Tommy and Tuppence ( Partners in Crime)
Guys! Guys! I am not a huge Agatha Christie fan across the board, but I love these two. Unlike the 1980s series which was totally 1920s flapper glam, this reboot is set in the 1950s and it makes it even more wonderful when Tuppence thwarts domesticity for a life of crime-solving. I love the chemistry between Tommy and Tuppence who are a settled married couple but have such a penchant for thrill-seeking it jolts something back into their obvious chemistry. I also enjoy how their little boy is always conveniently away and how they sneak into people's things in pursuit of their mysteries and get caught and have lame cover stories and no one cares. Love.
Newsies
I saw this touring production in Boston and then twice now in Toronto and Dan DeLuca( as well as having a favourite close-to-my-heart surname) is just astounding as the leader of the strike, Jack Kelly. I went with some people yesterday and told them that Newsies excels at revitalizing the old fashioned type of broadway that is reliant on singing and dancing and not on special effects and rock ballads. The kids are amazing on stage, there is a fabulous feminist lead and the voices are exceptional. The choreography incorporates every type of dance from acrobatic to ballet to tap. I am just thrilled at how much verve it has. See it if it is coming to your city ( don't worry, it is much better than the film. It works better on stage)
I also think if people have kids this is a great way to introduce them to a major point in children's justice and history but also to ignite a discussion on social justice.
Pygmalion
I could talk about the Shaw Festival's production forever and wanted to do a full blown review but realized I don't have the time this week what with edits and my real job. So, here you are going to get the overview. Settled in gorgeous Niagara-on-the-Lake, the Shaw Festival is a favourite summer stop about two hours out of Toronto. My friend Mel and I went and had a blast. Here, they have kept the dialogue the same and stayed cherished and true to the original work but transposed it to the 21st Century. All the way through, I was delightedly thinking: How Does Pymalion Work Now? But it does. Save for when Eliza complains about not being able to find a role outside of marriage as Higgin has made her fit for nothing.
Speaking of Higgins, Patrick McManus made it his own. I have seen several incarnations of Pygmalion and My Fair Lady and a lot of it is the same old, same old ( the delightfully same old because I friggin' love it). But, McManus updated the character, made him boyish and infused quite a lot of physicality. The sets were amazing. Eliza was amazing. It just worked very well. There is an entire re-invention fashion motif, there is a set-change video from the BBC talking about the new class ( which blends well with Alfie Doolittle's long -drawn-out treatises on Middle Class Morality). It proves that Shaw's humour and relevance are century agnostic.
Emma Approved
After a long week at a work conference, I vegged out Friday night and binge-watched this youtube serial. I have never seen Lizzie Bennett Diaries but I really enjoyed this. It worked well. The Knightley was adorable and it is cozy marshmallow-hot-chocolate viewing.
"A plate of apples, an open fire, and a 'jolly goode booke' are a fair substitute for heaven", vowed Barney. -L.M. Montgomery, 'The Blue Castle'
Monday, August 24, 2015
Thursday, August 13, 2015
Book Gush!!!! : Sebastien de Castell and Kate Griffin
If you are like: I wish I could find the Musketeers as
retold by Scott Lynch then I have this series for you.
Confession: it’s hard to make me laugh in books. You won’t usually find my laughing at the
spirited antics of some contemporary romance where the heroine has toilet paper
stuck to her shoe. I’m not into
that. I am, however, a sucker for
cerebral sarcasm and a winning, irreverent voice.
‘Goodnight Lord Tremondi,’ I said. ‘You weren’t an
especially good employer. You lied a lot and you never paid us when you
promised. But, I guess that’s all right, since we turned out to be pretty
useless bodyguards”
I WAS LAUGHING ON THE FIRST PAGE ! Falcio and his Greatcoat friends are
outcasts, outliers and completely obsolete but they need to save the day
anyways.
“My name is Falcio val Mond, First Cantor of the Great Coats
and this was only the first of a great many bad days to come!” de Castell tugs you into his web and
entangles you there.
Lest you think it is all fun and swashbuckling hijinks, it
is not. Indeed, there is a pensive and
sad undertone with a perfectly realized world developed with injustice, pain
and sorrow.
“It is an odd sort of bluish colour, and you would call it
bright at first, but then as you looked on it further, you’d find yourself
adding words like oily and runny-looking and finally sort of disturbing.”
de Castell has a way with words that is equally surprising
and winsome, cunning and smart. His
prose literally snaps up from the page and sparks you in the eye like the
moment you toss an extra log on a campfire and flits of ember flick a little
extra smoke.
There’s a great deal of screaming in this story. Best get
used to it now.
I think I was attacked once or twice, but I couldn’t afford
the delay so I killed them and moved on.
I received Knight's Shadow for review from the publisher
And, if you are like: I kinda want Sally Lockhart but I would
prefer a more interesting guy sidekick (maybe a gay Italian with a half-scarred
face) and more cross-dressing and opium addiction then you will love Kitty Peck.
I read The Music Hall Murders and the Child of Ill-Fortune back to back last
week. I had trouble putting them down. [note: these books are super inexpensive on kindle]
You guys all know I love Victoriana and surprising poems and
the dark, creaky shadow-drenched streets of London illuminated with surprising
prose. Kate Griffin pulled me in
immediately.
“She was dressed in a black embroidered gown that gaped wide
at the neck revealing a throat that was strung like a broken violin.”
Really vivid imagery, a perfect Cockney-vernacular which
sets brilliantly well in the first person narrative. Kitty is at times infuriating and vulnerable,
strong and sly. A different kind of
lady detective in stories that defy genre.
“Lady Ginger’s words were like something noxious coughed up
by a pampered cat. One minute it’s purring and curled up neat on your lap, next
it’s hawking out a half-digested rat head.”
“he coated my name with a greasy slick of insolence”
And as much as I love Kitty, I love Lucca! Smart, cultured Lucca who maintains pride and
vanity despite the treacherous accident that marred half of his beautiful
face. I love how a few Italian words and
phrases erupt now and then.
“I’d seen the truth of that picture, but Lucca, now , it was
like he could feel it all—every lash, every cut, every chain.”
It’s a very vivid and visceral and gritty world with dark
motivations and the basest of human depravity.
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
Book Spotlight: the Great Estate
Title: The Great Estate
Author: Sherri
Browning
Series: Thornbrook
Park, #3
Pubdate: August
4th, 2015
ISBN: 9781402286858
Pulled apart by past
mistakes. Driven by a passion neither could deny.
Sophia
Thorne was young and inexperienced when she married the dashing Earl of
Averford…and through dark and troubled times, their relationship nearly came to
an end. Now she’s determined to transform herself into the fiery, ardent lover
she always wanted to be, giving them a second chance at love… before they’re
lost to each other forever.
It
took nearly losing Sophia for Gabriel to realize he had allowed his love for
his great estate to distract him from his beautiful wife. But that time is
over. Despite all the obstacles standing in their way, Gabriel vows to teach
Sophia what it is to truly love…and to be loved by a husband devoted heart and
soul to her every desire.
Sherri
Browning writes historical and contemporary romance fiction,
sometimes with a paranormal twist. She is the author of critically acclaimed
classic mash-ups Jane Slayre and Grave Expectations. A graduate
of Mount Holyoke College, Sherri has lived in western Massachusetts and Greater
Detroit Michigan, but is now settled with her family in Simsbury, Connecticut.
