I am very excited today to bring you a review of The Man I Love by Suanne Laqueur. I was lucky enough to be sent a review copy of her book, which I loved. Please read my review and scroll down to WIN your own copy of this great book. (Open Internationally).
My Review:
Is it possible to find that one true love who penetrates our very soul to the core during our short time on this earth? When Erik Fiskare begins his first year of college at Lancaster University he decides to major in lighting and set design. His first big show is a ballet performance and that is when he meets Daisy Bianco, a dance major at the school, and his life is inexplicably changed forever. Suanne Laqueur gives us a love story in this book unlike any other in its intensity and realism. As they slowly get to know each other physically and emotionally, Erik and Daisy’s affections are sometimes sweet and romantic and other times they are raw and savage. But they fit together perfectly, flaws and all and cannot seem to breathe without each other.
I have felt lately that foreshadowing has become a lost art form in contemporary literature. Many books seem to be preoccupied with providing the reader with shock value through explosive and unexpected plot twists. The foreshadowing that Suanne Laqueur includes throughout the first part of The Man I Love shows the tremendous talent and literary genius of this author. We know that something terribly tragic will unfold in this book, and the subtle imagery and dialogue gives us a glimpse of what will come. This serves to keeps the reader frantically turning the pages and teetering on the edge of his or her seat.
The language and diction of The Man I Love is lyrical and melodic. I have rarely read a book that, through it’s word choice, can capture the myriad of emotions through which the characters move. We feel the intense feelings and bond that Daisy and Erik share as they fall in love. We feel nauseous and distraught when tragedy strikes the characters. We feel an aching pain when Erik is suffering and trying to put his life back together.
Suanne Laqueur also provides us with a rich and in depth cast of characters that include not only Erik and Daisy but their friends and family as well. Will, who is Daisy’s dance partner, experiments with his sexuality and his confident and casual acceptance of who he is provides some of the most hilarious dialogue in the book. We are also introduced to David, Erik’s lighting design partner, who is fighting his own demons and uses drugs as a way to cope. Daisy’s parents, who are French and rather progressive in their treatment of their adult daughter, are understanding about her relationship with Erik and even embrace him as a son.
Finally, THE MAN I LOVE is one of those books that makes us think about important themes and issues long after we have closed the last page. Can we ever truly run from traumatic experiences in our past? What would we do to save the life of the ones we love? Do we let our scars swallow us and sink us into the abyss, or do we embrace them and wear them as badges of honor? Despite the fact that this is a long novel, I was bitterly disappointed when it ended. Suanne has promised another installment of Erik and Daisy and I intend to hold her to that through constant pestering to write faster.
Giveaway:
Suanne is generously giving away one copy of The Man I Love along with a $10 Amazon Gift card. Also, 5 lucky winners will win an e-book copy of The Man I Love. Click HERE to enter the giveaway
I received an Advanced Review copy of this book from the author, Leslie Tentler
My Review: Ryan Winter is a detective on the Atlanta Police Department and has just been assigned the toughest case of his career. There is a killer on the loose who seems to be targeting police officers. He suspects that it might be gang related but there are very few leads to go on.
Ryan is also struggling with recent events in his personal life as he has just recently gotten divorced from his wife Lydia. Lydia is a doctor in the emergency room and their jobs make it so that they keep running into each other. From the very beginning Leslie Tentler makes it clear that there is still some electricity in the air when Ryan and Lydia are in a room together. Are things really over between them?
There were several plot lines going on at the same time in this book and I was puzzled a few times where the author was going with them. But the end was definitely a surprise for me and all of the various stories were brought together cleverly and cohesively. The book is definitely worth the read just for the ending alone.
The other aspect of the book I really appreciated was all of the research that went into the book about police procedurals and medical terminology. Leslie Tentler immerses the reader into the fast-paced, high anxiety world of cops and emergency room doctors.
If you enjoy a good mystery with some good old-fashioned romantic chemistry thrown in the mix then FALLEN by Leslie Tenter is definitely worth the read.
