Tag Archives: Historical Fiction

Review and Giveaway: I Looked For the One My Heart Loved by Dominique Marny

Book Synopsis:
I Looked For The One - coverAnne and Alexis are separated by war as children and reunited later by destiny. A powerful and dramatic love story that spans decades in spite of its seeming impossibility.

Anne, 9, and Alexis, 11, grow up together in the Montmartre area of Paris. While she has a major crush on him, he merely sees her as his friend’s little sister. After WWII begins, the two are separated as their families flee Paris to avoid the German occupation. When they say goodbye, Alexis promises to always protect Anne.

Anne holds on to this promise for years as she constantly thinks of Alexis, wondering where he may be. Anne grows up, finds works in an art gallery, and marries a kind, devoted man with whom she has two children. But her heart still belongs to Alexis and she never stops looking for him. Their paths cross fatefully one day in Brussels many years after they were separated.

Alexis, living in Canada and soon to be moving to San Francisco, has a family of his own; a wife in constant depression and a son. Despite their responsibilities to family and the geographical distance that keeps them apart, Anne and Alexis find a way to love one another, secretly yet passionately.

But after all this time, will they ever manage to be truly together, completely? [provided by the publisher]

My Review:

This was a lovely book that spans forty years of life in Paris beginning in 1939.  When World War II begins, neighborhoods of families and friends are scattered throughout France.  The main character in the book, Anne, and her family flee to the countryside to live with her grandparents until the turmoil of German occupation settles down.  Anne who, at the time is 9 years old, is very upset to leave her brother’s friend Alexis on whom she has a childhood crush.

At first I thought that Anne’s fondness for Alexis, which she thinks back on throughout her adult life, was unrealistic.  How many of us carry a torch for someone whom they met as a child?  However,  the circumstances surrounding the chaos and destruction of World War II leave an impression on Anne.  Her thoughts of Alexis appear to be more than just a childhood crush; she looks back on the time she spent with him as one of peace and happiness before the war ushered in a period sadness, destruction and change.

Anne seems to be fond of her husband Francois, but he never is the great love of her life.  He is comfortable and takes care her and they have two wonderful children.  They never have anything in common beyond their family.  So when Anne meets Alexis again later in life, she is easily tempted to have an affair with him because of their immediate connection.  They share a past and memories of their old neighborhood of Montmartre and they both have a deep love and appreciation for art.

The author keeps us wondering until the end of the story if Anne and Alexis will ever be able to break free of their unhappy marriages and be together.  I LOOKED FOR THE ONE MY HEART LOVED is a great read for those who appreciate historical fiction set in Paris.

About the Author:
I Looked For The One - MarnyDominique Marny was raised in a family that loves art, literature, adventure and travels. In addition to being a novelist, she is a playwright, screenwriter, and writes for various magazines.  Watch the video below in which Dominique talks about her book and how Paris inspired its setting. 

 

Giveaway:

The publisher is giving away one paperback copy to someone in the U.S. and one e-book to all other International entries. The giveaway is open until 9/14. Click on the link below to enter:

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Thanks so much to France Book Tours for hosting another great tour. Please click on the banner below to see all of the stops on this tour and to view other ongoing tours:
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Review, Giveaway and Author Q&A: The Naive Guys by Harry Patz

I am so excited today to bring you a review of The Naïve Guys by Harry Patz. Thanks to Harry for the advanced copy of the book, which I thoroughly enjoyed.  Harry also graciously agreed to let me interview him and I think everyone will appreciate his thoughtful answers.  Harry is also giving away 4 copies of his book (open internationally).  Please scroll down to the end of my review to enter to win your own copy, add the book to Goodreads and to connect with Harry through his website and social media.

My Review:

The Naive GuysVergil, Rome’s most famous epic poet, tells the story of the hero Aeneas who, after escaping the burning of his hometown of Troy, wanders the seas in search of a new place to settle.  At the core of Vergil’s Aeneid is the theme of wandering, new beginnings and finding one’s place in life.  It is no surprise that Mark, the main character in Harry Patz’s new novel The Naïve Guys, has a dog eared and well-worn copy of The Aeneid among his treasured possessions in his childhood bedroom.  Mark has just graduated from Boston College in 1992 and he, like his fellow graduates, believes that the job offers will start pouring in.  But after moving back in with his mother and Uncle Frankie, who serves as a surrogate father, Mark realizes that the “real world” outside of the protective walls of college is a lot harder to deal with than he ever imagined.

