Tag Archives: Historical Fiction

Review: Winter by Christopher Nicholson

I received an advanced review copy of this book from the publisher, Europa Editions.

My Review:
WinterI always thought it was sad that the Roman Stoic philosopher Cicero, in his moral treatise De Senectute (On Old Age), argues that not only do old men not engage in the pleasures of a lover any longer, but they are actually relieved to be free from such sensations.  Seneca, in one of his Stoic epistles, agrees with Cicero’s sentiment by telling Lucilius that it is a relief to have tired out one’s appetites and be done with such things.

Christopher Nicholson, in his fictional autobiography about the last few years of Thomas Hardy’s life, greatly disagrees with Cicero and Seneca’s views on old age.  Nicholson gives us an example, through the life of this famous author, of an old man enjoying love and fantasizing about pleasure even though such enjoyments are not necessarily attainable.  The focus of the book is the winter of Hardy’s eighty-fourth year when he decides to become involved in an amateur production of Tess.  He has resisted turning what is his most famous novel into a staged production, but when he meets Gertrude Bulger, a local townswoman, he believes she is the only one that can do his heroine justice.

Hardy lives a very quiet life in the small town of Wessex where he was born.  He doesn’t go out and socialize very much, so it is truly remarkable when he agrees to become involved with the local theater company to stage this production of Tess.  He develops a heart-warming relationship with the lead actress, whom he affectionately refers to as “Gertie.”  He enjoys having her over for tea and talking to her about books, philosophy and life in general.  He realizes that, even though he is in the winter of his life, he still has strong feelings of love and desire for this twenty-eight year-old woman.  She inspires him to write love poems again and he produces over twenty such poems in the course of a few months.

The imagery and backdrop of winter is appropriate for Hardy’s reflections on what he feels could be the last few months, weeks or days of his life.  The cold and ice and bleak landscape reflect what he feels is going on in the natural progression of his life.  He, however, is not sad or bitter about this .  And when he has the opportunity to interact with Gertie he embraces the opportunity and does not deny himself feelings of love, pleasure and desire just become of his advanced age.  One of the sweetest moments of the book is when he finds one a piece of her hair and tucks it into one of the books in his library as a keepsake.

The other forceful character in the book is Hardy’s wife who is about forty years his junior.  Although Florence is much younger than her husband she acts like she is the octogenarian in the relationship.  She is obsessed with her health, paranoid, whiny and jealous.  When she sees that Thomas has developed feelings for Gertie she is relentless in her nagging at him and does everything she can to make sure that they do not see each other again.  I understand that Hardy could be a quiet, brooding, stubborn man and was not the easiest person to live with.  But Florence’s constant obsession about her health and the perceived wrongdoings against her made it difficult to have any sympathy for her.

The reader should be warned that the ending is not necessary a happy one.  There is, however,  a larger message in the book to be found which is that Cicero and Seneca did not quite have the correct perceptions on old age.  Human beings have the capacity to experience love, desire and pleasure right up until our final days.  Cicero and Seneca most definitely would have judged Hardy to be a bad Stoic.

About the Author:
C NicholsonChristopher Nicholson was born in London in 1956 and brought up in Surrey. He was educated at Tonbridge School in Kent, and read English at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. After university he worked in Cornwall for a charity encouraging community development. He then became a radio scriptwriter and producer, and made many documentaries and features mainly for the BBC World Service in London. He was married to the artist Catharine Nicholson, who died in 2011. He has two children, a son and a daughter. For the past twenty-five years he has lived in the countryside on the border between Wiltshire and Dorset.

 

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Review: The Life and Loves of Lena Gaunt by Tracy Farr

I received an advanced review copy of this title from Gallic Books through NetGalley.

My Review:
Lena GauntWhen we first meet Lena Gaunt, she is a lonely octogenarian who has been invited to play her theremin at a music festival near her home in Perth, Australia.  Lena has had a long and interesting life and her most notable accomplishment has been as an innovative musician.  After her performance on her theremin, a odd looking electric instrument that one plays by manipulating one’s hands in the air without touching it, she relaxes in her trailer by smoking some heroin.  At first this seems funny that a woman her age is engaging in such extracurricular activities; but as we learn more about Lena’s life, we come to understand that her dependence on mind altering drugs helps numb the pain of the  devastating losses she has experienced.

Lena is actually born in Singapore in 1910 where her father is a successful and wealthy businessman.  When Lena is only four-years-old she is shipped off to Australia to attend a boarding school.  This is the first experience of lost love that Lena experiences.  She is alone at this school, far away from any family and her only comfort is her music.  Her mother’s brother, Uncle Valentine, drops in on her every once in a while and it is Uncle Val that eventually introduces her to the cello.  Music becomes, for Lena, an escape, a comfort; it soothes her and gives her something on which to focus.

When Lena is a young adult she finally settles in Sydney among a group of artists and their patrons.  It is during this period where she is introduced to a professor who has invented the theremin and her expert playing and manipulation of this innovate instrument are what launches her into the spotlight.  It is also during this time that Lena meets the love of her life, Beatrix, who is a talented painter and artist in her own right.