Find her online at www.sherribrowningerwin.com.
***
Perfect for fans of Downton Abbey, the third in Sherri Browning’s Thornbrook Park
series, The Great Estate, comes out this August! To celebrate her new release,
Sherri’s agreed to answer some questions for us about herself and her career as
an author.
How do you approach the research in your novels in
order to provide the lush and well-drawn settings in which you populate your
characters.
I travel. I love visiting old
estates that have been kept in their original condition. I recently went
through the Frick Museum, former residence of Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919),
with author Julia London in New York City. I like to read fiction written in the
same time period I’m writing in to pick up some ideas of setting, like novels
by E.M Forster or Edith Wharton. I also use Pinterest and Tumblr to find some
pictures of location or period-specific clothes, art, and architecture.
An Excerpt:
Thornbrook Park. A warm
wave of pride filled him at the sight as Dale drove them up the winding way.
The chimneys appeared first over the crest of the hill, followed by the slate
roof, and finally the rose stone facade. How could he have stayed away so long?
Sophia wouldn’t be expecting him. He planned
to surprise her, perhaps persuade Finch not to even announce his return. He
would simply appear at the dinner hour, dressed to the nines, and act as if he
had been there the entire time. Darling, I believe the quail is cooked
perfectly, but not quite the same as when I shoot it myself… No, it wouldn’t
do. She hated it when he left her alone to go off hunting. He’d always known
it, but he couldn’t seem to give it up. Old habits. In truth, he couldn’t wait
to get his boots on, the good English ones he’d left behind, take up his rifle,
and stomp off into the woods. His woods. Alas, there would be no more hunting.
At least, not as frequently, and certainly not right away. Not until he was
certain that he wouldn’t upset Sophia further. Not until she forgave him.
Perhaps he could suggest
other activities that they could do together? His brow shot up. He knew just
what activities he had in mind, but they would have to work up to that. Slowly.
He meant to court her properly, one step at a time.
“Now, Dale, I don’t want
a fuss,” he said. “It’s good to be home but no need for a celebration. I mean
to slip in quietly.”
Buy Links:
Amazon: http://amzn.to/1LR3ai0
Apple: http://apple.co/1KQtgkA
Chapters: http://bit.ly/1Co93S5
Indiebound: http://bit.ly/1gmvOeQ
Tuesday, August 11, 2015
Book Spotlight: Tremaine's True Love by Grace Burrowes
Hi reader friends! I do love a good romance now and then!
Grace Burrowes gives us insight into Tremaine's True Love as well as an excerpt from the book
What makes a man a gentleman?
For a romance writer, this question has to be answered in every book, because implicit in the term “hero” is something of the gentleman. Heroes need not be charming, handsome or wealthy, and they might not even be obviously heroic, at least at the start of the book, but they have to be worthy of our loyalty for the duration of an entire book.
In the True Gentlemen series, I took three men who’d wandered across my pages in previous stories—Tremaine St. Michael, Daniel Banks, and Willow Dorning—and found them each a happily ever after. Tremaine is a flinty business man, Daniel is poor and pious, Willow finds polite society an enormous trial and would far rather be with his dogs. These fellows were not obvious choices as romance heroes, but they each hadsomething that tempted me to write stories for them.
When we met Tremaine in an earlier book (Gabriel: Lord of Regrets), Tremaine was convinced that he’d found a good candidate for the position of wife. He offered marriage, listing all the practical advantages to both parties, and he congratulated himself on how much sense his proposed union would make.
The lady turned him down flat, and as a gentleman is bound to do, he graciously ceded the field. He didn’t like it, he didn’t entirely understand how or what he’d lost, but he wished the happy couple well.
Daniel’s role in David: Lord of Honor was to charge to London with sermons at the ready in an attempt to restore his sister’s honor. The very man Daniel accused of wronging that sister had already set her back on the path to respectability.
Oops. But again, being a gentleman, Daniel wishes the couple every happiness, even if doing so costs him the future he’d envisioned for himself and his loved ones. Like Tremaine, he’s a gracious and even dignified loser.
Willow’s appearance in Worth: Lord of Reckoning is brief, but he too is determined to see a sister rescued from a possibly compromising position, and again, rescue is simply not on the heroine’s agenda.
In all three cases, the true gentleman acts in the best interests of those he loves and is responsible for, regardless of the inconvenience or cost to himself. Because Tremaine, Daniel, and Willow were honorable, I liked them. I trusted them, I wanted them to have the happiness they clearly already deserved.
In the Nicholas Haddonfield’s sisters—Nita, Kirsten, and Susannah—I found ladies willing to oblige my ambitions for these men. In each case, our hero has lessons yet to learn, and in each case, his inherent honor wins the day. He might not be handsome, wealthy, or charming in the eyes of the world, but because he’s a true gentleman in the eyes of his lady, he wins her true love.
I hope you enjoy reading these stories as much as I enjoyed writing them!
Excerpt – Tremaine’s True Love
Wealthy businessman Tremaine St. Michael has concluded that marriage to Lady Nita Haddonfield would be a prudent merger of complimentary interests for the mutual benefit and enjoyment of both parties… or some such blather.
Tremaine rapped on Lady Nita’s door, quietly, despite a light shining from beneath it. Somebody murmured something which he took for permission to enter.
“Mr. St. Michael?”
Tremaine stepped into her ladyship’s room, closed the door behind him and locked it, which brought the total of his impossibly forward behaviors to several thousand.
“Your ladyship expected a sister, or a maid with a pail of coal?”
“I wasn’t expecting you.” Lady Nita sat near the hearth in a blue velvet dressing gown. The wool stockings on her feet were thick enough to make a drover covetous. “Are you unwell, Mr. St. Michael?”
“You are not pleased to see me.” Did she think illness the only reason somebody would seek her out?
She set aside some pamphlet, a medical treatise, no doubt. No vapid novels for Lady Nita.
“I was not expecting you, sir.”
“You were not expecting me to discuss marriage with you earlier. I wasn’t expecting the topic to come up in a casual fashion either. May I sit?”
She waved an elegant hand at the other chair flanking the hearth. Tremaine settled in, trying to gather his thoughts while the firelight turned Lady Nita’s braid into a rope of burnished gold.
“You are pretty.” Brilliant place to start. The words had come out, heavily burred, something of an ongoing revelation.
“I am tall and blond,” she retorted, twitching the folds her of her robe. “I have the usual assortment of parts. What did you come here to discuss?”
Lady Nita was right, in a sense. Her beauty was not of the ballroom variety, but rather, an illumination of her features by characteristics unseen. She fretted over new babies, cut up potatoes like any crofter’s wife, and worried for her sisters. These attributes interested Tremaine. Her madonna-with-a-secret smile, keen intellect, and longing for laughter attracted him.
Even her medical pre-occupation, in its place, had some utility as well.
“Will you marry me, my lady?”
More brilliance. Where had his wits gone? George Haddonfield had graciously pointed out that Nita needed repose and laughter, and Tremaine was offering her the hand of the most restless and un-silly man in the realm.
The lady somehow contained her incredulity, staring at her hands. “You want to discuss marriage?”
“I believe I did just open that topic. Allow me to elaborate on my thesis: Lady Bernita Haddonfield, will you do me the honor of becoming my wife? I think we would suit, and I can promise you would know no want in my care.”
