February 13, 2012

Join Us for the Forever Amber Read-a-Long

*Revised reading schedule...see below


Announcing the Forever Amber Read-a-Long.
Marie and I have been wanting to read this famous historical novel by Kathleen Winsor for years and when Marie mentioned that she was finally going to read it this year, I told her I would join her.  And so, the read-a-long was born!

About the book (from Goodreads):
Abandoned pregnant and penniless on the teeming streets of London, 16-year-old Amber St. Clare manages, by using her wits, beauty, and courage, to climb to the highest position a woman could achieve in Restoration England—that of favorite mistress of the Merry Monarch, Charles II. From whores and highwaymen to courtiers and noblemen, from events such as the Great Plague and the Fire of London to the intimate passions of ordinary—and extraordinary—men and women, Amber experiences it all. But throughout her trials and escapades, she remains, in her heart, true to the one man she really loves, the one man she can never have. Frequently compared to Gone with the Wind, Forever Amber is the other great historical romance, outselling every other American novel of the 1940s—despite being banned in Boston for its sheer sexiness. A book to read and reread, this edition brings back to print an unforgettable romance and a timeless masterpiece.

Dates:  Sunday, March 18, 2012 - Saturday, April 14, 2012

Details:

  • Start reading on Sundays, discussion post will be posted on Saturdays.
  • You can do a post and leave your link in the comments, or you can just post your thoughts in the comments of the week's discussion post.
  • The last week, April 8 -14,  will be for catch-up readers and final thoughts.
*Reading schedule has been slightly revised.  I didn't realize that the book had parts, which would probably make for more natural breaks in the reading.  If you have read a bit ahead of the new stopping points because of the previous schedule, don't worry.  It's only a couple chapters difference.  I hope you will forgive me the mishap.  ~Michelle


Reading schedule:
  • Week One (March 18 - 24)--Prologue through Part III, which starts at Ch. 22 (stop reading at end of Ch. 21) 
  • Week Two (March 25 - 31)--Part III through Part V, which starts at Ch. 46 (stop reading at end of Ch. 45)
  • Week Three (April 1 - 7)--Part V through Chapter 69 (end)
  • Week Four (April 8 - 14)--A week for catch-up and final thoughts

If you would like to join us, please leave a comment below.  We certainly would love to have you with us in the reading of this classic historical novel.

If you have any questions, feel free to ask in the comments or email us at hfconnection@yahoo.com.

January 28, 2012

{Give@way!} Guest Post: Tina Boscha, author of River in the Sea

WINNERS of River in the Sea:

Print copy--author Christa Polkinhorn
eBook--hitchcockbe44

CONGRATS! I have sent you emails.  Please respond within 48 hours.  Thanks!


RIVER IN THE SEA
AVAILABLE ON AMAZON

Giveaway details at the end of this post.

Please welcome the author of River in the Sea, Tina Boscha:

I have bad news for my mom: readers want a sequel.

Of course, this isn’t bad news at all, for either her or me. But when your daughter writes a novel based on your life, as I did for my mother, it may be a bit surprising, even shocking, to think that readers want to know more. It took my mom a few months to crack the book open and read it. My dad had to read it first and let her know it was okay, and in the meantime I tried not to pressure her. Still, it was difficult for me until I put myself in her shoes. If my early life was shaped into fiction and displayed for all to read and see and perhaps judge, I’d be nervous too.

I originally set out to write River in the Sea as a stand-alone book, and my motivations to write it were many. There is the most selfish one, and that is because I have always, always wanted to write and publish. It was never enough for me to say, when asked what I wanted to be when I grew up, that I wanted to be a writer. I always said author. To me, even as young as six or seven, that was a crucial difference.

I also wanted to write my parents’ story, most notably my mother’s, as they grew up during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands during WWII.  During my childhood, I silently collected the stories my mom and dad told my siblings and me about what they experienced as kids during the war. They talked of hiding out in hollowed out potato heaps, surprise raids where soldiers took everything from jewelry to milk, throwing their bikes into the canal to avoid giving them to German soldiers, downed pilots ferried out to England by the Frisian and Dutch resistance.