Lena has a full life during which she is showered with accolades and acknowledgement for her musical talent.  But despite her success,  a feeling of loss and loneliness pervade her life.  She moves around the world, from Paris to London to New York City, but in the end she finds her way back to Perth and to the beach and ocean which she loves so much.

This seems, at first, like a quiet and slow book but about half way through it grabs you and sneaks up on you until you can’t put it down because you so desparately want to know what happens to Lena and those she loves.  I will admit that I had to wipe a tear or two from my eyes after finishing her story.

Gallic Books has brought us another brilliant, character centered story that I highly recommend.  They were one of my favorite publishers last year and their winning streak continues with me.  Kudos to Tracy Farr for a successful first book that is being published not only in her native Australia, but in England and the United States as well.

About the Author:
Tracy FarrTracy Farr is an Australian novelist, short story writer, and former research scientist. Since 1996 she’s lived in Wellington, New Zealand

Tracy’s debut novel The Life and Loves of Lena Gaunt is published in Australia and New Zealand by Fremantle Press (2013), and in the UK by Aardvark Bureau (2016) for international release (excl. Aus/NZ).

 

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Review: Colonel Fitzwilliam and The Countess of Sainte Toulours

I received an advanced review copy of this title from the author.

My Review:
Colonel Fitzwilliam and the Countess of Sainte Toulours - Stanley Michael HurdHistorical fiction, mystery, espionage and romance are all part of Stanley Hurd’s new novel that centers around the character of Colonel Fitzwilliam.  Hurd takes Austen’s beloved character from Pride and Prejudice and creates a story just for the Colonel.  When the story opens Fitzwilliam is working in the War Department trying to figure out Napoleon’s next move.  A peace has been declared and French ports are starting to open back up to British trade, but no one in the British government trusts Boney to keep his word.  So the government decides to send Fitzwilliam undercover as a spy to see whether or not Napoleon is sincere about peace or if he is using this time to build more ships and gear up for war.

Before he is shipped off to France for his mission, Fitzwilliam is invited to his cousin Darcy’s house for a social dinner.  At this gathering he meets a lovely young woman named Emily for whom he instantly develops romantic feelings.  Love and romance spring up very quickly between Fitzwilliam and Emily and just as they are getting to know each other Fitzwilliam has to go off on his spy mission in France.  One of the best aspects of the writing of this book are the heartfelt letters that Fitzwilliam sends to Emily.  Since their acquaintance is new he doesn’t want to be overbearing or inappropriate towards her; his letters contain just the perfect amount of amorous sentiments and a description of his time spent spying on the French.

While he is in France, Fitzwilliam meets up with his spying partner, a feisty and charismatic man named Esparaza.  The situation gets especially interesting when they rescue an upper class French woman who claims she is a Countess.  They bring the Countess back to England where she reveals to them that the French have captured her mother and are holding her ransom until the Countess provides them intelligence about the English war plans.  Fitzwilliam and Esparaza have quite a mission on their hands at this point; they need to somehow rescue the Countess’ mother from a French jail and keep her safe from French spies watching her in England.

The entire novel comes to a rather exciting and unexpected conclusion.  A duel, a stint in a French prison and a rescue all play a part in Fitzwilliam’s adventure.  I like the fact that Hurd is not trying to change or rewrite the Colonel’s story as it is handed down to us by Austen.  He gives us a truly unique and exciting story that is in line with Austen’s original character.

About The Author:
HurdStan Hurd is a Ph.D. neurochemist who currently occupies himself writing, teaching fencing and Karate, and polishing samurai sword blades. He was introduced to Jane Austen’s works late in life, but became immediately captivated by the unlabored beauty of her prose. Having read one of the many adaptations written to extend the story of “Pride and Prejudice”, while he was delighted to be back in that world, he found the exclusively female perspective of the author was at times intrusive; since he could not let himself complain if he did not attempt it himself, he set out to write “Darcy’s Tale”.

Many of his friends are amazed that he should be writing a Regency romance; he takes a particular delight in that fact.

 

Giveaway:
The author is generously giving away two e-book copies of his novel.  This giveaway is open internationally as long as you can accept a Mobi version of the book for Kindle.  Just leave a comment letting me know you want to win.  I will pick a winner on Friday.

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Review: Crooked Heart by Lissa Evans

I received an advanced review copy of this novel from the publisher through TLC Book Tours.

My Review:
Crooked HeartThis is the heartwarming tale of two lonely people that find each other amidst the turmoil of World War II in London.  Noel is an orphan living with his godmother when the novel opens and, although she is a tough old woman and a former suffragette, dementia is taking its toll on her health.  Due to her increasing confusion, she walks out of her home at night and dies in a sand pit.  Noel is then left with some of his godmother’s distant relatives who really don’t care to have the ten-year-old boy around.