A proper swain would have been on his damn bended knee, the lady’s hand in his. Lady Nita would probably laugh herself to tears if Tremaine attempted that nonsense. Lady Nita picked up her pamphlet, which Tremaine could now see was written in German.
“Why, Mr. St. Michael?”
“I beg your pardon?” Tremaine was about to pitch the damned pamphlet in the fire, until he recalled that Nita Haddonfield excelled at obscuring her stronger emotions.
“Why should you marry me, Tremaine St. Michael? Why should I marry you? I’ve had other offers, you’ve made other offers. You haven’t known me long enough to form an opinion of my character beyond the superficial.”
This ability to take a situation apart, into causes, effects, symptoms, and prognosis was part of the reason she was successful as a healer. Tremaine applied the same tendencies to commercial situations, so he didn’t dismiss her questions as coyness or manipulation.
She wasn’t rejecting him either. She most assuredly was not rejecting him.
Grace Burrowes gives us insight into Tremaine's True Love as well as an excerpt from the book
What makes a man a gentleman?
For a romance writer, this question has to be answered in every book, because implicit in the term “hero” is something of the gentleman. Heroes need not be charming, handsome or wealthy, and they might not even be obviously heroic, at least at the start of the book, but they have to be worthy of our loyalty for the duration of an entire book.
In the True Gentlemen series, I took three men who’d wandered across my pages in previous stories—Tremaine St. Michael, Daniel Banks, and Willow Dorning—and found them each a happily ever after. Tremaine is a flinty business man, Daniel is poor and pious, Willow finds polite society an enormous trial and would far rather be with his dogs. These fellows were not obvious choices as romance heroes, but they each hadsomething that tempted me to write stories for them.
When we met Tremaine in an earlier book (Gabriel: Lord of Regrets), Tremaine was convinced that he’d found a good candidate for the position of wife. He offered marriage, listing all the practical advantages to both parties, and he congratulated himself on how much sense his proposed union would make.
The lady turned him down flat, and as a gentleman is bound to do, he graciously ceded the field. He didn’t like it, he didn’t entirely understand how or what he’d lost, but he wished the happy couple well.
Daniel’s role in David: Lord of Honor was to charge to London with sermons at the ready in an attempt to restore his sister’s honor. The very man Daniel accused of wronging that sister had already set her back on the path to respectability.
Oops. But again, being a gentleman, Daniel wishes the couple every happiness, even if doing so costs him the future he’d envisioned for himself and his loved ones. Like Tremaine, he’s a gracious and even dignified loser.
Willow’s appearance in Worth: Lord of Reckoning is brief, but he too is determined to see a sister rescued from a possibly compromising position, and again, rescue is simply not on the heroine’s agenda.
In all three cases, the true gentleman acts in the best interests of those he loves and is responsible for, regardless of the inconvenience or cost to himself. Because Tremaine, Daniel, and Willow were honorable, I liked them. I trusted them, I wanted them to have the happiness they clearly already deserved.
In the Nicholas Haddonfield’s sisters—Nita, Kirsten, and Susannah—I found ladies willing to oblige my ambitions for these men. In each case, our hero has lessons yet to learn, and in each case, his inherent honor wins the day. He might not be handsome, wealthy, or charming in the eyes of the world, but because he’s a true gentleman in the eyes of his lady, he wins her true love.
I hope you enjoy reading these stories as much as I enjoyed writing them!
Excerpt – Tremaine’s True Love
Wealthy businessman Tremaine St. Michael has concluded that marriage to Lady Nita Haddonfield would be a prudent merger of complimentary interests for the mutual benefit and enjoyment of both parties… or some such blather.
Tremaine rapped on Lady Nita’s door, quietly, despite a light shining from beneath it. Somebody murmured something which he took for permission to enter.
“Mr. St. Michael?”
Tremaine stepped into her ladyship’s room, closed the door behind him and locked it, which brought the total of his impossibly forward behaviors to several thousand.
“Your ladyship expected a sister, or a maid with a pail of coal?”
“I wasn’t expecting you.” Lady Nita sat near the hearth in a blue velvet dressing gown. The wool stockings on her feet were thick enough to make a drover covetous. “Are you unwell, Mr. St. Michael?”
“You are not pleased to see me.” Did she think illness the only reason somebody would seek her out?
She set aside some pamphlet, a medical treatise, no doubt. No vapid novels for Lady Nita.
“I was not expecting you, sir.”
“You were not expecting me to discuss marriage with you earlier. I wasn’t expecting the topic to come up in a casual fashion either. May I sit?”
She waved an elegant hand at the other chair flanking the hearth. Tremaine settled in, trying to gather his thoughts while the firelight turned Lady Nita’s braid into a rope of burnished gold.
“You are pretty.” Brilliant place to start. The words had come out, heavily burred, something of an ongoing revelation.
“I am tall and blond,” she retorted, twitching the folds her of her robe. “I have the usual assortment of parts. What did you come here to discuss?”
Lady Nita was right, in a sense. Her beauty was not of the ballroom variety, but rather, an illumination of her features by characteristics unseen. She fretted over new babies, cut up potatoes like any crofter’s wife, and worried for her sisters. These attributes interested Tremaine. Her madonna-with-a-secret smile, keen intellect, and longing for laughter attracted him.
Even her medical pre-occupation, in its place, had some utility as well.
“Will you marry me, my lady?”
More brilliance. Where had his wits gone? George Haddonfield had graciously pointed out that Nita needed repose and laughter, and Tremaine was offering her the hand of the most restless and un-silly man in the realm.
The lady somehow contained her incredulity, staring at her hands. “You want to discuss marriage?”
“I believe I did just open that topic. Allow me to elaborate on my thesis: Lady Bernita Haddonfield, will you do me the honor of becoming my wife? I think we would suit, and I can promise you would know no want in my care.”
A proper swain would have been on his damn bended knee, the lady’s hand in his. Lady Nita would probably laugh herself to tears if Tremaine attempted that nonsense. Lady Nita picked up her pamphlet, which Tremaine could now see was written in German.
“Why, Mr. St. Michael?”
“I beg your pardon?” Tremaine was about to pitch the damned pamphlet in the fire, until he recalled that Nita Haddonfield excelled at obscuring her stronger emotions.
“Why should you marry me, Tremaine St. Michael? Why should I marry you? I’ve had other offers, you’ve made other offers. You haven’t known me long enough to form an opinion of my character beyond the superficial.”
This ability to take a situation apart, into causes, effects, symptoms, and prognosis was part of the reason she was successful as a healer. Tremaine applied the same tendencies to commercial situations, so he didn’t dismiss her questions as coyness or manipulation.
She wasn’t rejecting him either. She most assuredly was not rejecting him.
Buy Links
Barnes and Noble: http://bit.ly/BNBurrowesTremaine
IndieBound: http://bit.ly/IndieBurrowesTremaine
Author Biography
New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Grace Burrowes' bestsellers include The Heir, The Soldier, Lady Maggie's Secret Scandal, Lady Sophie's Christmas Wish and Lady Eve's Indiscretion. Her Regency romances have received extensive praise, including starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and Booklist. Grace is branching out into short stories and Scotland-set Victorian romance with Sourcebooks. She is a practicing family law attorney and lives in rural Maryland.
Social Media Links
Website: http://graceburrowes.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/GraceBurrowes
Tuesday, August 04, 2015
BOOK GUSH! A Curious Beginning by Deanna Raybourn

GUYS I LOVE DEANNA RAYBOURN!
