January Book Review Roundup! Four historicals so far this year…
January 24, 2018
Here’s what I’ve been reading so far in 2018, all historical romances set in varying periods. Let me know what you thought if you’ve read these books. What are you reading now? I’ve moved on to a contemporary. More on that later. Here goes:
The Lost Heiress (Ladies of the Manor, #1) by Roseanna M. White, a 2015 novel published by Bethany House Publishers/Baker Publishing Group, is a Christy nominated novel that gets my choice for BEST OPENING LINE so far this year. See if this doesn’t catch your attention: Temptation sat before her, compelling as the sea. Great, isn’t it? Her opening paragraph decided me right there that I wouldn’t be setting this book aside. (You know we all do sometimes.) The Lost Heiress has that Upstairs/Downstairs, Downton Abbey quality that we all fell in love with in the series combined with the whole lost princess feel of Anastasia, and Ms. White captures the concept and time period deftly. But her characters didn’t initially show up in England. We’re introduced to them in Monte Carlo’s rich, extravagant atmosphere, and making the main character, Brook Eden, Monegasque, was a really cool twist right at the get-go. There’s a big mystery and a bad guy who is really bad, but the main feature of the story is Brook’s lifelong love for her best friend Justin Wildon, heir to the Dukedom. Of course, first we have to find out who she really is. Along the way, we are introduced to her true family, and I have to say, her father’s character was delightful, and I applaud Ms. White for creating a strong father/daughter bonding theme. While there were segments that felt a little predictable, it was still overall a great story! Five stars.
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Providence: Hannah’s Journey by Barbara M. Britton, published in 2016 by Harbourlight Books is Biblical fiction that will give readers a greater appreciation for the period, conditions, and especially the despotic, idolic lifestyles of Isreal’s neighbors, the Arameans. When Hannah, the young heroine, flees her father’s house to escape an arranged marriage, she is soon captured by the Aramean army who enslaves her to the wife of its general, a dying leper. There in Aramea, forced to serve the man’s unfaithful wife, and pursued by her wicked lover, her own faith is challenged and grows, as is the faith of Gilead, the boy she loves who followed her and is also captured. The story is very edgy in sections, especially when dealing with the demands of the Aramean priests and false gods, but the story also brings to light an old testament story, while imagining what might have happened.
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