Showing posts with label Kate Furnivall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kate Furnivall. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Top Ten Tuesday: The Red Dress edition

 

 




Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. This week the topic is a book quote freebie. I don't really do quotes, or at least not short quotes. When I save quotes they are usually quite long so not really suitable for a TTT post!


I do, however have this one from The Christmas Party by Karen Swan



So inspired by this quote - I bring you red dress covers!




The Bronze Horseman by Paullina Simons - Now, I know I am cheating with this one because there is no sign of a red dress on the cover. However, in the scene where the two main characters meet, Tatiana is wearing a white dress with red roses on the cover.


The Jewel of St Peterburg by Kate Furnivall - Now this is a red dress!





A Desperate Fortune by Susanna Kearsley - I never miss an opportunity to include a Kearsley book in one of these lists.


Poison Study by Maria V Snyder - I loved this book!






To Defy a King by Elizabeth Chadwick - I really need to read another Chadwick novel. They are always so good! Luckily I have more than one here to choose from.


The Pearlers Wife by Roxanne Dhand - I haven't read this yet but the premise sounds so interesting.





Seduce Me At Sunrise by Lisa Kleypas - I am pretty sure I could have found ten red dress covers just in the historical romance genre!


Romancing the Duke by Tessa Dare - Another historical romance!!





Shalador's Lady by Anne Bishop - Moving on from historical romance this time to fantasy.


The Christmas Party by Karen Swan - I can't not have this book on the list seeing as it inspired this whole list!



Sunday, February 07, 2021

Six Degrees of Separation: From Redhead by the Side of the Road to One Hundred Years of Solitude

Welcome to this month's edition of Six Degrees of Separation, which is a monthly meme hosted by Kate from Books Are My Favourite and Best.  The idea is to start with a specific book and make a series of links from one book to the next using whatever link you can find and see where you end up after six links.  I am also linking this post up with The Sunday Salon, hosted by Deb at Readerbuzz.



I missed last months Six Degrees which was a shame, but I am back this month with a list that contains at least one tenuous link! See if you can spot it.



The starting point this month is Redhead by the Side of the Road by Anne Tyler, an author who I have  never read, although I am sure I should have! I did think about doing books with red in the title but I have a feeling I have done that before, if not in Six Degrees, definitely in a Top Ten Tuesday post, so I took a different direction.




The Secret of the Mansion by Julie Campbell (Trixie Belden mysteries book 1) - My first thought related to the word redhead and that kind of inevitably lead to me to think about my first red headed book crush - Jim from the Trixie Belden books!



Voyager by Diana Gabaldon - Jim was not my only red headed literary crush. There was also James Alexander Malcolm Mackenzie Fraser from the Outlander series. This book, the third in the main series, is probably my favourite. Maybe it is something about a variation of the name James, and not the redhead, but I don't think so.




The Red Scarf/Under a Blood Red Sky by Kate Furnivall - When I checked my handy dandy spreadsheet which list the books I have read since  2004, the author directly above Diana Gabaldon alphabetically is Kate Furnival. I kept on thinking about the red scarf as the link too. This book is set in 1930s Russia, specifically in a Siberian prison camp.



The Tolstoy Estate by Steven Conte - Also set in Russia, but this time during WWII, this was one of my favourite books from last year



Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy - An obvious connection here, from a book where most of the action takes place at Tolstoy's house  to a book written by the man.



One Hundred  Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez- I originally read Anna Karenina as part of Oprah's Book Club back in the 90s.  This was the first book that I ever  read with the book club! I am not sure I would've read either without my fellow readers and the fun that we had in the forums. I am still online friends with a lot of those people now!



Did you spot the very tenuous link?

Next month the starting point is Phosphorence by Julia Baird, which is going to be interesting to find a connection to. Better get my thinking cap on early for that one!

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Top Ten Tuesday: Why I Love.....


Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl.  This week's TTT starts with an explanation, then a history lesson, then a pre-announcement and then the post. Stick with me though, I hope it will be worth it!

The theme for this week's TTT is actually Books that Should be Adapted into Netflix Shows/Movies but that's not really something that I spend a lot of time thinking about. Next week's topic is Questions I Would Ask My Favorite Authors so what I am doing this week kind of ties in with that. Sort of.