About The Author: Leslie Tentler is best known as the author of the Chasing Evil trilogy (Midnight Caller, Midnight Fear and Edge of Midnight). She was named as a finalist for Best First Novel at ThrillerFest 2012 for Midnight Caller, and as a finalist in the 2013 Daphne du Maurier Awards for Excellence in Mystery and Suspense for Edge of Midnight. She is also the recipient of the prestigious Maggie Award of Excellence. Her newest novel is titled Fallen.
Leslie is a member of Romance Writers of America, International Thriller Writers, The Authors Guild and Novelists, Inc. A native of East Tennessee, she currently resides in Atlanta.
I am very excited today to bring you a preview of The Man I Love by Suanne Laqueur. I received a kind and gracious email from Suanne a few weeks back asking me if I would be interested in reviewing her self-published book. After reading the great reviews on Goodreads I decided I would give it a try and I am so glad I did. I invite you to read a brief summary of the book, look at the trailer, and read a Q&A with Suanne about the book and her writing process. On Wednesday I will be posting my full review along with a giveaway of the book.
The Man I Love Book Spotlight:
“You never got over her. You just left.”
Erik Fiskare once had the bravery to make a gunman stand down. But now he lacks the courage to confront his own past.
As a college freshman, he is drawn to the world of theater but prefers backstage to center stage. The moment he lays eyes on a beautiful, accomplished dancer named Daisy Bianco, his atoms rearrange themselves and he is drawn into a romance both youthfully passionate and maturely soulful. It is a love story seemingly without end. But when a disturbed friend brings a gun into the theater, the story is forever changed. Six lives are lost and Daisy is left seriously injured, her professional dreams shattered.
Traumatized by the experience, the lovers spiral into depression and drug use until a shocking act of betrayal destroys their relationship. To survive, Erik must leave school and disconnect from all he loves. He buries his heartbreak and puts the past behind. Or so he believes.
As he moves into adulthood, Erik comes to grips with his role in the shooting, and slowly heals the most wounded parts of his soul. But the unresolved grief for Daisy continues to shape his dreams at night. Once those dreams were haunted by blood and gunfire. Now they are haunted by the refrain of a Gershwin song and a single question: is leaving always the end of loving?
Watch this amazing book trailer for The Man I Love:
About The Author: Suanne Laqueur graduated from Alfred University with a double major in dance and theater. She taught at the Carol Bierman School of Ballet Arts in Croton-on-Hudson for ten years. An avid reader, cook and gardener, she has been blogging at http://www.eatsreadsthinks since 2010. Suanne lives in Westchester County, New York with her husband and two children. The Man I Love is her first novel. You can connect with Suanne on her website: http://www.suannelaqueur.com/.
Author Q&A:
1. As well as a writer, you are an avid reader. Do you have a favorite author and has he or she influenced your work?
Trying to pick favorites of anything stresses me out. But if I had to narrow it down to two influential authors, I would say Laurie Colwin and Rumer Godden. When I read Godden’s In This House of Brede, I was amazed at how she was able to create well over two dozen characters and make each one unique and vibrant and alive. And I loved her attention to detail when it came to settings and surroundings. Colwin’s Family Happiness blew me away with its thoughtfulness and depth of emotion regarding a sort of taboo subject—this very ordinary woman found herself having a love affair and struggling with emotions she didn’t have names for. I found myself thinking, “I want to write this way. Make ordinary people extraordinary. Take extraordinary circumstances and show how ordinary and universal they really are.”
The circumstances of The Man I Love certainly start out ordinary: what begins as a passionate love story takes an unexpected turn, and becomes an intense journey of loss, heart break and recovery. The novel was written from the outside in. In other words, I had the story of Erik and Daisy meeting in college, which I wrote when I myself was in college. Then in my thirties, I started writing the story of Erik and Daisy in their adulthood, when they are apart. Not just apart but estranged. Something had destroyed them. I had no idea what. I had nothing in the middle. Truly I had no story. It was just a bunch of scenes. Like I had these literary paper dolls and I played with them, writing self-indulgent fan fiction.
2. You’ve been writing about Daisy and Erik that long?
I have. They are a little younger than me but I’ve known them since I was sophomore in college. Erik has always been Erik. His last name was Lindstrom and he was a football player. It’s only fairly recently that I crafted him into a technical theater guy. I wanted to do a cute play on the Swedish Fish candy so I whimsically changed his surname to Fiskare. But out of that silly little decision emerged huge aspects of his character. His necklace. His nickname. His identity. David’s teasing “Fishy, fishy in the brook.” None of that existed when he was Erik Lindstrom.