When Mark finally lands a job as a software salesman at Fishsoft, an up-and-coming company in the infant technology industry, he is too naïve to realize that he failed to negotiate his salary.    As Mark is trying to navigate the world of office politics, he is also trying to keep in touch with his group of old friends who are a link to the happy and carefree days of college.  Mark and his friends have some very funny adventures throughout the book and the author’s sense of humor was one of my favorite aspects to the story.  I laughed out loud so many times while reading the story that my husband stopped asking me what was so funny.

Mark and his friends engage in some of the most interesting and hilarious conversations in the book especially around the topic of women and relationships.  Mark wants to find a woman who is intelligent and with whom he can have stimulating conversation, but she must also be sexy and “stimulate” him in other ways.  Throughout the story Mark has relationships that only fulfill half of this perfect formula.  One of the reasons why I found Mark to be such a likeable character is that he truly wants to fall in love and have a connection with the right woman.  The fact that he can never quite get it right makes him sympathetic and makes us cheer him on and wish for him to find his happy ending.

Sports, especially football, play a prominent role in Mark’s memories about the early 1990’s.  Another reason that I really enjoyed this book is due to the sports references and history.  Mark and his friends use football games as bonding moments and their attendance at the games keeps them close as a group of friends.  When his favorite teams win, their victories serve as a pick me up, especially when Mark suffers low points in his personal and family life.  I have learned through my own students that, whether they are players on a team or fans cheering on the sidelines, participation in athletic events serves to build their self-confidence and to provide them with a sense of belonging to a community.  Part of what helps Mark to cope in his transition period is the fact that he still feels a part of the Boston College community through sports.

I would classify THE NAIVE GUYS not just as literary fiction, but also as historical fiction because of its accurate depiction of life in the early 90’s in New York.  Mark has to use pay phones, e-mail is a new technology that most people don’t know about, and his “laptop” computer is really not at all portable.  For anyone who was in high school or college during the 1990’s this book is a fun and nostalgic read.  The combination of great characters in which the reader becomes truly invested and an interesting plot kept me eagerly turning the pages of THE NAIVE GUYS until the very end.

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Giveaway: Open Internationally:

Harry is giving away TWO signed copies of The Naïve Guys to someone in US/Canada and TWO ebooks to someone in any other country.  Winners will be notified via email on October 2nd. CLICK HERE TO ENTER THE GIVEAWAY

 

About the Author:

Harry PatzHarry Patz, Jr. is a twenty-year veteran of the tech and media industries. He has been a participant of the Nantucket Atheneum Writer’s Group since October, 2013. Harry contributed a short story, “Off Season” for the group’s published anthology collection, “The Moving Pen: A Nantucket Atheneum Writer’s Group Anthology,” published in June, 2014.

Harry holds an MBA from The Johnson School at Cornell University and a BS in Management from Boston College. He resides in Westchester, New York.

Connect with Harry-
Website: www.thenaiveguys.com
Twitter: @harrypatz, @thenaiveguys
Facebook: www.facebook.com/thenaiveguys

Author Q&A:

1. In The Naïve Guys, Mark has a close group of friends that are like family to him. Did you base any of these characters on your own friends?

HP – I definitely drew on relationships from various aspects of my life. Some characters are based on my own friends and acquaintances, some are composites, and many are purely imagined. Some personality traits of my friends were accentuated, while others were combined and deemphasized. And there is a bit of me in each of the “guys,” sometimes from different periods of my life. One of my favorite movies growing up was American Graffiti. I later read that the film’s creator, George Lucas (of Star Wars fame) stated that each of three main characters were based on himself at different stages of his life. His construct made a huge impression on me.

2. Sports, especially football, have a prominent role in “The Naïve Guys”. Why, of all things you could have chosen to explore about the early 90’s, did you decide to include these details in the book?

HP – Mark and his friends are very much trying to figure out who they are, as Mark still lives in his childhood bedroom, with sports pennants of his favorite teams hanging on the wall. In this time of uncertainty, and especially as Mark, Pete and Kostas are all Boston College alumni, the rebirth of that football team provides not only a pastime, but a sense of comfort, belonging and pride for these fellows when they are so unsure of themselves in both the career and (female) relationship aspects of their lives. The nine game winning streak of the BC football team in 1993, including the landmark victory over #1 Notre Dame allowed Mark to push many of the less-established elements of his psyche to the side.

3. Mark is very “naïve” about getting a job when he is fresh out of college. Do you think that young people graduating from college today are just as naïve, more so, or less so about their job prospects?

