Category Archives: Historical Fiction

Review and Giveaway: Island Fog by John Vanderslice

Today I welcome TLC Book Tours back to my blog with a very interesting set of short stories. I invite you to read my review and scroll down to the end of the post to enter to win your own copy.

My Review:
Island FogAll of the stories in this collection are set on the small town of Nantucket and take place during a wide range of years, 1795 through 2005.  Although the author says that only 2 of the stories have any basis in reality, I think one can learn quite a bit about the history and culture of these interesting island.  We learn from one of the stories, “King Philip’s War,” that the island was inhabited by Native Americans long before the British arrived.  In this story, the son of a native American finds that bigotry and prejudice against anyone who is not white still exists on the island.  Although Jacob has made friends with the white son of a sheep farmer, there is always an underlying resentment in their relationship even though they are just young boys.

The first story in the collection, “Guilty Look, reminds us of the very strong Quaker presence on the island in the 18th and 19th centuries.  In this story, which is set in 1795, the Nantucket Bank is robbed and the head of the bank, who is a devout Quaker, immediately fingers the non-Quakers on the island for pulling off the heist.  Even when evidence to the contrary is presented, the non-Quakers are still rounded up and thrown in jail.

The second half of the book tells us that there is still the mentality of “us vs. them” on the island, but it exists not between different religious or ethnic groups, but instead between those who live there full-time and those who just visit.  In “Morning Meal,” a plumber who has lived on the entire for his entire life, suffers a lonely existence after his wife and daughter die in a tragic ferry accident.  The plumber sees a lot of the “visitors” as he is oftentimes called to jobs at their lavish vacation homes.  His wife was actually a tourist, but he loved her nonetheless and she was the only woman who ever truly loved him back.

Alan, in the story “Haunted,” used to be a visitor to the island, but now he runs a successful business giving tours of different places on the island that are said to be haunted by ghosts.  Alan actually fled to Nantucket after he was dumped and kicked out by his boyfriend.  When letters from Alan’s ex start showing up in his mailbox, Alan can’t decide whether he should go back to Boston or stay on Nantucket.  This story, just as all of the others, ends in a cliffhanger.  All of the stories lack a neat and tidy ending, and they make the reader use his or her own imagination to decide what will happen next in each story.

ISLAND FOG is a clever, well-written and entertaining collection of short stories.  It makes me eager to read longer works by the author.

About The Author:
John VandersliceJohn Vanderslice teaches in the MFA program at the University of Central Arkansas, where he also serves as associate editor of Toad Suck Review magazine. His fiction, poetry, essays, and one-act plays have appeared in Seattle Review, Laurel Review, Sou’wester, Crazyhorse, Southern Humanities Review, 1966, Exquisite Corpse, and dozens of other journals. He has also published short stories in several fiction anthologies, including Appalachian Voice, Redacted Story, Chick for a Day, The Best of the First Line: Editors Picks 2002-2006, and Tartts: Incisive Fiction from Emerging Writers. His new book of short stories, Island Fog, published by Lavender Ink, is a linked collection, with every story set on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts.

Giveaway:
The author is giving away one paperback copy of the book (US/Can).  Just leave a comment below and let me know you want to win!  It’s that easy!  Giveaway ends 1/22 and winners will be notified via email and have 48 hours to respond.

The Winner of the Giveaway is: Martha R.

Click on the TLC tour banner below to see all of the stops on this book tour.

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Filed under Historical Fiction, Short Stories

Review: All That Glitters by Michael Murphy

Today I welcome back TLC book tours to my blog with another great book by Michael Murphy.  I invite you to read my review and enter the giveaway for a $25 gift card and a copy of Michael’s first book, The Yankee Club.

My Review:
All That GlittersAll that Glitters is the second installment of Michael Murphy’s Jake and Laura mystery series.  This book has all of the same qualities that made the first book a great read.  This book is set in 1933 in Hollywood, when Jake and Laura take a train cross country from New York to begin their new life in Hollywood.