When children are evacuated from London, Noel is placed with a woman named Vee who has an interesting and sad story of her own.  Vee got pregnant when she was seventeen, only to be abandoned by her lover.  Vee has raised her son as a single parent, not an easy thing to do in 1940’s London, and she also cares for her mute mother.  Vee is always trying some small scan to bring in money and put food on the table for her son and mother.  When she hears that she will be given a stipend for taking in Noel as an evacuee, she decides that any small inconvenience is worth the extra income.

The strength of this book lies in the development of the relationship between Vee and Noel.  Noel has pretty much been abandoned and is alone in the world.  At the same time, Vee”s mother remarries and her son Donald runs away because a scam of his own making has gone awry.  Vee has spent the better part of her life taking care of her mother and son, only to be left behind by both of them without so much as a thank you.

But Noel proves to be great company for Vee and together they run some minor scams to have a decent income.  When Noel disappears overnight, Vee misses him dearly and does everything she can to find him.  It is evident that this child has grown on her and she wants him in her life permanently.  The plot really pulls at the heartstrings as Noel realizes that there is suddenly a person in his life that cares about him and he has the potential for a true parent and a lasting home.

CROOKED HEART is a novel with a serious backdrop of World War II but the author manages to make the story heartwarming and funny.  For those who love World War II historical fiction, this book is a must read.

 

About The Author:
L EvansAfter a brief career in medicine, and an even briefer one in stand-up, Lissa Evans became a comedy producer, first in radio and then in television. She co-created Room 101 with Nick Hancock, produced Father Ted, and co-produced and directed The Kumars at Number 42. Her first novel, Spencer’s List, was published in 2002. Lissa Evans lives in north London.

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Review: Circling the Sun by Paula McLain

I received an advanced review copy of this title from the publisher through NetGalley

My Review:
Circling the Sun Few people know that Beryl Markham was the first female to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean from east to west.  I had no idea what a trailblazer she was for women’s accomplishments in the 20th century until I read McLain’s book.  Some might know her because of her friends, Karen Blixen and Denys Finch Hatton who were made famous in the movie Out of Africa.

Beryl’s father, Charles Clutterbuck,  buys a plot of land on which to raise and train race horses in the British colony of Kenya at the turn of the century.  Beryl’s mother leaves the Colony after a year and Beryl is raised by her father and has an unconventional childhood as far as British, aristocratic children are concerned.  Despite his best efforts to educate her and make her become a “proper” English girl, Beryl is most content to ride horses on her father’s farm and hunt with the local tribes.  Throughout the novel she is constantly striving to regain the freedom she had as a child but which is so elusive for a female in the early 20th century.

When the Clutterbuck farm fails, seventeen year old Beryl feels lost and is not sure what to do with her life.  She can follow her father to Cape Town but she desperately wants to stay in Kenya, the only home she has ever truly known.  She feels that her only choice is to marry a local farmer and horse trainer named Jock who is twice her age and whom she barely knows.  Beryl seems to be looking for love, companionship and someone who truly understands her and will let her be herself.  When she doesn’t conform to Jock’s idea of a domestic wife, the marriage fails and ends in divorce.  Beryl marries two more times; her failed second marriage to a British aristocrat named Mansfield Markham, is also chronicled in the book.  The one man that she seems to truly love and want to be with is Denys Finch Hatton, a man who himself cannot be tamed and whom she can never truly possess.

Even though her personal life and numerous love affairs end up in failure, Beryl seems to put her energy into succeeding as a horse trainer.  Most of the book deals with her early life as she trains horses and works among men on farms.  When her first marriage fails she is determined to make her own way in life and lives and works on a friend’s horse farm in her attempt to become the first licensed female horse trainer.  She is trying to break through in a field dominated by men and she is subjected to constant disappointments and setbacks because of her gender.

One final aspect of the book that must be mentioned is the author’s beautiful and detailed descriptions of colonial Kenya.  The topic of big game hunting has been a prominent topic in the news lately and McLain’s descriptions of British aristocrats going out on safari so they can possess one of these beautiful animals is an interesting glimpse into the origins of this sport.  At one point in the book the British royal family goes out on a safari to hunt animals and the press glorifies this barbaric activity.

CIRCLING THE SUN is a great summer read for its lush settings and inspiring tale of a little-known female trailblazer from the early 20th Century.

About The Author:
Paula McLainPaula McLain has published two collections of poetry, “Less of Her” and “Stumble, Gorgeous,” both from New Issues Poetry Press, and a memoir entitled “Like Family: Growing Up in Other People’s Houses” (Little, Brown, 2003). “A Ticket to Ride,” is her debut novel from Ecco/HarperCollins. She received her MFA in poetry from the University of Michigan in 1996, and has since been a writer-in-residence at Yaddo, The MacDowell Colony, and The Ucross Foundation Residency Program, and received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Ohio Arts Council. Individual poems and essays have appeared in numerous journals, including the Gettysburg Review, Antioch Review, and The New York Times Sunday Magazine. As well as teaching part-time at John Carroll University, she is a core faculty member in the low-residency MFA Program in Poetry at New England College

 

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