HP – I am going to cop out here a tad and say both more and less naïve.J On the one hand, today’s college grads, growing up in the age of Columbine and ubiquitous mobile phones, cameras, and “selfies,” are so much more media and tech aware than prior generations. We see brilliant tech founders in high school, let alone those who forego or depart college early. The era of lifetime and long-term employment is dissolving from their parents’ and grandparents’ generations right before their eyes, so they are focused on not just getting a job but acquiring skills, all within a great work environment. And they lead very public lives; it’s just in their DNA.

On the other hand, I’m not sure, in general (to be fair), that they have developed the deepest level of reading, oratory, and critical thinking skills that prior generations had. While every college will extol their first class sushi bar and fitness facilities, I’m not sure they are graduating students with the best foundation to help them lead long-term successful lives, even while working on “the next big thing.”

4. I really enjoyed Mark’s references to the Aeneid in the book. Did you have other parallels in mind between Aeneas and Mark besides the obvious one of transitions ( i.e. both characters at a crossroads in their lives and trying to find their place in life)?

HP – One of the key themes in the The Nave Guys is the balance between fate and free will. What, if anything is predestined, and what is a choice? That choice can be to not make a decision, or to choose a very different path. And it’s not just Mark, it’s Sally, Vinny, Uncle Frankie, and many others who have to grapple with this question.

So for fans of the Aeneid, you may recall that Aeneas is destined to find (create) the Roman race, but he diverges from that path for a dalliance with the beautiful, sexual Dido among other stops on his journey, and we’re not really sure he is going to defeat rival Turnus though it is foretold as such.

I think one can view Mark’s journey through a similar prism. He thinks he is smart and it will all work out for him, but he is unsure if it really will. I always loved that passage in the Aeneid where Aeneas is given three imperatives – establish the peace, spare the vanquished, and crush the haughty. (The passage is much prettier in Latin, by the way). Mark, in his own life and in his own way, with respect to his friends, his family, his work colleagues and the women who enter his life…he tries to do those exact things.

5. At the end of the book Mark mentions traveling the world and alludes to his future. Is there another book in the works about what happens next to Mark Amici?

HP – I was on a long-drive today from Boston to New York and I thought about where the story will pick up for Mark and his friends. So yes, I will continue the journey for them at some point. Like all of us, Mark and the guys will grow in different and unexpected ways.

But to give that next chapter justice, I will take a break from them for a while. I plan to work on a themed short story collection first. Hopefully it is one your readers will enjoy. Thank you Melissa for the time and for sharing The Naive Guys with your readers.

 

 

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Review: Neverhome by Laird Hunt

I received an advanced copy of this book from Little, Brown and Company through NetGalley.

NeverhomeConstance is a farmer from Indiana who wants to see more of the world outside of her rural farm. She decides that fighting in the Civil War will give her this chance. Her husband Bartholomew would not be a good soldier and so she decides that she will make the sacrifice and march off to war and fight for her country in his place. She puts on the Union uniform, hides her feminine qualities and in this disguise travels down south to the heart of the battleground where she takes on the name of Ash Thompson.

Ash has many interesting adventures that make her a legend among her fellow soldiers. At one point she is given the nickname “Gallant Ash” and a song is written about her. She fights alongside men and oftentimes is a better fighter, and certainly a better sharpshooter, than the men. She is constantly afraid that her secret will be revealed and it is amazing that throughout the entire story only a handful of people suspect her true identity.

NEVERHOME is brilliantly written in Constance’s own voice and we see the horrific landscape of the civil war through her eyes. I admire this book as a well-researched historical novel and Laird Hunt even uses the correct accents and turns of phrase from someone in this era. The dream sequences that Constance has are vivid and haunting and I suspect that she has what we would call nowadays PTSD. She is so disturbed by some of the horrors she witnesses that reality and dreams start to blend together.

One final aspect of the book I want to mention is Constance’s relationship with her husband.  They have a unique marriage in which they seemed to have reversed what would have been the traditional roles of husband and wife in the 19th century.  Constance is the strong and brave partner while her husband is docile, passive, and even weak.

The story is so interesting and captivating that I actually read it in one day. I could not wait to find out what happens to Constance and the ending was unexpected. I would not be surprised if NEVERHOME becomes an instant American classic that all students of history will find on their course reading lists.

There are many historical fiction novels set during the Civil War.  Leave me a comment and let me know which ones you have read and would recommend.