It was mind-boggling that these events were something my parents lived through, and in particular, my mother's father and brothers experienced events that most modern kids and adults just can't fathom. Openly defying the orders of the German army and going into hiding? It's amazing, dramatic, thrilling, and sobering. Studying World War II is one thing, knowing those who lived through it is another. (The actual research for the book was easy; I interviewed my parents and took notes of our conversations. If I ever had a question, another phone call or an email was all it took.)

Furthermore, I often think the domestic side of war gets overlooked, and I wanted to show it from the viewpoint of a 15-year-old girl. And not just any 15-year-old. My mom openly defied orders of her own, unspoken but ironclad rules about what girls must be like. She was not demure, quiet, and resigned to become what everyone else expected of her – which back then was a homemaker and mother. She did eventually become those things, but at 15, she smoked (publicly!), drove her father’s truck and tractors (illegally, I might add, beginning when she was just 12), and worked outside in the fields alongside her brothers. All the while wearing very bold red lipstick. Later, at age 19, she decided to forge a new path and immigrated by herself to America.

It took me a long time to understand the significance of that sentence I just wrote; River in the Sea focuses mostly on the events that transpired the last six months of the war. I wanted to end the book with a satisfying resolution to those events, but to leave what happens to Leen afterwards open, because after all, there is much more life after 19! (Hint: the book does not end with a “Reader, I married him” moment.) Today’s readers are too smart to accept pat endings, where everything ties neatly in a bow.

But what surprised me was that readers wanted to continue following Leen’s adventures. One of my early reviews said, “I was actually thinking I would love for the author to continue her mother’s story of her life in Amerika. Did I really just ask for a sequel. Yep! I guess I did.” I recently spoke at a book club and the wonderful women there said the same thing, even starting to chant, “Sequel! Sequel!”

My mom – who was actually born Leen De Graaf, as in the book – considers herself just a regular person. Normal. Nothing out of the ordinary. But anyone who has ever known her, or knows her history, speaks differently. While the Leen in the book is my version of her, and therefore fictionalized, I tried to capture my mom’s essential characteristics – of trepidation falling before courage, of willingness to flout convention, of taking on big responsibilities because that’s what you do. Of her humor and warmth and sometimes need to be impetuous.

I’ll be honest – the idea of writing a sequel is a bit mystifying. And scary. From a pure plot point of view, how do you top WWII? But yet I feel more and more compelled to consider it. Maybe not a full-length novel, maybe a novella…. Who knows? I don’t have to figure it out right now. I’m still trying to get this book off the ground and my mom is still getting used to the idea that a book with her face on the cover is out in the world!

Ultimately, though, no matter what happens next in my own saga of writing and publishing a book about my very much alive mom, I have come to understand that this reader reaction is perhaps the highest compliment I can receive as a writer. Readers love Leen and want to follow her journey. She is a character that sticks with you. And in turn, this becomes the compliment I wish to pay to my mother:

Leen De Graaf, it really isn’t bad news, not bad news at all, to learn that you are anything but ordinary.

About the book:
"At fifteen, Leen De Graaf likes everything she shouldn't: smoking cigarettes, wearing red lipstick, driving illegally, and working in the fields. It seems the only thing she shares with her fellow Dutchmen is a fear of the German soldiers stationed nearby and a frantic wish for the war to end. When a soldier's dog runs in front of Leen's truck, her split-second reaction sets off a storm of events that pitches her family against the German forces when they are most desperate - and fierce. Leen tries to hold her family together, but despite her efforts, bit by bit everything falls apart, and just when Leen experiences a horrific loss, she must make a decision that could forever brand her a traitor, yet finally allow her to live as her heart desires. Inspired by the life of the author's mother, River in the Sea is a powerful and moving account of one girl reaching adulthood when everything she believes about family, friendship, and loyalty is questioned by war."

Review from Portland Book Review


We would like to thank the author for offering a two copy giveaway of River in the Sea.  Up for grabs for two lucky followers of HF-Connection are a print copy (US/Canada) and an eBook copy (International)!