Likewise Daisy went through a lot of name changes. She started out as Jeannie. Then she changed to Julie. But my daughter’s name is Julie and I had a really tough time working with that name. So I needed something new and I threw around a whole lot of names until I got the idea of Erik having a tattoo on his wrist, and from out of there came Daisy, and from there her real name Margeurite.
3. So how did you eventually find the middle? How did the story come to be?
Someone from my past came back into my life, twenty years after we had gone through a terrible experience and then completely disconnected afterward. I was completely unprepared for the emotional whirlwind that came with resolving this event from my youth. I went into a bad depression and I didn’t understand what was happening to me. But working it out in therapy I came to realize that disconnecting from pain doesn’t end it. Maybe it hides but it’s never gone. It’s there waiting for you when you tear open that boarded-up door. Often with more power than it had before. You have to feel it—even twenty years later—or it will never leave you.
I immediately knew this was the story I wanted to write. Needed to write. Both to channel it away from me in a positive way, but also because I suspected this kind of experience is universal and I wanted to connect with others through it. I wanted to write a story about the effect of trauma. And not limited to trauma from a shooting or an accident or war—I wanted to write about emotional trauma. Abandonment. Loss. Heartbreak. Particularly emotional trauma that goes unresolved. Grief that’s left un-grieved. And that’s where one of the taglines for the novel comes from: “You never got over her. You just left.”
Once I had the emotional crux of the story in place, I was able to layer the circumstances on top and think about what exactly had happened to Erik and Daisy.
4. And when did you decide to make that a shooting?
I wish I had paid more attention to this aspect of it. I can’t put my finger on exactly when but the seeds of the storyline were born when I came across a YouTube video of Viviana Durante and Robert LaFosse. In it they are dancing the pas de deux “The Man I Love” from George Balanchine’s ballet Who Cares? Robert is blond and handsome and nothing like I picture Will Kaeger looking. However, Viviana is petite and dark-haired and just an exquisite dancer. I watched her in this video and she seemed to embody Daisy right away. And certainly the chemistry she has with Robert evokes the relationship Daisy has with her partner Will.
Anyway, I was watching the video one day and I came to the part where Viviana does this very difficult lift on Robert’s shoulder. And you can see, right around the 4:04 mark, that she overshoots the jump and she teeters on his shoulder. It’s this precarious three seconds where you can see Robert discreetly adjusting his weight and getting her back on balance. And something just popped in my head. I thought, something happens here. I don’t remember exactly when that thought coalesced into she gets shot but it did and I had my story. Soon after, I wrote the NPR Radio segment, creating the anniversary of a shooting incident at the fictitious Lancaster University, sketching out what had happened.
5. What was it like, as a woman, to write from the male perspective?
Originally the novel started out from Daisy’s point of view. It made sense to me: as a woman, to write her story. Why wouldn’t I? I kept writing and writing Daisy but the material seemed strangely stagnant. I’d write chapters and scenes from her adult life and yet nothing was happening. I tried adding in some chapters from other points of view, just to make it interesting, including a few scenes from Erik’s perspective. I didn’t know what I was doing, I still didn’t know what the story was. I took the whole mess and put it in the lap of my friend Ami. And she came back with Daisy’s chapters separated, saying “These are all right.” Then she grouped the chapters from other characters and her feedback was, “These are a distraction.” Finally she indicated the few chapters from Erik’s point of view and said, “This. This is your story.”
I was like Are you kidding me? Write from his point of view? But then I realized Ami was right. It wasn’t Daisy’s story at all. It was Erik’s. He had the evolution. He chose to leave and he eventually chooses to go back. And the choosing, the deciding to decide—that is the story. Once I had him in my mind, it was very easy to write from his eyes. It felt very natural to tell his tale. It was fascinating to watch him emerge off the page, take on life and embark on this incredible journey.