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Mini Reviews for September

September 2nd is a big publication day for lots of great books.  I thought I would do a mini review of some interesting books that will be published this week:

Feast for ThievesFeast For Thieves by Marcus Brotherton is an historical novel set in Texas in the late 1940’s.  Rowdy Slater is a World War II veteran that is trying to find employment and fit back into society.  When he ends up in Cut Eye, Texas under suspicious circumstances the local sheriff offers him a deal: serve as the reverend for the local church for a year.  Rowdy rarely goes to Church, so he is stunned when he finds himself preaching the Bible and leading a church community.  This is book is a page turner that includes bank robberies, high speed car chases and plenty of bad guys.  Brotherton has written an entertaining novel that is also thought-provoking.

 

10:04: A Novel is one of the most unique books you will probably ever read.   It not only contains elements of literary fiction, but also interweaves throughout the story poetry, short story, 1004 A Novelphilosophy, children’s fiction, and, I suspect, autobiography.  The main character in the novel is an unnamed author, living in New York City and enjoying literary acclaim after the publication of his first novel.   Despite the success of his career, he struggles with a serious medical diagnosis and his best friend has just asked him to donate sperm so she can have a baby.  Ben Lerner shows us a man who contemplates his past as he struggles to figure out his future while living in a big city in the early 21st century.  The title of the novel is a clever reference to the popular 80’s movie “Back to the Future.”

 

Code Name Nanette is loosely based on real women who went undercover for the Allies to spy on the Germans during World War II.  When the book begins, Nanette is an octogenarian living Code name nanettein a nursing home in Canada and she describes in great detail her time spent as one of these spies.  She poses as a prostitute in France who services German officers.  While she seduces the soldiers she learns important military secrets that she communicates back to the allies.  As you can imagine, many parts of Nanette’s story are erotic and this book is definitely not rated “G.”  However, I do think it is a good historical fiction read and the erotic parts of the story serve to help the reader understand Nanette’s story.

*I received advanced copies of all of these books from the publishers through Fresh Fiction. To read my full reviews of these books and more, click here.

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Review- Edmund Persuader: A Romance by Stuart Shotwell

If you  enjoy the style and setting of Jane Austen’s novels then you will love Edmund Persuader. In fact, I was searching for books similar to Austen when I found this novel. There is currently a giveaway on Goodreads to win lots of copies of this fantastic book. The link is at the bottom of this page after my review.

Edmund PersuaderI received Edmund Persuader as a Goodreads giveaway and I am so delighted that I did. I do not say this lightly, but it is one of the best historical fiction novels I have ever read. This is a very long book and is actually 2 volumes. But even after having read all 1500 pages, I was disappointed when it was over. So do not be discouraged by its length.

This novel is set in the early 19th century with Edmund Percy as the main character. He is the third son of a proud English gentleman and Edmund’s older brother Christopher will inherit the family estate. Edmund has studied Theology at Oxford and plans to enter the Church to earn his living. However, just before he takes orders, he is asked by his father to visit the West Indies and straighten out the family’s sugar cane plantation which has been abandoned by a corrupt estate manager.

While living in the Caribbean, Edmund has a crisis of faith as he learns about the brutally harsh lives of slaves that are used to work his family’s plantation. He also meets, falls in love with, and has a sexual relationship with a mulatto slave. This brings about a second moral crisis because he believes he has committed fornication and can in no way serve in the Church of England after committing such a sin.

When Edmund finally travels back to England and takes his orders, he finds his way to his Aunt Andromeda in Hampshire who, widowed and childless, serves as a second mother to him. It is in Hampshire that he receives a position in the church, first as curate and then later as rector. While in Hampshire he meets and falls in love with daughter of a local squire. It is evident, as the novel unfolds, that she is also deeply in love with Edmund as well but she has a dark secret that keeps her from accepting his offer of marriage. Edmund must find out what this secret is and use his keen powers of persuasion to win over the object of his desire.

There are several themes that this book explores about the struggles of men and women in 19th century England. Edmund finds great pleasure in his physical relationship with the mulatto slave in Antigua and he fears that he will never find a proper English woman who will also fulfill his physical needs. The theme of pride and the mistakes and prejudices that are the result of excessive pride are also explored.

This book makes us contemplate the fact that humans make mistakes but that these mistakes can be overcome through redemption and the love of others. The most important theme in this book is that, although we may feel at times that it is impossible to affect changes in society at large, it is important that we show kindness, love and understanding to those in our immediate circle on whose lives we can have a more immediate and positive effect. I highly recommend this book for anyone who loves historical fiction, a great story and engaging characters.

The publisher is giving away a lot of copies of this book on Goodreads. Head over to that site to enter the giveaway and add it to your “To Read” list.

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For more information on this book and to read an interview with the author visit the Edmund Persuader Website

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