Not only is she one of the best authors to follow on social media and blog, she is a prime example of how to connect and engage with one's readership.
Oh! And she writes the sexiest most intelligent books in the stratosphere.
( read my Q and A with Deanna here )
I fell head over heels over her Lady Julia books and then, most recently, with her triad of adorable adventure romances that recalled Out of Africa, The Scarlet Pimpernel and, well, everything good thing (my book gush of City of Jasmine is here ) And now we have a new series to tempt readers of Julia and Brisbane who want something that stretches over books and allows us to settle in to a flint and tinder romance. Beginning with A Curious Beginning (releasing September)
Raybourn writes with a knowing wink and a smile and, here, she is back in Victorian London featuring the darling and bright Veronica Speedwell, a Victorian lady reminiscent of Amelia Peabody who loves to chase butterfly specimens across the exotic corners of several continents and can stay off any untoward advances with her hat pin. She keeps a small mouse named Chester tucked tightly to her as a mascot and she is brave and wonderful with an athletic form, a manner too bold for a spinster, and a life stretched with possibility when her guardian "aunt" passes away.
But there is intrigue! Mystery! Murder! Stolen identities! and even a Royal tinge of excitement and Veronica, alongside the growly and perfect Emerson-like Stoker (there's a lot of Elizabeth Peters in this series) into a whirlwind of corruption, danger and near death.
No one writes quite like Deanna Raybourn: pairing a whip-smart sense of humour, paragraphs and conversations replete with verisimilitude with sensuality and intelligence. Obviously, the sparks between our unlikely pair: Stoker the taxidermist with a high falutin' past and Veronica with the unintentional web of intrigue entrapping her corsets, bloomers and fashionable clothes, is palpable. But Raybourn leads them through several verbal waltzes, heated breaths and close quarters, without ever quite throwing them in each other's arms. This is what kept me reading at a harried pace through hilarious scenes with a travelling circus ( seems like Stoker is also an expert knife thrower, amongst other things) to the alleys of London and the docks and filmy murk of the Thames.
The connection between the two is something that will clutch at your heart and catch in your throat, but Raybourn knows how to play her cards and keep you wanting just a little more. This is chemistry and sexual tension at its finest: a marriage of minds, joining equals who keep the banter flying.
Hilarious and romantic and breathtaking at the same time.
An unconventional symphony that twists and sizzles in flying colours. I cannot WAIT for the next Veronica Speedwell.
My thanks to the publisher for an e-galley.
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Am Writing: Everything about Benny Citrone
As a reader, I love learning about
the behind the scenes stuff of novels I love.
Especially when it comes to characters. I want to know what is going on
in the mind of an author when they create my latest fictional book obsession. I
google a lot. Interviews. Pinterest boards.
I would love to
pepper Martha Grimes about Melrose Plant and ask Patrick O’Brian what he was
thinking with Maturin (and where Maturin came from ). I would love to ask LM
Montgomery about Barney Snaith.
I am currently working on the second Herringford and Watts
book A Lesson in Love and Murder wherein I introduce Benfield Citrone.
Benny came about when I was butting my head against the wall
with Jasper Forth. Jasper is a long time friend of the girls and, in his mind,
a prospective love interest for Merinda whom he just adores. But he wasn’t adding the spark I needed to the story and he wasn’t bringing out a
zesty and challenging side of Merinda I needed him to. He’s still essential to the story and I won’t
let you know how his path ends, but for the purpose of the middle book I
needed something other than Jasper.
Benny also came about as a counterbalance to Ray. My Ray DeLuca ( who is the leading guy in Bachelor Girl's Guide to Murder is extremely problematic in book II
and doesn’t spend as much time on page as in the first, though he remains a pivotal character and plot point. I know some readers would love Ray but some
wouldn’t be attracted to him. I wanted
to give prospective readers options. I don’t always fall for the most obvious
character in a novel and I wanted to provide different types that reflected the
major differences in Jem and Merinda. Though best friends, Jem and Merinda would not
be attracted to the same kind of man. I
wanted to have some prospect of romance because I love writing it and it makes
the mysteries more fun (and gives them an extra slant for investment) and Ray
just wasn’t cutting it in this book ( he really doesn’t. *shakes head* he’s kinda clueless and
I keep asking him: do you REALLY want to do that? And he’s
like, “dude. You made me up. I cannot be held responsible for my poor albeit
good intentioned life choices)
Benny showed up and he was a mountie. My dad is an RCMP chaplain and a long time
collector of mountie memorabilia and history. It is a major part of my
upbringing. Merinda calls him Benny but
his full name is Benfield Citrone.
Benfield is the middle name of Samuel Benfield Steele, an RCMP officer renowned for taming the Yukon
without use of a firearm. Citrone is (
get this ) the surname of a client I used to work with at my day job and the
name just stuck.
I liked the idea of having a man who possessed the same
deductive skill as Merinda but in a slightly different way. Merinda is schooled in Sherlock Holmes and
the guidebook of former Pinkerton M.C. Wheaton. Benny is a tracker. He is remarkably
observant but his skills were honed in the Yukon. He is vibrant and perceptive and aware and has
immediate chemistry with Merinda.
I needed to give Merinda an equal: I do some neat things with Jasper but at
this point in the series she could stomp him into submission. The second book in my series thematically
deals with anarchy and submission and I couldn’t have Merinda sway someone so
easily. She has equal footing with Benny and part of their mutual attraction is
borne of their butting heads.
Benny is in Toronto infiltrating an anarchist group in hopes
of learning more about his missing cousin, Jonathan. Jonathan may well be dead but Benny won’t rest
until he has tracked every last clue to his cousin’s whereabouts: dead or
alive.
I am having a lot of fun with him, especially as he takes on
his own characteristics. As a writer, I
find I have a beginning outline and vague form and idea of a character but soon
enough I’ll be tapping away and they begin to think and talk for
themselves. I have had more time with
Jasper, Ray, Merinda and Jem so they have been their independent fully-formed
entities for a long creative while,
Benny is fun to get to know.
My sister in law has a question for me any time I go out on a
date and that is: Who Would Play Him in a Movie?
Benny is conventionally handsome except that he has had his
nose broken in two places by a hockey puck.
I think of actor Sam Reid ( but with brown eyes instead of
blue )
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
In Which I write Elsewhere
Hi Team!
It's been awhile!
It is becoming increasingly difficult for me to review every single book I read ( what with working on my second novel and all ) but I try to do a good job of keeping my Goodreads up to date! Often with little comments or squeals of glee. I encourage you to check out my reading log there.
Rachel's Goodreads
And while you are there, feel free to add my first Herringford and Watts novella "A Singular and Whimsical Problem" to your shelf.
AND! you can also add the second full-length H and W novel "A Lesson in Love and Murder" to your shelf because my publisher was nice enough to put this on there ( even though I haven't quite written it all yet ;) )
(and seriously: I am working on Lesson in Love and Murder right now and you will all love Benfield Citrone --- my MOUNTIE! yes, I have a mountie.Also, a cameo by Emma Goldman. Also, a cameo by Teddy Roosevelt. Part of it is set in Chicago where my trouser-wearing lady detectives pit against anarchists ---with explosives! La! )
In other places:
On Novel Crossing, I wrote about reporters in CBA fiction ( something dear to my heart as I have one in my own special Ray)
I also interviewed Kate Breslin whose Not By Sight was fantabulous
For Breakpoint, I was able to write about the fab new film Testament of Youth as well as review Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee
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irrelevant hedgehog |
It's been awhile!