Laura Wilson has signed a contract to be in movies for Carville Studios.  I loved the setting in old, glamorous Hollywood with its enchanting actors, lavish parties and the glitz of the big screen.  It was interesting to see the history of how movies with speaking actors, called “talkies,” developed.  It was a very exciting time for people involved with the big screen; these movie studios provided people with a good laugh through their screwball comedies even though the country was in the midst of a depression.

When Jake and Laura get off the train in California, Jake immediately understands that there are a variety of unsavory and dishonest characters involved in the movie business.  Jake has a fight with Eric Carville on his first night in Hollywood while he is at a party with the “who’s who” of Tinseltown.  It is well-known that Eric, the son of the movie studio’s owner, is a bully that is used to pushing everyone around; but now he has met his match in Jake Donovan.

Of course, the Jake and Laura series wouldn’t be complete without a mystery.  When Eric ends up dead, Jake is the prime suspect and in order to clear his name he is drawn right back into his role as a gumshoe.  Even though he was supposed to leave his detective life behind in New York, his instincts won’t let him wait for the police to prove his innocence.

If you enjoyed the first book in the Jake and Laura series, then you will equally love reading ALL THAT GLITTERS.  Michael Murphy has pulled off another successful novel with interesting characters, a riveting story, and a great setting that transports us back to Prohibition Era Hollywood.

About The Author:
Author MurphyMichael Murphy is a full-time writer and part-time urban chicken rancher. He lives in Arizona with his wife of more than forty years and the four children they adopted this past year. He’s active in several local writers’ groups and conducts novel-writing workshops at bookstores and libraries.

 

Giveaway:
The author is giving away a $25 Gift Card to the book store of your choice as well as a copy of the first book in the Jake and Laura series, The Yankee Club.  Giveaway ends 1/30.

Click Here to enter the giveaway

Thanks so much for stopping by!  Click on the TLC tour banner below to visit all the stops on Michael Murphy’s tour.

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Filed under Giveaways, Historical Fiction, Mystery/Thriller

Review: Almost Famous Women by Megan Mayhew Bergman

I received an advanced review copy of this book from the publisher through Edelweiss.
My Review:
Almost Famous WomenThe stories in this collection revolve around women who were famous for a brief period of time.  As the title suggests, they were “almost,” but not quite famous enough, to become household names.  The first thing that struck me about these stories is that many of the women all do jobs or tasks that are usually reserved for men in the late 19th and early 20th centuries: riding motorcycles, racing speedboats, and painting nudes.

These women are daring and take risks and will not settle for loneliness, boredom or obscurity.  When a woman wakes up in a hospital bed wondering if her grave injuries during a motorcycle crash were worth risking her life, she decides she cannot go back to living a lonely and dull life in eastern Maine.

The women in these stories also lead terribly sad lives and none of them really have happy endings; an illegitimate baby is discarded at a convent by her parents, an actress dies of an overdose and a reclusive painter is taken advantage of by her nurse.  The story that I found the saddest is the first one in the collection in which conjoined twins are abandoned by their birth mother and taken in by a women who exploits them.  The twins’ caregiver parades them around and makes them sing and dance and everyone treats them like outcasts.  At the end of their lives, shunned by society and broke, they are forced to work long hours at a grocery store where they still get strange looks from the customers.

I also liked the fact that the author gives us a visual, as the stories are accompanied by a picture of each woman it describes.  If you want a collection of stories that tugs at your heartstrings and makes you think about unusual women who strive to live outside of societal norms, then ALMOST FAMOUS WOMEN is a great read.

About The Author:
Megan BergmanMegan Mayhew Bergman is the author of Almost Famous Women (January 2015) and Birds of a Lesser Paradise (March 2012) – both from Scribner, and both Indie Next selections. Megan was a Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers pick and will receive the Garrett Award for Fiction from the Fellowship of Southern Writers.

Megan’s work has appeared in the New York Times, Best American Short Stories 2011, New Stories from the South 2012, McSweeneys, Ploughshares, One Story, Oxford American, The Kenyon Review, Narrative and elsewhere.