So what am I doing?

Here begins the history lesson. A very long time ago, I used to be part of a blog called Historical Tapestry, which was a group blog that focused solely on historical fiction and that was active for around 7 years. There were at any one time four or five of us who worked on the blog, and there were times that Historical Tapestry was the blog of my heart. There were so many great features! We hosted the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge for years (which is now hosted by Amy at Passages to the Past). And at the beginning, we had a member who was fabulous with blog design and graphics, so there are some great graphics too.

One of the features I loved most was called Why I Love where we asked the authors one question - to write about something they loved. That one question led to some truly amazing posts so today I am sharing glimpses of ten of those. And why would I do that? Well, because later in the week I am going to be relaunching the feature here, with a post from Donna Morin as part of a blog tour, and I have a few more lined up. And I may be somewhat cheeky and use some of the Why I Love graphics too!

So after that long introduction, here are ten Why I Love posts. I hope some of the links are interesting enough so that you can click through and read the whole posts! As I was preparing this post I got so engrossed in the posts. There are posts about shoes, about cruise ships, about people from history, eras, and so much more.

Why I Love Venice by Donna Russo Morin

I'll start with Donna Russo Morin because she is the author who will be relaunching this feature on Friday. Back in 2010, Donna wrote a post for us on Why I Love Venice. Whilst she is now writing about a different place and time, I have fond memories of my few days in Venice many years ago and I loved her post about the place.

Infatuation with magical, mythical lands has been a part of the human landscape for centuries. Atlantis, Shambhala, the Garden of Eden—all have been the topic of great research and discussion. Yet there are such real, magical places to be found—tangible, breathtaking, awe-inspiring places. And perhaps none is more mystical and compelling than Venice, Italy.


Why I Love Etruscan Art by Elisabeth Storrs

One of my favourite ever posts was by Australian author Elisabeth Storrs. She wrote about a civilisation I knew very little about and her post was so informative. Her post starts:

Funerary art seems a morbid source of inspiration but it was my discovery of an ancient sarcophagus that began my obsession with the art of a little known civilization and a ten year journey to write my novel, The Wedding Shroud.
Even now, rereading this post is completely fascinating.

Why I Love Fairy Tale Retellings by Kate Forsyth


It's no secret that I love Kate Forsyth. I have enjoyed several of her novels, particularly the novel Bitter Greens which I have used several times in both TTT and Six Degrees of Separation posts, and there is every chance that book will appear again in the future. It's one I never miss a chance to post about if I can!

So why do I love such retellings? Because they illuminated the dark and hidden depths of fairy tales, the most mysterious and magical of all narratives.


Why I Love Music by Victoria Hislop

I recently borrowed a Victoria Hislop book from the library. I have really enjoyed the ones that I have read so I am very much looking forward to it. Victoria shared her love of Greek music:

Music is never just incidental in Greece, it is always at the centre of any communal activity and I have often found the atmosphere it creates immensely inspirational. And when I take CDs home in my suitcase, I find it travels far better than the local wine!


Why I Love to Write About Russia by Kate Furnivall

I remember reading and enjoying Kate Furnivall's books about Russia so I was pleased when she told us why she loved to write about Russia.

I devoured everything I could lay my hands on about Russia. Books, films, paintings, and of course travelling to the country itself to see it with my own eyes. I was mesmerised. By its fascinating history, its breath-taking geography, its amazing art and literature and by the passion of its people. Above all by its dramatic and often bloody politics that loomed so large over the world throughout the twentieth century.


Why I Love to Write Medieval Fiction by Elizabeth Chadwick

The very first Why I Love post was written by Elizabeth Chadwick who has long been one of my favourite authors, even though I am currently several books behind. She has actually written a couple of Why I Love posts for us but this one is an entertaining tale of how, as I young child, the seeds were sown for her love of medieval history.

Another post was 10 reasons why she loved William Marshall, who is someone she has written about at length.

Elizabeth Chadwick has just released a new book, medieval history of course, so check out The Coming of the Wolf!

Why I Love Time Slip by Susanna Kearsley

Susanna Kearsley is another of my long time favourite novelists. We even had an entire Susanna Kearsley Week for her as some of the other members were big fans too. She has also written a couple of posts for us. This one talks of why she loves writing time slip/dual timeline novels.