Interested? Please leave your email address in the comments as well as sharing this post with your twitter or facebook friends! Please leave the link to your shared link (required!) in your comment. Good luck!

Giveaway ends on February 10, 2012 at 11:59pm CST.

January 22, 2012

W-i-n-n-e-r-s of White Seed by Paul Clayton

I'm happy to announce that everyone who entered the White Seed giveaway won a copy of the book! Congratulations!

The five winners of the signed print copy are:

cyn209
Booksnob
Rachel
SusieBookworm
Amanda

The winners of the eBook are:

Linda
Terry
Carolyn
Margaret
Carrie
J.R. Tomlin
Kelly
Colleen
virginiebarbeau
Beth
Pricilla
Kathleen
Michele
Jenny
Carol Wong
Kate 
Boleyn12

If you did not leave your email address in the comments, please contact me at truebookaddictATgmailDOTcom  I'll need that info for Paul to send you the eBook file.

I'd like to thank Paul for this generous giveaway.  I hope you all enjoy the book.  Congrats again and thanks for entering!

January 03, 2012

{International Giveaway!} Guest Post: Tudor Superstition by Kate Emerson


AT THE KING'S PLEASURE
AVAILABLE JANUARY 3, 2012
Read  Reviews of At The King's Pleasure at Burton Book Review or historical-fiction.com

International Giveaway details at the end of this post.


Please welcome the author of the Secrets of the Tudor Courts Series, Kate Emerson, with her following article:
Tudor Superstitions

by

Kate Emerson


What would make an otherwise rational person risk his life on the basis of a prophecy? People in Tudor times believed in many supernatural things—witches, ghosts, fairies, and the ability of some people to predict the future. Those who claimed to have the gift of prophecy always had followers, although they tended to be so outspoken that they quickly brought disaster down on their own heads. If their predictions were treasonous, for example predicting the death of the king, then they were likely to end up in prison, if not on the scaffold. Casting horoscopes could also be dangerous for the astrologer, even though horoscopes were believed to be useful in the practice of medicine. All the Tudor monarchs employed astrologers at one time or another. If their predictions came true, they were rewarded. If not, not so much. In one famous instance in 1503, a court astrologer to Henry VII predicted that Henry’s queen, Elizabeth of York, would have a long life and that the child she carried would be a healthy boy. Instead, Elizabeth died shortly after giving birth to a girl who also died within days of her birth.

In AT THE KING’S PLEASURE, the 3rd Duke of Buckingham truly believes in the predictions of a prophet. His sister, Lady Anne Stafford, is more skeptical, but she, too, accepts astrology as a legitimate science. The mind set of sixteenth-century people was simply not the same as ours today. Lacking a scientific explanation, Tudor men and women accepted that an unexpected and unexplained death could have been brought about by enchantment, that a comet was a bad omen, and that someone who had been bewitched could go to a local cunning woman to buy a charm that would protect him from the evil spell.

Since people in Tudor times had little idea what caused illness, they were also clueless when it came to ways to prevent disease from spreading. That did not stop them from trying. They came up with all kinds of “preventives” and “cures.” “The stuff” was a traditional Fenland cure for the ague—opium poppy juice coagulated into pellets and swallowed. Hanging three spiders around your neck was also believed to alleviate the ague. What was ague? Possibly it was a form of malaria. It consisted of intermittent fevers and was sometimes confused with typhoid and with pneumonia. The cure that eventually worked was Peruvian bark, first brought to Spain from the New World in 1639.

I have collected far more material on folk remedies than I will ever be able to use in my novels. Many contain ingredients that even the experts cannot identify with any certainty. Some of my favorites are unicorn’s horn, dried mummy, and dragon water. There are treatments for minor ailments as well as deadly diseases. A sixteenth-century Englishman wouldn’t hesitate to apply fried horse dung to a bruise. Or, for a bruised knee, he’d apply green poultice of hot boiled cabbage or leek overlaid with sheep’s wool. Yum! Makes you kind of glad you live in the twenty-first century, doesn’t it?