Raised in North Carolina, Megan now lives on a small farm in Vermont with her two daughters, veterinarian husband, and a host of rescue animals.

 

 

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Filed under Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction, Short Stories

Review: The Awakening by Allen Johnson

I received a review copy of this novel from the author.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThis is a beautiful novel about the power of redemption.  The story reminded me quite a bit of the same message that is conveyed by Dickens in A Christmas Carol: it is never too late in life to make amends and become a better person.

Lupita is a successful doctor who works at a local clinic in her hometown of Espejo, Spain.  She lives with her elderly, yet feisty, grandfather, Diego.  One night Diego finds a severely wounded man on the street and brings him home for Lupita to care for.  After a few days, the stranger whom they call Antonio, is recovering from his wounds but is still in a coma.  His sleep is fitful and tormented and Lupita and Diego wonder with what demons this wounded man is wrestling.

This story is also a bit of an historical fiction as Diego reminisces about his younger years and meeting the greatest love of his life, Lupe.  Diego and his wife move to Granada after they are married and experience the turmoil of the Spanish Civil War in the 1930’s.  The two time periods in which the story takes places, both the 1930’s and the 1990’s are intertwined nicely in the narrative.

The most interesting aspect of the story deals with Antonio and his awakening and subsequent amnesia.  For 4 months he cannot remember who he is or why he was attacked.  As he his healing, he finds peace with Lupita and Diego and truly becomes a part of their family.  But when he does regain his memory, will his previous life threaten the happiest home he has ever known?  I highly recommend reading THE AWAKENING so that you can find out!

 

About The Author:
Allen Johnson has been called a modern Renaissance man. Yes, he is a popular author, but that’s just the beginning. He is also a Ph.D. psychologist, keynote speaker, leadership consultant,cyclist, painter, actor, jazz pianist and vocalist, photographer, and videographer.

Allen has a voracious appetite for life. He has cavorted with giant turtles in the Caribbean, climbed the glacier peaks of the Pacific Northwest, and flown a single-prop plane across the country. He is fluent in French and calls a small village in the south of France his second home. That lust for life is always present in his writing: His characters are multidimensional and brimming with ambition and desire.

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Filed under Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction

Guest Post: Author Marie Savage On How to Begin An Historical Fiction Novel

 

Today I welcome Marie Savage to The Book Binder’s Daughter who is writing about her new book Oracles of Delphi and her process of beginning an historical fiction novel.  I invite you to read her interesting guest post, enter to win your own copy of her book and visit the other stops on the tour.

Great beginnings: Setting the historical scene to keep the reader turning the pages

As a writer, editor, publisher, and avid reader, I think a lot about how to draw a reader into a story and keep them turning the pages. All good stories must have a powerful beginning that not only hooks the reader immediately, but also sets the mood and gives tantalizing clues about what is to come. In historical fiction, the beginning has to do even more work—it has to transport the reader to a time and place that may be completely unfamiliar.

9780989207935-Perfect.inddThere are many ways to grab a reader from the very first line and first paragraphs, and in writing ORACLES OF DELPHI, set in 340 BCE, I think I tried them all before I got it “right.” I probably rewrote the first chapter fifty times, and that’s no exaggeration. Ultimately, I believe, a successful beginning boils down to a deft use of tension and in ORACLES, the first paragraph plunges the reader directly into the story, gives a sense of the time period, and sets up the tension between two characters:

Nikos’s heart pounded against his rib cage like a siege engine. He pressed his back into the stone wall, closed his eyes, and tried to calm his breathing. He couldn’t believe he’d been such a fool. “Next time I’ll surrender the prize,” Charis had always promised. Next time he would claim it, he always hoped. But instead….

He pulled himself to the top of the wall and lay flat. The moment of escape calmed him. The gates of the Sacred Precinct were locked, and he’d had to climb out the same way he’d climbed in. On the way out, though, he wasn’t carrying a body.

He glanced to his side, toward the theater, and then down to the Temple of Apollon where he’d left Charis’s body for the priests to find. Stars winked in and out as clouds drifted across the black dome blanketing the night sky. He crouched, reached for a nearby branch, and swung down to land on the ground with a soft thud.