It is becoming increasingly difficult for me to review every single book I read ( what with working on my second novel and all ) but I try to do a good job of keeping my Goodreads up to date! Often with little comments or squeals of glee. I encourage you to check out my reading log there.
Rachel's Goodreads
And while you are there, feel free to add my first Herringford and Watts novella "A Singular and Whimsical Problem" to your shelf.
AND! you can also add the second full-length H and W novel "A Lesson in Love and Murder" to your shelf because my publisher was nice enough to put this on there ( even though I haven't quite written it all yet ;) )
(and seriously: I am working on Lesson in Love and Murder right now and you will all love Benfield Citrone --- my MOUNTIE! yes, I have a mountie.Also, a cameo by Emma Goldman. Also, a cameo by Teddy Roosevelt. Part of it is set in Chicago where my trouser-wearing lady detectives pit against anarchists ---with explosives! La! )
In other places:
On Novel Crossing, I wrote about reporters in CBA fiction ( something dear to my heart as I have one in my own special Ray)
I also interviewed Kate Breslin whose Not By Sight was fantabulous
For Breakpoint, I was able to write about the fab new film Testament of Youth as well as review Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
Q and A: Natasha Pulley

Readers, I cannot tell you how thrilled I was to gulp down The Watchmaker of Filigree Street over the course of Saturday. That's right, I read all day. This is a keeper book. It is funny and fresh and wonderful. I laughed aloud and often when I wasn't sinking into its gorgeous language.
I was thrilled, too, when Natasha Pulley agreed to do a Q and A here! Her voice is so special and she is an author that came out of nowhere for me and one that I will follow forever. I loved her characters immediately!
[[A few snippets of imagery made me trip over how gorgeous they were:
"....the dark corridor to a door the far end under which firelight bled."
"Under the gas lamps mist pawed at the windows of the closed shops"
"The gold caught the ember-light and shone the colour of a human voice."
"Today the silence had a silver hem."
"...water mumbled in the pipes and there were steps and sudden bright thumps..."
"A prickling terseness started about halfway down his spine as if somebody had rested their fingertips gunshaped between the vertebrae there."
"...still dense over the river where it made skeleton ghosts of ships' masts and trapped the stale smell of the water"
"your science can save a man's life, but imagination makes it worth living."
(I could go on forever! But, I won't) ]]
R: I lost my taste for every other book after reading Watchmaker. Your voice was something I had never encountered before. Do you just sit and write? Or are you a plotter?
I just sit and write. The book didn’t really have a plot at first, but then my editor sort of nudged me and said it might be a good idea if something actually happened.
R:There’s a lot going on in the story---some of it quite dark--- what with nationalism, racism and even terrorism! At times, it seemed to parallel our own world—even though set well over a century ago. How do you think the Victorian age and the “Steampunk” genre best help us confront some of the limitations and darkness of our contemporary time?
Historical fiction is a lot like a telescope. We learn history as a series of facts, unemotionally, and so we tend to think of it in a fairly detached, distant way. Fiction brings everything near again. But if you turn it round the other way and look through it backward, you can make very near things look distant. Very few modern problems are new — they just look new, because they’re closer than we usually see things. Putting them into historical fiction, and making them distant, can sometimes make it clearer what they actually are.
R: My head hurt just thinking of how brilliantly mapped out the entire plot was…not to mention the research from botany to science to watchmaking! The different timelines, the dates, the happenstances, and the events perfectly constructed by Keita Mori. How did you keep track and juggle all of this?
I should probably have kept a big chart, but I’m not that efficient; when I wrote, I tended to have bullet points at the start of new sections to remind me what had to go in and what it had to match up to later, but that’s quite an easy thing to do. A book looks like a linear document when you read it, but writing one, you can skip about from chapter three to chapter twenty without all the intervening stuff to make you forget.
R:I must tell you—I cannot remember highlighting a book so enthusiastically as I did The Watchmaker of Filigree Street. It was at times heartbreaking and tense, yes, but also extremely funny. Do you have a personal favourite moment?
Yes. The moment Thaniel forget the music from the Foreign Office Ball, and the moment Mori forgets how to play it, is probably one of the oldest and most redrafted in the whole thing. I think I spent more time trying to get that right than I did on all the parts set in Japan.
R: absolutely adored the relationships between your characters. Sure, the development of Grace and Matsumoto and Mori and Thaniel could set us in mind of Philip Pullman and Doyle ( as two examples). Yet, they were all so unique and so organic. Were there concrete inspirations for your characters? Or, did they just develop naturally on their own?
Definitely there were concrete foundations for everything, only some of which I can remember. I watched a Japanese sci fi movie called Moon Child (it’s about vampires) in which one of the actors looks very like Mori, so I started blurring the two in my mind after that. I was also reading lots of Sherlock Holmes when I started writing it, and it always struck me as strange that although Watson is yanked always between his wife and Holmes at any given time, nobody ever really seems to get properly upset by any of it. I also read everything by Robin Hobb, who has a marvellous character called the Fool who knows the future. He’s a prophet in a far grander sense than Mori is, and he’s much stranger, but a lot of her stories hinge on how what he can do affects his relationships. That said, concrete foundations only go so far and I think the point at which a story really becomes yours is when you start building your own structure rather than looking at other people’s architecture; after point, the characters did develop by themselves.
R:Another note on character: I loved how there was no distinct line between good and bad and each character had moments where the reader questioned or even misunderstood. Here, I think of Grace. While I found it difficult reading about her reactive response to Mori, I empathized with my belief that she was doing what she thought was right. How did you set to achieve this balance?
Nineteenth century novels are full of total candlewasters who wouldn’t react to a slap in the face; I hate The Portrait of a Lady, because the heroine of it goes back to an awful man at the end for a lifetime of rubbish rather than murder him like you want her to. It’s righteous but annoying. With Grace and Mori, I didn’t want either of them to be a coward, and I didn’t want either of them to be a saint. It felt much more human for them to be afraid of each other and to fight and to come away less than shiny.
R:Finally, what has been your favourite part of your journey to publication thus far?
The book cover, definitely the book cover. I owe the Bloomsbury design team a very big round of drinks.

Natasha Pulley studied English Literature at Oxford University and earned a creative writing MA at the University of East Anglia. Pulley lives near Ely in Cambridgeshire, England. This is her first novel.
Find Natasha Pulley on the web
Follow her on Twitter
Add Watchmaker to Goodreads
Friday, July 17, 2015
Bachelor Girl's Guide to Murder is around the web!
Hi Team!
Just letting you know that you can pre-order the first full-length Herringford and Watts adventure (a novella entitled A Singular and Whimsical Problem will introduce you to the characters in December!) is now available for pre-order
Go to Amazon!
Also, Bachelor Girl's Guide to Murder is on Goodreads --- so please feel free to go and add it to your TBR account because I think you will want to read it!
Also, I have been working on the second novel in the series A Lesson in Love and Murder and you can check out my pinterest page
My reading world lately has been this:
Just letting you know that you can pre-order the first full-length Herringford and Watts adventure (a novella entitled A Singular and Whimsical Problem will introduce you to the characters in December!) is now available for pre-order
Go to Amazon!
Also, Bachelor Girl's Guide to Murder is on Goodreads --- so please feel free to go and add it to your TBR account because I think you will want to read it!
