Showing posts with label susan higginbotham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label susan higginbotham. Show all posts

Sunday, November 8, 2009

SUNDAY SALON


This past couple of weeks has been huge for me on the reading front.  I just became more focused in reading the growing pile of books that have been sent to me.  Now I feel great because I actually made a reasonable sized dent in the pile.. for once!

Currently I am reading The Sign for Drowning by Rachel Stolzman.  It is a beautifully written book, and it has renewed my interest in learning sign language I have had since I was about 10 years old.  I am also reading "The Traitor's Wife" by Susan Higginbotham, but it has had to be put on the back burner until I got some of my more pressing review copies under my belt.  I finished the book "Women are Crazy Men are Stupid" by Howard J. Morris and Jenny Lee, and to my total surprise it was HILARIOUS! 

I have also signed up for this:


Which I am SUPER DUPER excited about!  I cannot wait to see who I am buying for!!!!  Just click on the pic above to enter and find out more about it! 

I think I've said it before, but I'll say it again, I absolutely love the book blogger community.  LOVE.  I love the people, the camaradarie, the learning about books I would have never heard of, the whole thing.  Love ...it.  And this is just another example of the fabulous people who like to bring us all together!  

This week I'll be still finishing up the few books that are left from publishers and authors, but I am also going to do some reading strictly for me.  I plan on spending a good amount of quality time with "The Traitor's Wife" and am going to enjoy every single second!

Have a wonderful Sunday!

For more Sunday Salons click here.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

THE WINNER OF HUGH AND BESS!!!



TO:


at

I will also be sending you an email!  Please notify me of your mailing address so I can send it on to the publisher and they can mail your book!!! 

Thank you so much to everyone who entered!!  If you didn't win I highly recommend purchasing Susan's book, it is worth every single penny!!! 


Tuesday, October 27, 2009

TEASER TUESDAYS


Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly meme hosted by MizB at Should Be Reading.  Anyone can play!

  • Grab your currently read
  • Flip to a random page
  • Choose 2 sentences and post them
  • Try not to include any spoilers!
  • Don't forget to mention the title of the book so folks can add them to their TBR's! 

My teaser is from "The Traitor's Wife" by Susan Higginbotham

' "I do too.  Despenser has gone beyond all bounds in his greed for land and money.  England will be better for the steps we are taking."

Wateville sighed.  "Tell that to my mother-in-law." '

You can see more Teasers  here.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

REVIEW: HUGH AND BESS by SUSAN HIGGINBOTHAM and GIVEAWAY!!!





Not to be over dramatic, but this book came at the PERFECT time in my life. I literally JUST finished “Three Day Road” by Joseph Boyden, and while not being a BAD book, it was not an overly HAPPY one. And from the first sentence of Hugh and Bess I knew that it was going to be a delightful read. Which it totally WAS.    I LOVED IT.

I really do not know much about Edward II, but interestingly enough I DID know about the standoff at Calais so parts of the book were very cool for that reason. What I LOVED about the novel is  that each of the characters had a very distinctive VOICE. And Bess’s voice is so endearing, I liked her immediately. She is only 13 when we meet her, and she is a widow (thaaaat’s right.. I said WIDOW) and her parents have figured she had been widowing around long enough and it was high time for her to be married off.. again.  Bess is not impressed, to say the least, especially when she finds out that her dear friend Joan is marrying her brother Will who is around their age, and Bess has to marry this old guy who is a whole 32 years old for heaven’s sake!
Eventhough this novel is set in the 14th century Bess's character is, in many ways, very typical of a any thirteen year old girl.  For example how she is secretly annoyed at the fact the Joan has developed breasts long before she has.

"So why didn't you tell me?  Don't you want to marry Will?"
"No."
"Why?"
"I have my reasons."
This had become Joan's favourite saying since she had started her monthly courses and developed those breasts of hers. 

She is feisty, and outspoken, but also self conscious.  All completely endearing qualities.  Hugh, although relatively handsome, has a dark family history which horrifies Bess.  But since she has no choice in the matter agrees to marry him. 

Flashbacks to Hugh's past help us to understand his character and how it is vastly different to that of his distasteful and cruel father and Grandfather.   He is a respectable and lovely man who is always trying to "do the right thing".  We also learn of Emma, Hugh's first real love whom he will never be permitted to marry.    A very respectable woman in her own right,  who knows the rules of the court well enough to know she will never be married to Hugh, the only man she has ever really loved. 

Throughout the story we are gently taken along as Hugh and Bess's feelings for one another grow, and we learn that their love is the stuff of fairy tales.  That, which is to say, is not without its nightmares.