6. It’s also been said that, to many authors, characters will come to “take on a life of their own.” Have you experienced this while writing? Of your characters, do you have a favorite? Did you have any surprises while writing this character? Can you explain how you came to create him?
I love this question and a perfect example from The Man I Love is the character of James Dow, the shooter. He did not exist until a few months before publishing. In fact, in early versions, there were two shooters, not one. And the scene itself was only alluded to, treated as a vague flashback. My editor insisted I had to write the scene and the aftermath. Then my husband convinced me to have only one assailant because when you have two, you have a conspiracy, and that becomes the focus of the story.
So before I could write the action, I needed to think about who the assailant was and his motive. My first attempt was a disaster. I hated it. It sounded completely ghostwritten. Contrived and faked. James was a total cookie cutter paper doll. Flat. Just a convenient villain. I made him a jerk because I figured he had to be and I absolutely hated the entire section of the novel. I sent it to my editor and then snatched it all back again.
I went into a retreat. For three weeks I sat with my notebook and pen and just scribbled stream of consciousness about who I thought James was and what drove him to do what he did. Even if I didn’t end up using all this backstory in the finished novel, I needed to know what it was. It was difficult because I had this pre-conceived set of circumstances I needed to retro-fit him into. But I couldn’t stuff him into a jacket that didn’t fit. I had to follow him into the wardrobe department, see what jacket he picked out himself, and then follow him around and write down what he did.
It was a very stressful three weeks but also exhilarating. I’m glad I paid attention to the process, trusted myself and let it play out because in the end, the section turned out to be some of my best writing.
7. A lot of your readers are clamoring for a sequel to The Man I Love. Is that in the cards?
I don’t think I’m quite done with the universe of characters within The Man I Love. But I don’t think a sequel is next up. Rather I seem to be working on a prequel. I’ve started to climb up Erik’s family tree and I’m find out some interesting things. Not only about his mysteriously absent father but even further back through the generations. He comes from a long line of men who went to war—real or personal—and came back changed. The necklace he wears was not passed down as one intact object but rather it was accumulated over the years. I want to write this story. Erik will be there but only as a little boy. And then of course I have all that unused material from Daisy’s point of view. Plus scenes I’ve been jotting down having to do with Erik and Daisy in the next phase of their life. I know I’m not done yet. I’m just getting started…
Thanks so much to Suanne for sharing this great book with me and agreeing to a Q&A.
Today I welcome back TLC book tours to The Book Binder’s Daughter with an historical fiction novel entitled Gutenberg’s Apprentice. I invite you to read my review, learn a little more about the author and look at the other stops on this book tour.
My Review:
We all take for granted the written word, especially in the 21st century when not only are physical books readily available but so are books in electronic form. In Muniz, Germany in the 15th Century an Elder by the name of Gutenberg had a crazy and obsessive idea of finding a way to mass produce books instead of having them laboriously copied by hand through scribes. Peter is one such scribe and is recalled from his scribal duties in Paris at a monastery by his foster father. Peter’s foster father, with whom he has been living since the age of 10, wants Peter to become Gutenberg’s apprentice as Gutenberg works on his new printing press. Fust, Peter’s adoptive father is a merchant who has heavily invested in Gutenberg’s new invention.
At the center of the story is the long and tedious process of smelting ore, casting the letters out of the metal and then finally using them to print books. The first thing that Gutenberg attempts to print is a Latin grammar. Then Gutenberg gets the church to agree to hire him to print missals for Mass. But when the church cannot agree on which version of the missal it wants printed, Gutenberg, Fust and Peter must come up with another idea for a book to produce with their printing press. They decide the Bible will not only carry on God’s word, but will also be a popular item for clergy and non-clergy alike to purchase.
This book reads more like a history of the development of the printing press than a historical fiction novel. The characters are not developed to the point where we might empathize or even like them. Gutenberg is your typical eccentric genius who is obsessed with his work of art. Fust, Peter’s adoptive father, is a merchant who is always looking for new ways to make money. Peter himself only seems to have some spark of emotion when he meets and falls in love with a painter’s daughter named Anna. But he loses interest her all too quickly when she is not impressed with his printing device.