Also, I have been working on the second novel in the series A Lesson in Love and Murder and you can check out my pinterest page
My reading world lately has been this:
Friday, July 03, 2015
Book Gush: Not by Sight by Kate Breslin

You guys I am gonna gush. So be ye warned. I am just letting
you know that there will be all-out gushing. Because Kate Breslin is a genius
and this book is a world.
I loved this book. I loved the experience of reading this
book: the physical reaction that had my hands shaking and my palm over my heart
to hear its thudding beat.
I loved this book. This book is smart. This book is
brilliant. This book is poetry. This book is parable.
And, best of all, this book is a perfect literary read: a
book lover’s dream---pulling on Leroux’s Phantom of the Opera, with hints of
Thornfield Hall, with a great, lovely nod to the Scarlet Pimpernel. This book reminds us why we read.
We read for love. We read to find ourselves in the pages and
we are happily surprised when the characters speak for us--- regardless of time
or travail or circumstance.
A well-flourished exposition on betrayal, trust and hope,
Breslin thematically weaves faith tenets within the tenuous world of the Great
War. The prose that she so well honed in
For Such a Time is expert poetry-in-motion in her sophomore novel.
And can I talk about the feminist suffragette slant? I have
mentioned before that a favourite literary trope is exploring women who so want
to take a stand but really have to stumble into it : realizing that their individual
gifts might be as resonant in their quiet ways of changing the world than in
grand gestures. Here, the book opens
with a ball throwing back to Lord Grenville’s ball: that pivotal moment in the Scarlet Pimpernel and as Percy falls
immediately for the dashing French actress Marguerite, so Jack Benningham
disguised as a playboy while working for the Admiralty is immediately smitten
with Grace Mabry---to him a nameless goddess ensconced in tempting green,
swathed as Pandora ….
The metaphorical box
she opens is enough to distract and lure him away from his mission at the
event, culminating in her leaving him with a white feather, an insignia of the
cowardice she feels at his being a playboy in London-town and away from the
action of the European theatre.
They meet again, although now Jack ----safely ensconced on a grand estate as Lord Roxwood---is blind
and scarred, the result of an accident at sea immediately after the ball but,
to Grace and others, just another story in the tabloid rags of a playboy drunk
who set his townhouse on fire.
She becomes his driver, when she is not working on
his estate with the Woman's Forage Corps he becomes smitten
with her via their preternatural kinship and a menagerie of colourful
personalities are bottled in a cozy countryside: the servants and friends of Lord
Roxwell ( including Violet, Jack’s rich fiancée and Lord Marcus, a regular
Andrew Ffoulkes for those who subscribe to all things Pimpernel)
I did find, at times, that Grace was almost too good – and too
perfect a mouthpiece to express Breslin’s religious and moral intent. But, I found myself not caring because I was
so much in love with the story.
In love with the sexual tension that was an undercurrent of every
zippy, nerve-tingling scene Grace and Jack shared together. In love with the soft introduction of betrayal
and helplessness, of hope and believably flawed characters. In love with the
resplendent juxtaposition of conversation with pure descriptive poetry as
Grace, like her creator, imbues the English landscape with a painting of
words. In love with my favourite
romantic trope: a man scarred who looks to the promise of love for redemption.
This is Rochester, this is Sir Percy, this is
Col Brandon --- this is the reason my literary heart beats so strongly. In love with the tantalizing research eked out
in every scene regarding the Woman’s Forage corps --- a precursor to the Women’s
Land Army of WWII ( this has shades of Land Girls, for those BBC fans)
Espionage! Treason! And an e-galley that is pretty much
entirely highlighted as I tripped carelessly in love with almost
every.single.quote A teacher once
referred to poetry as the perfect words in the perfect order. Not one of Breslin’s descriptors is out of
place:
“Most women,” says Jack, “are by far more intelligent---which
is probably why men don’t want them voting at the polls.’ His tone sobered as
he added, ‘Fear tends to breed hatred and dissention, Miss Mabry.”
“Just like an artist captures an image on canvas, a good
writer must paint a picture with words”
“Men don’t like suffragettes because they want to keep us
under their thumbs”
“Those smiles of his were so rare, each one she received
from him like a gift”
“His gentle voice caressed like the rustling grasses of the
field. “
“Grace pressed close and touched her lips to his. Let this
be their parting then, she thought, surrendering not to reason but to her heart”
“Passion unfurled between them like the petals of his most
prized rose.”
“She sensed in him a longing, tasting the loneliness he would
face in the days to come. Surrounded by him, she breathed in the spice of his
Bay Rum cologne mingled with a touch of aged leather and the scent that was
uniquely Jack Bennigham.”
“Her emerald eyes gleamed, and Jack drank in her presence –from
the riot of red curls bound in green ribbon to the beautiful eyes, her perfect
nose and her rosebud mouth that now quivered with mischief.”
I just want to talk about this book forever. And I
will. So I need you guys to promise me
that you will go read it and then see if you can get through it without dying
to throw in the Anthony Andrews version of the Pimpernel (but resist it and
keep reading) and then come talk to me. FOREVER!
As for me, I have preordered three print copies: one for me,
two spares – or to giveaway to friends who will fall as hard for this fictional
world as I did.
BOOK LOVE
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Boston!
For the second time in a year, I was back satiating my passion for BOSTON! My goodness, by far my favourite US city!
I spent six days wandering the city as well as taking advantage of the amazing and quick commuter rail to head out to Concord to visit Orchard House (Louisa May Alcott's often homebase and the inspiration for Little Women) and to visit Walden Pond, Thoreau's homestead and Ralph Waldo Emerson's house.
I love Boston.
Some of the reasons I love it:
Boston proper is a relatively small city (especially compared to Toronto) so it is so easy to walk around in.
The Common: Reading in the Common with an iced coffee while watching those Swan boats? Love
The cobblestoned Freedom Trail.
Quincy Market and Faneuil Hall
The accents! To Canadian Rachel, most Americans have accents: but the Boston dialect is so distinctive and regionally specific----
THE NORTH END! Oh my goodness, I love the North End: site of Paul Revere's house and the Old North Church but also Boston's Little Italy---home to amazon cannoli and all manner of delicious Italian food at restaurants people line up for hours to get in.
Back Bay and Beacon Hill: the rows of red-bricked ornate architecture, the public alleys and Boulevards
THE PEOPLE: the people in Boston are so friendly. When I was there last autumn, stepping out of the airport, a woman used her Charlie Card to get me on the subway and rode past her stop to make sure I found the Back Bay station
The Green Dragon Tavern: I love the ambience and the ghosts of the rebel Sons of Liberty plotting their revolution
The Harbour: gorgeous! I mean, one moment you are remembering a ton of darjeeling was tipped over the side, the next you are gazing over at New England lighthouses
The people ( I think I mentioned this )
The Old State House and the Old South Meeting House: just walking Boston gives you a sense that you have peeled back a few hundred years
And SO MANY MORE THINGS
pictures! ( ever so craftily stolen from instagram)
I read great books in Boston
Finally finished Mad Miss Mimic by Sarah Henstra
American Eve: Evelyn Nesbit, Stanford White, the Birth of the 'It' Girl and the Crime of the Century by Paula Uruburu ( note: this non-fiction is UNPUTFRIGGINDOWNABLE )
Popular by Maya van Wagenen
The Daring Exploits of a Runaway Heiress which was adorable and snarky
I was at opening night of Newsies on its Boston tour stop and it was my first time seeing the highly anticipated Broadway show ( I have been stoked about it ). Ironically, I am seeing it opening night here in Toronto. Lots of Newsies for me!