"Hugh and Bess"  is a love story, and it is very well written and lovely to read.  Personally, I could not put it down and read it in two days.  And I will be ordering Higginbotham's other book "The Traitor's Wife" and then "The Stolen Crown" when it comes out.  If this book is any indication of the story telling ability of the author than I know I will LOVE her other books as well.  Historical fiction can be tricky.  You need to have enough HISTORY to frame the story in it's place in time, but not TOO much and not TOO DRY to make it like a text book.  Higginbotham's historical fiction blends the "historical" and the "fiction" perfectly.  In fact, in my opinion, the mark of a great historical fiction novel is that you want to go on after you finish it and devour anything having to do with the family or historical persons portrayed in the book.  Higginbotham's novel made me want to do that very thing.    Also, the mark of ANY good book is at the very very end, when you finally close its cover , you actually sigh audibly as in "that was SUCH a great book." 

RATING:  4.5/5

You can read more about Susan Higginbotham and her works at her website here.

NOW FOR THE GIVEAWAY PORTION OF THIS POST!!!!!

The publisher,  Source Books, of Hugh and Bess has GRACIOUSLY allowed me to giveaway a COPY OF THE BOOK!!!!!

Here is how to enter:


  • Leave a comment with your email adress. (one entry)


  • Becomea  follower and leave a SEPERATE comment that you have done so or that you are one already. (2 entries)


  • Post or Twitter about this giveaway and then leave a SEPERATE comment providing the link. (2 entries)


  • Put this giveaway in your SIDEBAR for 2 more entries!

This giveaway is open until October 30th at midnight Alberta Time, and the winners will be announced on October 31.  The winners will have ONE WEEK from that DATE to reply by sending me their mailing address or their winning number will be forfeit. 
The winner will also be notified via email. 

GOOD LUCK!!!!

Sunday, October 4, 2009

SUNDAY SALON


Aaaaahhhh, Sunday.....  I LOVE Sundays.  And this Sunday in particular is awesome because we had our first snow fall!  So, at 730 this morning I put on a fire and read the paper while the rest of my house was sleeping. 

This week turned out to be a great reading week!  After several weeks of not a whole lot of productive reading, I finished Three Day Road by Joseph Boyden and started and finished Susan Higginbotham's "Hugh and Bess", which I LOVED.  I will be reviewing it on Tuesday after hopefully being able to arrange for a giveaway of the book!  (fingers crossed!) 

I carry Echo in the Bone around with me everywhere, and have not been able to read as much as I like of it.  It's not a book I want to read with distractions around.  Because I love this series so much, I want to savour every single word of this latest book, knowing the next (and LAST) one will not be out for 3 years or more.  Sigh.  After following on Diana Gabaldon's blog for the past year, I still stare at its cover in awe that it is finally here in my possesion.  Yes, I love it THAT much.  Sad, really.  What is cool about following an author's blog such as Diana's is that all along while writing Echo she shared with us little excerpts AND even described in detail HOW she wrote a few bits.  We even were let in on the stress of the final weeks of the "final frenzy", as she puts it, where she basically did nothing but write.  Diana also kept us apprised of the discussions over various cover designs and posted the final cover long before anyone else knew about it.  She also replies often to comments, and is very approachable to her readers.  Here is here blog in case you would like to follow her too:  Voyage of the Artemis


This week I will be reading "The Christmas Cookie Club" by Ann Pearlman.  I recieved this ARC back in the summer, but have been waiting until now to read and review it.  It looks like a fun read, and I think it would be a great gift for the women in your life! 

I'll also be reading "Dewey - The Small Town Cat who Touched the World" by Vicki Myron.  This book is already very heartwarming, and Dewey is quite possibly one of the cutest cats I have EVER seen in my LIFE.  EVER.  

I may add one more book to the pile, James Patterson's "The Murder of King Tut."  It was also a review copy from the lovely folks at Little Brown Publishing co., and it looks like a fascinating read. 

Other than that, I am going to go BACK to my fire and knit while my 9 year old daughter watches "That's So Raven" and enjoy some scream-free moments before our 2 year old wakes up!

Have a WONDEFUL Sunday!

For more Sunday Salons visit here.

Monday, September 14, 2009

MAILBOX MONDAY

A big thank you to The Printed Page for hosting Mailbox Monday.  "Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came into their house last week (checked out library books don’t count, eBooks & audio books do). Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists."  ~ The Printed Page

I actually have books that came in the mail last week!!  WOOOOT!!!  I would like to thank Hachette Books for sending me my own review copy of my giveaway "The Way Home" by George Pelecanos (deadline for entering to win one of 5 copies is tomorrow!!!)  It looks like a good one! 
Also, thanks to Little Brown and Company for a review copy of "The Murder of King Tut" by James Patterson! 







And last but by no means least a huge thank you to the publishers of Susan Higginbotham's book Hugh and Bess!  I can't wait to read this one! 



Have a great day!!!