton, and C. S. Lewis. I would sit back and let them talk about their lives and their writing. And if I could ask one more just to drop by for dessert I would love to have it all punctuated by Oscar Wilde’s ascerbic wit.

 

8) Which of your characters is most like you?

 

Well, since GLASTONBURY covers 1500 years of English history, there’s quite a range to choose from. Perhaps I could claim some small kinship with Marie de France since she chose to live in England and wrote about some of the same subjects I cover in GLASTONBURY, such as Arthurian legends and Saint Patrick.

 

9) If you could cast your book for a movie, who would you choose?

 

Derek Jacobi would be wonderful as Austin Ringwode, whom history tells us was the last monk of Glastonbury. It is his searching for the Holy Grail that gives my story its structure.

Hmmm— Kenneth Branaugh or Jude Law for King Arthur? Definitely Kiera Knightly  for Guenivere. If this were to be filmed it would truly be “a cast of thousands.”

 

10) Worst habit you have?

 

Hoarding. My mother was a child of the depression and always believed in keeping something “because we might need it.” Of course, it often turns out that I do need it— but can I find it??

 

11) How much research did you do before and during writing?

 

In a sense GLASTONBURY is the product of a lifetime of research and reading because I literally grew up on the tales of King Arthur. Before the actual writing I took an extensive research trip to all the places I write about, especially Glastonbury, Tintagel, Dozmary Pool, Hadrian’s Wall, Caerleon. . .

 

The writing itself took three years and I was continuing my research for each section: Celtic, Roman, Arthurian, Anglo-Saxon, Norman and Tudor through all that time.

 

12) Psychologists tell us the thing we think we'd most like to grow up to be when we're ten years old is our avocation.  What did you want to be?

 

It’s true that I always loved to read and write, but mostly I wanted to be a rodeo queen— which I was: Miss Rodeo Idaho and runner-up to Miss Rodeo America.
 
 
 
Thank you, Donna.  I always love your answers to interview questions.  You're the most fun!  Good luck with your new book...I just know you have another one brewing.  I'm anxiously awaiting it.
 
5 stars for all of Donna Fletcher Crow's books
 
You can find them on Amazon and Barnes and Noble
 
Deborah/TheBookishDame
 

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

A Gothic Mystery! "A Darkly Hidden Truth"~ by Donna Fletcher Crow

Book Summary: "Felicity can’t possibly help Father Antony find the valuable missing icon. She’s off to become a nun. Then her impossible mother turns up unexpectedly. And a good friend turns up murdered…   Breathtaking chase scenes, mystical worship services, dashes through remote waterlogged landscapes keep the pages turning. Felicity learns the wisdom of holy women from today and ages past and Antony explores the arcane rites of the Knights Hospitaller. But what good will any of that do them if Felicity can’t save Antony’s life?"    I love a good gothic novel with mystery and paranormal enchantment.  This book has it all!  Don't fail to find it on Amazon...links below.


You must watch this amazing book trailer!




A Bit About Ms Crow:
Donna Fletcher Crow is the author of 38 books, mostly novels dealing with British history. The award-winning Glastonbury, an Arthurian grail search epic covering 15 centuries of English history, is her best-known work. Donna and her husband live in Boise, Idaho. They have 4 adult children and 11 grandchildren. She is an enthusiastic gardener.
Her newest release is A Darkly Hidden Truth, book 2 in her clerical mystery series The Monastery Murders. She also writes the Lord Danvers series of Victorian true-crime novels and the romantic suspense series The Elizabeth & Richard Mysteries. To read more about these books and to see book videos for A Darkly Hidden Truth and for A Very Private Grave, Monastery Murders 1, as well as pictures from Donna’s garden and research trips go to:
http://donnafletchercrow.com



Please find Ms Crows links here:

To purchase her book~

                                                                        Amazon     and  Barnes and Noble

Again, her beautiful website:  http://donnafletchercrow.com will give you such a wonderful tour of her books and very prolific writing life.