Time-slip novels, with their tandem narratives, allow me to explore that past while keeping one foot firmly in the present. And they let me explore, too, the ways that the present is shaped by the past, and the way what is happening now can be rooted in seeds that were sown generations ago. Straight historical novels can do this as well, of course – readers can spot the connections themselves – but I love how the use of both present and past, side by side, can make each one more interesting, just as complementary colours make each other more intense and vivid.

Why I Love Novels That Jump Between the Past and the Present by Pam Jenoff.

A similarly themed post, this time from Pam Jenoff.
Finally, I love stories that jump between past and present because, by showing people in different times and circumstances, they also allow the reader to draw parallels in characters’ experiences and explore timeless themes such as love, friendship, choice, betrayal, consequence and redemption. Perhaps that universality across the ages is at the heart of what makes the very concept of time travel so appealing.
Why I Love Old Letters by Sara Sheridan

Sara Sheridan talks about how you can get to know people through their letters, some of which may not have seen daylight for decades! Letters are one of the ways that history continues to reveal itself through the ages.
For me, there’s nothing like that feeling of getting close to someone who really made history – and that’s why I love old letters. They are as close as any of us is likely to get.


Susan Holloway Scott has now moved to write about American Colonial history but at the time she wrote this guest post for us, she was very much still writing about Restoration history. I loved her books about Charles II and his many, many mistresses.
How can I not love England at its very merriest? Coming on the heels of a horrific civil war, a regicide, and the puritanical protectorate of Oliver Cromwell, the reign of Charles II (1660-1683) is a writer’s delight. Called the Restoration in honor of Charles’s return to the throne, this period has much in common with other permissive eras that follow a repressive period. An entire generation of aristocratic children had grown into adulthood during the Civil War, and many who would once again form the ruling class were rootless, wild, and often undereducated. Once Charles returned from exile in France to take his father’s crown, traditional morality went out the window. There was considerable experimentation, not only in sexual behavior, but also in theatre, science, art, and music, even in fashion. It’s a fascinating time in which to set stories, looking forward to the humanist themes of the Age of Enlightenment, but still sufficiently medieval that traitors’ severed heads rotted on pikes on London Bridge.


So there are just ten Why I Love posts. There are so many more available in the archives at Historical Tapestry, and I can't wait to see what new Why I Love posts are to come!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Alphabet in Historical Fiction: U is for Under a Blood Red Sky

I did have a couple of ideas for posts for the letter U in the Alphabet in Historical Fiction meme, but all of them were going to involve reposting! After completely missing the letter T, I wanted to make sure that I didn't miss another letter (until we get to the letter X - I have no idea what I am going to post for that yet!). This review was originally post in January 2009







Davinsky Labour Camp, Siberia, 1933: Sofia Morozova knows she has to escape. All that sustains her through the bitter cold, and hard labour are the stories told by her friend Anna, beguiling tales of a charmed upbringing in Petrograd - and of Anna's fervent love for a passionate revolutionary, Vasily. So when Anna falls gravely ill, Sofia makes a promise to escape the camp and find Vasily. But Russia, gripped by the iron fist of Communism, is no longer the country of her friend's childhood. Sofia's perilous search takes her from industrial factories to remote villages, where she discovers a web of secrecy and lies - and an overwhelming love that threatens her promise to Anna. But time is running out. And time, Sofia knows, is something neither she nor Anna has.
Just over a year ago I read Kate Furnivall's first book, The Russian Concubine, and totally enjoyed it. When I heard that the author had a new book out I was hoping for a sequel to that book. I didn't get it, although it is coming this year, but having now read this book, I am not all that disappointed.

Where The Russian Concubine featured Russian characters who lived in China during the turbulent 1920's, this book is set in Russia itself. Now I love reading anything set in Russia, but this is the first time I remember reading anything set during the Soviet era of the 1930s, where the populace is ruled by fear of being arrested for the slightest misdemeanours or connections, and sent to the prison camps often never to return.

Our main character Sofia has been thrown into the prison camps of Siberia. It is there that she meets Anna, a young woman who has also been imprisoned due to her connections with the aristocracy. Each day the women have to perform back breaking manual labour, getting by any way they can. Sofia realises that her friend cannot take much more of this, so is determined to escape and find Anna's childhood friend Vasily. Whilst Anna is terrified for Sofia's safety, she also believes that Vasily will help her if he can.