I spent six days wandering the city as well as taking advantage of the amazing and quick commuter rail to head out to Concord to visit Orchard House (Louisa May Alcott's often homebase and the inspiration for Little Women) and to visit Walden Pond, Thoreau's homestead and Ralph Waldo Emerson's house.
I love Boston.
Some of the reasons I love it:
Boston proper is a relatively small city (especially compared to Toronto) so it is so easy to walk around in.
The Common: Reading in the Common with an iced coffee while watching those Swan boats? Love
The cobblestoned Freedom Trail.
Quincy Market and Faneuil Hall
The accents! To Canadian Rachel, most Americans have accents: but the Boston dialect is so distinctive and regionally specific----
THE NORTH END! Oh my goodness, I love the North End: site of Paul Revere's house and the Old North Church but also Boston's Little Italy---home to amazon cannoli and all manner of delicious Italian food at restaurants people line up for hours to get in.
Back Bay and Beacon Hill: the rows of red-bricked ornate architecture, the public alleys and Boulevards
THE PEOPLE: the people in Boston are so friendly. When I was there last autumn, stepping out of the airport, a woman used her Charlie Card to get me on the subway and rode past her stop to make sure I found the Back Bay station
The Green Dragon Tavern: I love the ambience and the ghosts of the rebel Sons of Liberty plotting their revolution
The Harbour: gorgeous! I mean, one moment you are remembering a ton of darjeeling was tipped over the side, the next you are gazing over at New England lighthouses
The people ( I think I mentioned this )
The Old State House and the Old South Meeting House: just walking Boston gives you a sense that you have peeled back a few hundred years
And SO MANY MORE THINGS
pictures! ( ever so craftily stolen from instagram)
I read great books in Boston
Finally finished Mad Miss Mimic by Sarah Henstra
American Eve: Evelyn Nesbit, Stanford White, the Birth of the 'It' Girl and the Crime of the Century by Paula Uruburu ( note: this non-fiction is UNPUTFRIGGINDOWNABLE )
Popular by Maya van Wagenen
The Daring Exploits of a Runaway Heiress which was adorable and snarky
I was at opening night of Newsies on its Boston tour stop and it was my first time seeing the highly anticipated Broadway show ( I have been stoked about it ). Ironically, I am seeing it opening night here in Toronto. Lots of Newsies for me!
Friday, June 19, 2015
'Caroline in the City' is on youtube and I am very ranty about it......
I was amused to find all episodes of Caroline in the City on youtube. I wasn’t a diehard follower but I had seen several episodes esp of the
first season in high school and I liked the sarcastic bite of the humour mostly
between Caroline’s cartoonist Richard ( who, clad in black and obsessed with
existential poetry was a complete anomaly in 90s heroic standards) and Annie
(the best character on the show, Caroline’s best friend and a dancer in Cats).
So, when I discovered it ( probably after thinking about it
while talking to Allison) I watched a
few eps here and there on youtube, recorded from syndication on some British
station as evident through the v.o. on the credits and enjoyed revisiting the 90s
clothes, the 90s hairstyles, Lea Thompson’s dimples and the broadway
references. Note: there is a fab epwith David Hyde Pierce playing an accountant who wants to be in Cats. You
should find it.
But then, the show takes a nosedive. A nosedive.
I don’t know (and I have a barely working knowledge of this ) if it was
taking cues from relationship triangles and disasters in Friends but it goes so
way off the deep end and I GOT VERBALLY ANGRY last night.
ANGRY at a sitcom.
Why? Because I am an adult and I can.
Let’s recap the relationships in Ye Olde C in the C. You may need wine
Richard ---- morose, bitter artist turned colourist who has a
thing for sunny Caroline but doesn’t realize it til Caroline almost marries
Del---her poofy haired greeting card mogul.
Caroline doesn’t recognize this.
(note: my teenage self never realized that Richard is basically
gay. Now, it is blatantly obvious. Regardless, Richard shoulda ended up with
Annie or with Del. Whomever.).
Caroline----perky
Wisconsin native with dimples who has her own single girl in the city comic
strip. In the second season ---after a few mixed paths and almost-happens realizes
that she loves Richard. This is not done
well. This is not done subtly. Culminating in her leaving Richard a message on
his
( hello 90s!) answering machine which his returned-from-Italy old
girlfriend Julia erases.
Then Richard marries Julia!!! After pretending to be married to Caroline. This isn’t even some charming screwball comedy
move from the 30s….
Then we get season three which, I swear, I may not actually make it through:
Julia---- I HATE IT WHEN writers resort to a Julia. The Men love B**ches Trope. I HATE IT! The same guy who would fall for Caroline
would not end up marrying ( and yet he does) the woman who albeit gorgeous, he
left in Italy with his memories of backpacking.
It is awful. The two have no onscreen chemistry and the
love triangle is so very sickening.
Julia is a horrible woman and she does dastardly things and we’re
supposed to hate her but root for good girl Caroline to win Richard. But, who
WANTS Richard now that he has proven terrible decision making skills? Who wants
Richard to be the hero when he knows that he is susceptible to a gorgeous but
horrible woman with a trust fund?
Not me. Anything that
was endearing and black and artistic and nerdy about him before is now just
annoying. And Caroline is annoying
because she gives into Julia and I want them all ( except for Annie ) to fall
off a cliff.
But the show decides
(cue from Friends?) to finally get Richard and Caroline together. In the stupidest way possible. The absolute worst writing of any “love”
story ever. And they keep poking at it
with episodes soapily linked to each other in To Be Continued. It is so
genuinely awful.
First, they have the entire ensemble in an unrealistic
flashback bottle episode where they are all tied up by a marriage counselor.
Then they release Julia’s trust fund so Richard is no longer
a starving artist and can paint in a penthouse.
This is disingenuous to the character who has spent seasons ALMOST
getting his big break (in a funny and clever way). They just cash in their
bored chips and GIVE him money. All that clever writing work. UGH!
He also doesn’t have to work for Caroline anymore which means
they can’t have their daily domestic spats; nor can Annie show up from across
the hall and engage him in a battle of sardonic quips.
They paint themselves into the worst corner ever and do you
know how they get out of it? ( I am
rolling my eyes here): by having Caroline and Annie think that Julia has
cheated Richard prompting Richard to follow his wife to Spain to confront her.
Thereafter, Annie and Caroline also go to Spain and Richard almost gets
trampled BY A BULL RUN ( oh how I wish he had).
And this was the episode I watched last night after a few
pints with a friend and I WAS SO LIVID that someone ( a many someones, to be
exact) made actual real live money and lots of it for writing this awful
nonsense. Like give me the money and
make Richard get trampled by the bulls….
And it gets even worse…
Caroline and Annie
have apologized for their mistake and gone back to New York. Richard follows Caroline because on his
deathbed from bull trample ( he’s not even scraped) he re-evaluated his life
and wanted to be with Caroline.
![]() |
You two shouldn't be together. The cat deserves more happiness |
And I didn’t get past this moment so I cannot tell you what
happens next because I was yelling at my computer and because I love my MacBook
Air so much didn’t want to be inspired
to throw it across my room in frustration.