An Short Guest Post With Ms Crow Regarding Her Reading Life :   (Taken from her blog...)
People always ask me, "did you always want to write?" No, I always wanted to read, although I did "write" my first novels in the sixth grade: an adventure series starring me, complete with illustrations. I think each book was about five pages long. I also sat in our back garden under a huge cottonwood tree and wrote embarrassingly bad poetry, complete with illustrations. My poetry is still embarrassingly bad, but that doesn't stop me writing it.
I had an ideal childhood for a reader. I was an only child, living on a farm. I would take a book out to the middle of the alfalfa field in front of our house, lay down flat and revel in the fact that God was the only person in the whole universe who knew where I was.
In the tenth grade my Charlie Chaplain look-alike English teacher Mr. Hodgson, of blessed memory, told me the only book report he would accept from me was Wuthering Heights. I still think that's a strange choice for a 15-year-old, and as many times as I have read the novel and seen the movie (and even visited Howarth) I still don't understand it. But it "took". From that moment I was hooked on the English classics and to this day I read very little other than English authors. Jane Austen, of course, is my lifelong literary love.
Donna Fletcher Crow
I naturally majored in English and became a starry-eyed English teacher, aspiring to inspire my students to a love of great literature before I retired to become a full time mother.
My reading life has always gone by passions, finding a writer I loved, reading everything he or she (usually she) wrote, then feeling absolutely bereft when I came to the end. Much the same feeling as having a child leave for college, I later learned. My passions have included Norah Lofts, D. E. Stevenson, Mary Stewart, Rumer Godden, Elizabeth Goudge and Elswyth Thane with whom I carried on a delightful correspondence just before she died and I began writing professionally.
The writer that really catapulted me into writing, however, was Gerogette Heyer. Her Venetia became the springboard for my first novel Brandley's Search, reissued later as Where Love Begins, although my book was set in 1824, so can't be strictly called a Regency. That book grew into the six-book Cambridge Chronicles series.


The Bookish Dame's Review :

I hardly know what to tell you except there's little that brings me back to my young adult years like a gothic mystery.  I love a gothic novel!  Shades of Norah Lofts and Mary Stewart--only more umph and a little better, I have to say!  I could hardly wait to receive a copy of Ms Crows book to review.  I particularly was anxious to read one set in a monastery with a proper, would-be novice nun,  a situation and setting which has always been a curiosity of mine.  That this book had a paranormal twist just made it all the more a draw for me, and once I visited Donna Fletcher Crow's website, I was sunk!  This is a book for a stormy night, everyone!  And, you'll be reading it when you're supposed to be doing lots of other things...I was.

Donna Fletcher Crow is a natural born writer with skills that make reading such a joy.  I identified immediately with her young protagonist Felicity, who is the aspiring nun cum sweetheart of not-sure-he-wants-to-be priest, Antony.  They, as sleuths, are familiar to those who have read Ms Crow's previous book, "A Very Private Grave;" which you don't have to have read, by the way, to enjoy this second book in the Monastery Series.  The couple is irrepressible!  I adore them and their bantering, their bravery and their push-pull of relationship throughout this mystery novel.  I'm dying to read more about them.

In having read the book, I would say that Ms Crow's influences by other authors are apparent, but subtle.  She has a wonderful sense of herself and it comes across brilliantly.  This is a novel in the vein of a Carolyn Hart's Annie Darling series with her husband and mother-in-law, but so much a superior quality.  Any of you who love a mystery with a moral and a twist will love this one, as well.  For me,  historical and art references were a plus.  Particularly those about the Templars.

I'm now going to be reading the 1st book in this series, and I look forward to her new book coming soon featuring the wonderful Felicity and Antony team called "An Unholy Communion."  I truly think I've found my latest favorite author in this gothic, set mystery genre.  Hopefully, you'll try this book, too, and join me as an on-going fan.

Please let Donna and me know if you decide to read...and if you've gone to Amazon or Barnes & Noble to check out her book!

5 stars for my newest find!!!

Deborah/TheBookishDame