Does it work? With references to the siege engine, the Sacred Precinct, and the Temple of Apollon, does it put you in the scene and in the time period? Will it keep you reading? I hope so. Here’s one of my favorite beginnings, this one by Deborah Lincoln whose book, AGNES CANON’S WAR, I edited and published.

Agnes Canon saw a woman hanged on the way to the Pittsburgh docks. The rope snapped taut, and a hiss rose from the watching crowd like steam from a train engine. The woman dangled, ankles lashed together, hooded head canted at an impossible angle, skirt flapping lazily in the breeze. A sharp pang of sorrow shot through Agnes though she knew little of the woman’s story.

I love this first paragraph because it puts you right into the story. In the first line, we read “Agnes Canon saw a woman hanged on the way to the Pittsburgh docks” but we don’t know why she was going to the docks—does she work there? Is she meeting someone there? Or is she going on a journey, leaving from the docks to parts unknown? Second, we know immediately that the story is set in a time during which hangings were done in public and steam engines were common. Third, the description of the woman’s body dangling with “ankles lashed together, hooded head canted at an impossible angle, skirt flapping lazily in the breeze” grabs the reader and immediately begs the question: what was this woman’s crime? Last, we discover that although Agnes knows little of the woman’s story, she knows enough to feel sorry for her, and that sympathy tells the reader something of Agnes’s character.

A good beginning should not be loaded down with adjectives and adverbs, but careful use of descriptive language can be effective in setting the mood, anchoring a story in time and place, and evoking a particular atmosphere. Below is the first paragraph from SLANT OF LIGHT, an award-winning Civil War-era novel from Steve Wiegenstein.

The keelboat moved so slowly against the current that Turner sometimes wondered if they were moving at all. Keeping a steady rhythm, Pettibone and his son worked the poles on the quarter-sized boat they had built to ply the smaller rivers that fed the Mississippi. Whenever the current picked up, Turner took the spare pole and tried to help, but although he was tall and muscular, with a wide body that didn’t narrow from shoulders to hips, poling a boat wasn’t as simple as it looked. He pushed too soon, too late, missed the bottom, stuck the pole in the mud, all to the amusement of Pettibone’s son, Charley. And with every stroke, Turner asked himself: What in all creation am I doing here?

In this paragraph, we know immediately that the story is set in the past as keelboats are not common modes or transport these days. And we know that Turner, who is tall and muscular, is unused to working the poles—something even a young boy can do. Turner is clearly a guest on the keelboat or has hired Pettibone and Charley to transport him. But transport him where? We know the boat is plying a tributary of the Mississippi, but what is Turner doing there and where is he going? The last line sets up the rest of the novel, hinting that discovering why Turner is on that keelboat in the first place is at the heart of the story.

What are your favorite first paragraphs and what elements draw you in and keep you turning the pages?

-Marie Savage

About The Author:

02_Marie Savage_Author PhotoMarie Savage is the pen name of Kristina Marie Blank Makansi who always wanted to be a Savage (her grandmother’s maiden name) rather than a Blank. She is co-founder and publisher of Blank Slate Press, an award-winning small press in St. Louis, and founder of Treehouse Author Services. Books she has published and/or edited have been recognized by the Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA), the Independent Publisher Book Awards (IPPY), the Beverly Hills Book Awards, the David J. Langum, Sr. Prize in American Historical Fiction, the British Kitchie awards, and others. She serves on the board of the Missouri Center for the Book and the Missouri Writers Guild. Along with her two daughters, she has authored The Sowing and The Reaping (Oct. 2014), the first two books of a young adult, science fiction trilogy. Oracles of Delphi, is her first solo novel.

Giveaway:

Marie is giving away one copy of her book (US/CAN).  Just leave me a comment below and let me know you want to win.  It’s that easy!  One winner will be chosen on Jan.9th and notified via email.  The winner will have 48 hours to respond.

Click on the Tour Banner below to view the full list of blogs participating in the tour!

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Filed under Author Interviews, Historical Fiction