So what have we learned?
A.) people who write throaway bull running episodes owe me money B.) I
hate it when writers create a “love triangle” by having their heroine or hero
end up with a jerky mean and evil person. WHY WILL WE LIKE THEM IF THEY MAKE
POOR LIFE CHOICES AND FALL FOR HORRIBLE people?
C.) the 90s. oh the 90s
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
book gush! Tiffany Girl by Deeanne Gist
Rambly Rambly Book Gush
I am going to go straight out and say that Deeanne Gist
hasn’t always been a favourite read of mine. Not her writing ability, so much as her heroines and the conventional wrap-up and message of her stories. But,I read them all. I guess because I saw some spark I
knew might be one day fully realized.
I followed her from her Bethany House days to Howard and found that I enjoyed the Fair
books more than I had her previous books. We are, thought I, on the right
track. Maybe because she had moved away from ( there's nothing wrong with this ) a more conservative inspirational publisher and had a little more wiggle room.

But, for the most part, the happily ever after sealed the
deal with Gist’s heroines and I found myself thinking a bit of them had
died. The prose and story waltzed around the eventuality of marriage.
Rightly so, as this was the focal point of so many women’s stories in
historical periods. But, I digress....
Here, Gist decides to invert the trope that she so long fictionally subscribed to and, in what I find a brilliant tongue-in-cheek colouring outside
the lines ( brilliantly paired, here, with the artistry motif) she writes a
treatise on the very thing that made her career: the romance ending in
marriage.
Flossie is not your ordinary girl. Instead, she is
believably complex. Like so many women she is torn between her desire for her
husband and children as well as her passion for her art. When she is
offered the chance to be a Tiffany Girl: to work the stained glass for the grand
exhibit at the Chicago World’s Fair, she grabs it at the reins. (Note: this is brilliant
because while so much fiction in the CBA market focuses on the actual fair,
this is in the periphery ---art meant to be displayed there that gives us a
bustling New York backdrop). Despite the reservations of her
parents, who have supported her interest in art and her artistic schooling to
this point in hopes she would give it up for a husband and babies, she moves
out to become a New Woman and takes up residence in a boarding house.
For the first half or so of the novel what we see realized
is one of my favourite types of story: an almost bildungsroman of a woman
trying to fit into a mould that she is not meant for. Flossie is certain
that her intrinsic ideals are well-matched with the New Woman archetype and yet
she is not a character who can be fit into a type. She immediately falls back
on cordial hospitality: befriending the boarders and setting up little dinner
parties and games.
Reeve Wilder ( note: by far Gist’s best hero and one of my
favs of the year) is not under Flossie’s spell. He thinks New Women are
like to undermine and overhaul all that is sacred about motherhood, home life
and family. His dark and lonely past help realistically inform his
distrust of this new model of women and he speaks out quite plainly against
Flossie. Yet, they are neighbours, and while he cannot advocate for her
lifestyle, he is intrigued by the light that surrounds her, her artistic
sensibility and the warmth that imbues every single person in the boarding
house.
There are charming scenes where Flossie pricks away at
Reeve’s icy exterior just as there are scenes involving Reeve and an elderly
widow --- where we get to see the true treasure behind the New Woman rant and
spiels.
Both characters are --as I feel so often as a reader/ woman ---contradictions. Brilliant, befuddling contradictions as so many of us! Real, fleshy human beings with hopes and flaws. Do they grow?
Absolutely.
When Reeve begins writing a fictionalized serial about a New
Woman, modeled on Flossie, of course, the book's ideologies slowly start to
shift and its stern yet subtly woven statement begins to emerge.
Everyone wants a happy ending for the fictional heroine. And
a happy ending for fictional serialized girl means giving up her photography business ( for what married
woman can work!) and falling into marital bliss. The editor basically
tells Reeve he has set the story up for this moment. This trapping is the only
seeming resolution for two characters of 1890s New York. Of
course, the readers expect the same. But something has changed. Reeve has
begun to understand why women want to make their own money, why women want to
pursue their passions and leave their indelible marks outside of the
expectations and industry of men. Reeve has begun to see why
Flossie wants what she wants.
The desire is not to overthrow him, the desire is for her to
be herself—have her own passion and dreams.
In ingenious parallel, meta-fictional and fictional worlds
collide and intertwine.
There is some confusion, some dancing, some spats, some cute
moments and a few kisses ( much hotter, with innuendo-ed language that far
outweighs any further descriptive) and the metaphor of doors being open and
closed.
There are ups and downs as Flossie learns that her passion
for her art and her natural skills are at odds with each other. She recognizes
that she is average. Quite remarkable for a woman in a historical fiction
novel, where we pride ourselves on women who break boundaries and excel. She does
these things, yes, but on a small scale.
And Reeve....well Reeve.... learns what it is to let his guard
down. And he writes some more and she finds herself in his words – and
not in words crafted around her caricature, where her flaws and contradictions
are paraded, but in soft, dulcet tones.
And romance ensues.
Real, toe-tingly romance.
And we whirl and twirl and Blue Danube our way into a
pattern that is so familiar and that is exhumed so expertly into marital and
domestic certainty…..and yet….
Yet....
This book may have lost me if it had not been able to
maintain its equilibrium between the two characters. This book is
romantic feminism at its best when it works with the often explored theme of
shared marital finances.
Reeve and Flossie are not of a time period where they can
shake the world to such extent it turns on its ear. Reeve and Flossie are
not of a time where women can work and still be married. But, Gist is
brilliant enough to assuage convention by carefully threading what true
independence and collaboration mean. And, for her, and for her
characters, this is deftly interwoven in terms of money, earnings and how
married couples divide property. There are limitations, but
these are not the days of pin money and rescinded property.
So she makes her statement and it is better still because it
is historically plausible. We know that Reeve and Flossie are part
of a chugging motion that will echo into the future and bring us to the point
where we are at today: a point where women with independent passions and means
outside of familial life are advocated for as much as those who choose marriage
and families.
I suppose ( and I thought of this continually while writing)
, part of the reason I always read Gist’s books is because the historical
accuracy and research is resplendent. From basketball to trolley assaults, she
outdoes herself here.
I also want to make note of the inspirational content.
Gist was indeed an inspirational author. This is very much a general
market book. There is nothing christian about this story. Save in its subtle
themes ( i.e., Reeve pays Flossie’s debt at one point, anonymously and without
wanting payment). However, she keeps all *ahem* action
behind closed doors. That doesn’t detract from the sexual tension,
though. It is palpable. (okay, so there’s this hot scene where
Flossie arrives in the middle of the night chilled to the bone from wandering
in a blizzard and boarding house mate Reeve has waited up for her and he rubs
her feet so they don’t get frostbite. And this is, like, the sexiest thing
since Willoughby helped Marianne Dashwood with a sprained ankle or since Dick
Dewy and Fancy Day washed their hands together in Under the Greenwood Tree)
QUOTES!
"Instead, he found her mouth again and wrapped his arms clear around her. "Open your mouth, magpie."
"What?"
He kissed her, really kissed her. She made mewling sounds. She raked her fingers through his hair. She twisted against him. Bracketing his ears, she pushed his mouth away. "I thought I was going to die during the photos!"
"That's the whole point of being a New Woman. They don't want to be reduced to housewifery. They feel it would take away everything that is special about them."
"Well, now she really was a New Woman and also in love. Neither looked even remotely like her fantasies."
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