~~
Kate Emerson is a cat lover, the author of the Secrets of the Tudor Court Series, and also writes mysteries as Kathy Lynn Emerson. Visit her website for more information, as well as a fascinating Who's Who in Tudor Women!

Thanks so much to the author for offering a giveaway of her newest release, At The King's Pleasure to one lucky follower of HF-Connection anywhere in the world!! Better yet, she is going to autograph it for you!
Interested? Please leave your email address in the comments as well as sharing this post with your twitter or facebook friends!
Please leave the link to your shared link (required!). Good luck!
Giveaway ends on January 14, 2012.

December 09, 2011

Guest Post and Giveaway: Harem by Colin Falconer


You are young and you are beautiful. You have been captured by the Turks after your Balkan city succumbed to a long siege. Your father and brothers are dead. You are terrified you will now be raped and murdered.

But you are not harmed by your captors, fearsome as they look. Instead you are taken back to the Ottoman capital and introduced into a gloomy wooden palace the Turks call the Eski Saraya. 

You are put into the care of the Mistress of the Robes, where your flair for needlework is put to good use. You are taught Arabic and the Koran. But it is made clear to you that you are now a slave. Whatever high position in life you had before, now you are nothing; the Sultan's plaything. 

You accept that will never see your own country again. This is your home now and there are only two ways out of this dreary place. If you do not attract the Sultan's eye he may one day give you away as a wife to one of his senior officers or ministers. But that's if you're lucky. You might just as easily be neglected and forgotten.

Or you can turn the tables.

You soon realize that these other women who share your predicament are your competition. One of them is going to be the mother of the next Sultan and attain a position of pre-eminent power in the country that enslaved her. If you are beautiful enough and clever enough and cunning enough that woman could be you.

The first step is to become gözde - 'in the eye'; that is, you must catch the attention of the Lord of Life, the Sultan himself. An ambitious girl like yourself might find a way. It depends how devious you are. 

Or you may rely on kismet, fate. One day you will wait with a hundred other girls in the court of the harem, pearls and jewels glittering in the sun. As the Sultan passes among you, he will take a handkerchief from the sleeve of his robe and drape it over your shoulder. You have been chosen! This is your golden chance. 

You may have one night and be forgotten; or this could be the road to absolute power. It is entirely up to you.

You are taken first to the Keeper of the Baths, your entire body is shaved by slave girls and you are bathed in water scented with jasmine and orange. Your hair is shampooed with henna. Afterwards another slave coats your body with a mixture of warm rice flour and oil. 

You are then prepared and coiffed and primped down to the last eyelash and the last drop of balm, dressed elaborately in clothes of incredible richness. Finally the Chief Black Eunuch escorts you to the Sultan's bedchamber. 

If you can please the Lord of Life then he might invite you back to his bed again. If the invitations become more frequent then you become iqbal, a favourite, and you won't have to sleep with the rest of these girls.

You are given your own apartments, your own eunuch slaves, even an allowance of your own. You are on your way. But it will all count for nothing unless you get pregnant and bear the Sultran a son. If you do, then you become a kadin, one of the Sultan's wives. You are now playing this deadly game in earnest because there are only ever four kadins. After that, the abortionist is called in. 

As one of the select four you are just a breath away from power now. You are also in deadly danger.

Only one of you can become the mother of the next Sultan, the Sultan Valide. If you do, your power will be unquestioned, you will rule the entire Harem and your son will reign supreme in the country that made you a slave. 

If you fail? You will probably end up at the bottom of the Bosphorus, drowned in a sack. So you cannot afford to fail. You must be clever and you must be charming and you must be attractive and you must be utterly ruthless.

These are your choices. This is the game. 

This is the harem.


Colin Falconer has been published widely in the UK, US and Europe and his books have been translated into seventeen languages. You can find him at his blog at http://www.colin-falconer.blogspot.com/ or his web page at http://www.colinfalconer.net/ 


Leave a comment for a chance to win an eBook copy of HAREM.  Giveaway will end on December 26, 2011 at 11:59pm CST.  Open worldwide.