Sofia finds her way to the village where they believe Vasily is now living, only to be drawn into the collective farming environment where the state determines that absurdly high quotas must be reached, and that no one, no matter how starving they are, gets to keep anything for themselves. She finds herself drawn both into the town and to the people of the town, but she knows that ultimately her aim must be to get back and save Anna, if she is still alive.

There Sofia meets Mikael, a prominent man, who is raising his son alone. As Sofia must take on a new identity and avoid the attention of the authorities, others within the village wrestle with the distinction between duty to each other and duty to the Motherland, with potentially disastrous consequences for all of them.

There are lots of events in this book that are highly improbable, but such is Furnivall's story telling skill, that it doesn't matter all that much. If you want a book filled with high drama with romantic and some minor paranormal elements , and that will keep you reading until the wee hours of the morning, then this may well be a book that you will enjoy.

If I had to choose between this book and The Russian Concubine for a first time Furnivall reader then the latter would win, but this is still a very enjoyable read, about a time and place that I haven't read much about.


**** Please note that in some countries around the world, this book is published under the title The Red Scarf.****

Rating: 4 out of 5

Cross posted at Historical Tapestry

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Under a Blood Red Sky by Kate Furnivall

Davinsky Labour Camp, Siberia, 1933: Sofia Morozova knows she has to escape. All that sustains her through the bitter cold, and hard labour are the stories told by her friend Anna, beguiling tales of a charmed upbringing in Petrograd - and of Anna's fervent love for a passionate revolutionary, Vasily. So when Anna falls gravely ill, Sofia makes a promise to escape the camp and find Vasily. But Russia, gripped by the iron fist of Communism, is no longer the country of her friend's childhood. Sofia's perilous search takes her from industrial factories to remote villages, where she discovers a web of secrecy and lies - and an overwhelming love that threatens her promise to Anna. But time is running out. And time, Sofia knows, is something neither she nor Anna has.
Just over a year ago I read Kate Furnivall's first book, The Russian Concubine, and totally enjoyed it. When I heard that the author had a new book out I was hoping for a sequel to that book. I didn't get it, although it is coming this year, but having now read this book, I am not all that disappointed.

Where The Russian Concubine featured Russian characters who lived in China during the turbulent 1920's, this book is set in Russia itself. Now I love reading anything set in Russia, but this is the first time I remember reading anything set during the Soviet era of the 1930s, where the populace is ruled by fear of being arrested for the slightest misdemeanours or connections, and sent to the prison camps often never to return.

Our main character Sofia has been thrown into the prison camps of Siberia. It is there that she meets Anna, a young woman who has also been imprisoned due to her connections with the aristocracy. Each day the women have to perform back breaking manual labour, getting by any way they can. Sofia realises that her friend cannot take much more of this, so is determined to escape and find Anna's childhood friend Vasily. Whilst Anna is terrified for Sofia's safety, she also believes that Vasily will help her if he can.

Sofia finds her way to the village where they believe Vasily is now living, only to be drawn into the collective farming environment where the state determines that absurdly high quotas must be reached, and that no one, no matter how starving they are, gets to keep anything for themselves. She finds herself drawn both into the town and to the people of the town, but she knows that ultimately her aim must be to get back and save Anna, if she is still alive.

There Sofia meets Mikael, a prominent man, who is raising his son alone. As Sofia must take on a new identity and avoid the attention of the authorities, others within the village wrestle with the distinction between duty to each other and duty to the Motherland, with potentially disastrous consequences for all of them.

There are lots of events in this book that are highly improbable, but such is Furnivall's story telling skill, that it doesn't matter all that much. If you want a book filled with high drama with romantic and some minor paranormal elements , and that will keep you reading until the wee hours of the morning, then this may well be a book that you will enjoy.

If I had to choose between this book and The Russian Concubine for a first time Furnivall reader then the latter would win, but this is still a very enjoyable read, about a time and place that I haven't read much about.


**** Please note that in some countries around the world, this book is published under the title The Red Scarf.****

Rating: 4 out of 5

Cross posted at Historical Tapestry
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