The process of printing these bibles and the procedures for smelting ore, casting the metal letters, the workings of the press and the politics of the Catholic church were well-researched. If you have a keen interest in learning how this process evolved then I would give GUTENBERG’S APPRENTICE a try.
About The Author:
I am a printer, journalist, and writer, celebrating the publication of my first novel, “Gutenberg’s Apprentice.”
I was born and raised in California, studied philosophy at Vassar College and got a degree journalism from U.C. Berkeley. I have reported for newspapers in California and from Europe as a foreign correspondent, including the Washington Post, The Guardian, The San Francisco Chronicle and Salon.com. I currently review books and arts for The Economist. Some of my articles can be found at www.alixchristie.com.
I started focusing on fiction with an MFA from St Mary’s College of California, and was a semifinalist in the 2008 Amazon Breakthrough Novel contest. My short stories have appeared in the Southwest Review, Other Voices, and a limited edition from Foolscap Press.
Gutenberg’s Apprentice Blog Tour:
Tuesday, September 23rd: The Steadfast Reader
Wednesday, September 24th: Julz Reads
Thursday, September 25th: BookNAround
Friday, September 26th: Nightly Reading
Monday, September 29th: Based on a True Story
Tuesday, September 30th: 5 Minutes For Books
Wednesday, October 1st: The Book Wheel
Thursday, October 2nd: Guiltless Reading
Monday, October 6th: Broken Teepee
Tuesday, October 7th: Always With a Book
Wednesday, October 8th: The Book Binder’s Daughter
Today I am welcoming Masquerade Book Tours to The Book Binder’s Daughter with another great Indie pick, Best Seller by Martha Reynolds. I invite you to read my review, learn a little bit about the author, and look at the other blogs on the tour.
My Review:
The plot of this book really took my by surprise, in a good way, a very good way. Robin has just been expelled from Boston University for selling pot and she has no choice but to move back to her close-knit hometown in Rhode Island, rent a small apartment and work 6 days a week in a diner. Her father is so furious at her that months go by before he will even talk to her.
I really thought this was going to be another typical coming-of-age story with a whiny teenage girl, but Martha Reynolds’ characters are much more interesting than I suspected. Robin understands that she has made an immature and stupid mistake and views her exile to a tiny apartment and her tedious job at the diner as a sort of penance.
While Robin is doing her “penance” she meets a few men in her life that bring a bright spot to her otherwise dull world. Andrew, one of her regular customers at the diner, is handsome and generous with his tips. When he learns that Robin is an aspiring writer and has hand-written a novel, he volunteers his wife’s services to type up a manuscript for her.
Robin also begins dating a local boy named Frank. The way in which the author developed this relationship was intriguing. At first Robin seems almost bored or indifferent to Frank. We are left wondering until the very end whether or not Frank is truly “the one” for Robin.
Robin’s upstairs neighbor also has an interesting role in the plot. He is overweight and Robin seems repelled by his presence, but at the same time she is drawn to him and seeks him out at a couple of key points in the storyline.
And finally, we are introduced to Robin’s dysfunctional family which includes her mother, father, older brother and sister-in-law. What amazed me about Martha Reynolds’ writing abilities is that she deftly weaves together many different storylines without making them confusing or convoluted.
I highly recommend BEST SELLER if you like a quick, light read that is full of surprises until the end.
Giveaway:
The author is giving away a $25 Amazon or Barnes and Noble Giftcard or a Book Depository shopping spree of the same value.
There will be one winner. This giveaway is Open Internationally and ends 10/20. Void where prohibited. Click HERE to enter the giveaway!
About the Author:
Martha Reynolds ended an accomplished career as a fraud investigator and began writing full time in 2011. She is the author of five novels, including the award-winning Chocolate for Breakfast (her debut novel), Chocolate Fondue, Bittersweet Chocolate, and the Amazon #1 bestseller Bits of Broken Glass. Best Seller is her latest release. Her essays have appeared in Magnificat magazine.
She and her husband live in Rhode Island, never far from the ocean.
I enjoy books in various genres, but especially literary fiction, literature in translation, historical fiction, history, short stories and travel writing and poetry. I know Latin and Ancient Greek so classics are my specialty.
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Background artwork "Come Back Winter" by Sunandini Banerjee. Used with permission from the artist.