Showing posts with label Katharine McMahon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katharine McMahon. Show all posts

Sunday, June 08, 2025

Six Degrees of Separation: All Fours to War and Peace

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.




This month's starting point is All Fours by Miranda July which is nominated for 2025 Women’s Prize for Fiction. Nominated or not, it's a book that I am really not interested in reading based on the things I have heard about it!




My first link is based on the number 4 and takes me to The Fourth Bear by Jasper Fforde. This is the second book in the Nursery Crimes series, which I seem to have enjoyed a lot when I read it 19 years ago (my review)

My next choice used the word bear as the link and is The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden. This is a book that I started on audio years ago and have never quite finished. One day.

This time, I am using the nightingale as connected to The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah. This is a book that I also listened to on audio but the difference is that I did finish it! 

Next, I am using the word nightingale as my connection to The Rose of Sebastopol by Katherine McMahon. How does that work you might wonder? Well, this book tells the story of a young woman who went to the Crimea to work alongside Florence Nightingale. (my review)

This week I have been reading The Diamond Eye by Kate Quinn, which is partially set in and around Sebastopol during WWII.

And next, we make a leap to War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy. The connection on this one is probably a bit obscure but I chose it because one of the characters in The Diamond Eye carries a copy of War and Peace around with him on the battlefield. This also acted as a reminder that I am a bit behind on my chapter a day readalong!

I am pretty sure that there is no way that I can link All Fours to War and Peace to come full circle! Another time!


Next month, the starting point is 2025 Stella Prize winner, Michelle de Kretser’s , Theory & Practice.

Will you be joining us?

Sunday, September 06, 2020

Six Degrees of Separation: Rodham to Light Between Oceans



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.



The starting point this month is Rodham by Curtis Sittenfeld. I can't imagine that I will ever read this book as I don't think it is my kind of book. It is an alternate telling of the life of Hilary Rodham Clinton, asking the question of what her life would have been like had she not married Bill Clinton.




For my first link in the chain, I have gone down the alternate history route, but kind of an extreme alternate. In the world that that Jasper Fforde has created for the Thursday Next series,  which starts with The Eyre Affair, dodos are the pet of choice, you can travel from one side of the world to the other in a tube, and the Crimean War still rages on even though it is 1985.



For my next link, I am focusing on the Crimean War and choosing The Rose of Sebastopol by Katharine McMahon. The Rose of Sebastopol is about a young woman who goes off to the Crimean War to be a nurse alongside Florence Nightingale.



I am following the war time nurse thread for my next link which is to Daughter of Mars by Thomas Keneally. This book is about a young woman who heads off from country Australia to the front in World War I.



Normally I try to use books I have read for these posts, but this time I am using a book I am going to read as my next link. The Wreck is by Meg Keneally, who is Thomas Keneally's daughter. They have written a historical mystery series together which I also have on my shelves, but this book is due to be released this month.



From here I kind of got stuck on the lighthouse motif, choosing Lighthouse Bay by Kimberly Freeman, because lighthouses are supposed to try and prevent wrecks, and because it is a really good book!



For my final link I chose Light Between Oceans by M L Stedman, once again because of the lighthouse, although I was trying to make a pun about preventing physical wrecks but not necessarily preventing emotional wrecks! It's a stretch though.

For this month I have travelled from an alternate world where dodos and mammoths roam to the Crimea, to the Mediterranean of WWI and then to the Australian coast. Where have your links taken you?

Next month's starting point is The Turn of the Screw by Henry James.


Tuesday, June 09, 2020

Top Ten Tuesday: Maybe I should read it!





Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl.

This week's theme Books I’ve Added to my TBR and Forgotten Why. At first I was thinking I would struggle to find ten but even just a look at only my physical shelves easily gave me that many. We actually had a friend come over for dinner last night, and every time I looked at my bookshelf over his shoulder I saw another book that could qualify for this theme. And that was without looking in my Audible account or at my Kindle!

For me, this also means that a lot of these books are a bit older, or probably closer to the truth - a lot older. This is a new release free zone!




Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor - I *think* I got this from another blogger many years ago. Having a look at the blurb it does look like a good read - magic, fantasy, set in Africa. Maybe I should read it.

The Twelve Rooms of the Nile by Enid Shomer - This has been on my shelf since 2012 and is about Florence Nightingale taking a trip down the Nile with Gustav Flaubert. Maybe I should read it!





Wench by Dolen Perkins-Valdez - This one has been on my shelf for more than 10 years. it does sound interesting. Maybe I should read it!

The Seamstress by Maria Duenas - Look at that big chunkster. This book was published with the title The Time in Between in some places and in the blurb compares the book to The Shadow in the Wind which is one of my favourite books. Maybe I should read it!




The Wives of Los Alamos by Tara Shea Nesbit - The blurb for this one looks great. A group of women come together in the town of Los Alamos, a place where there were world changing secrets. Maybe I should read it!

A Lady Cyclist's Guide to Kashgar by Suzanne Johnson  - I was just chatting to Bree from All the Books I Can Read and I shared this list, and then she said I think I recommended that book! Whoops. Maybe I should read it!



The Garden of Evening Mists by Tan Twan Eng - I am sure that several people have recommended this book to me. Maybe I should read it!

Jack Absolute by CC Humphreys - Remember when there were really active forums about authors or shared interests etc. Yeah, me too. I used to help run one that was all about Historical Fiction and there were lots of fabulous members, and I am pretty sure that this author was one of those, or we talked about his books there. Or maybe I heard about it elsewhere. Maybe I should read it!


Henrietta's War by Joyce Dennys - This was part of a group of book that was issued with similar covers around 10 years ago. I do wish I had bought more because the covers look so pretty. This one is a series of letters written during WWII about village life in country England. Sounds really good. Maybe I should read it!

The Crimson Rooms by Katherine McMahon - I read this author's book The Rose of Sebastopol (in which Florence Nightingale is a character) years ago, and I thought I loved it but now I read my review maybe I didn't. Either way, having previous read this author is probably why this book in on my shelves but who really knows. When I looked at Goodreads it seems that this is first in a series, although there does only seem to be two books. Maybe I should read it!

Have you read any of these books?

Sunday, May 04, 2008

The Rose of Sebastopol by Katharine McMahon

Britain, 1854: the Crimean War captures the imagination of young men eager to do battle with the new enemy, Russia, but as winter closes in, the military hospitals fill with the sick and wounded. In defiance of Florence Nightingale, Rosa Barr - young, headstrong and beautiful - travels to the battlefields, determined to be useful. Her cousin, Mariella Lingwood, remains at home with the sewing and writes letters to her fiance, Henry, a doctor working within the shadow of the guns. But when Henry falls ill and Rosa's communications cease, Mariella finds herself drawn inexorably across the Black Sea, towards the war. Following the trail of the elusive and captivating Rosa, Mariella's journey takes her from the domestic restraint of Victorian London to the ravaged landscape of the Crimea, and prompts a reckless affair with a cavalry officer whose complex past is bound up with her ordered world, but reveals a well of unexpected strength and passion that may help her to survive against the desolation of war.



Last year I read The Alchemist's Daughter by this author and quite liked it, so when I saw that she had a new book coming out I was pleased. What made me more pleased was that the novel was set in a period which I hadn't really read much about about (The Crimean War) and seemed, from the blurb at least, to feature one of the more iconic female historical figures (Florence Nightingale). I say seemed to because in actuality, Florence Nightingale was a shadowy figure very much on the edges of the storyline.

What the book was actually about was two young women, Mariella Lingwood and Rosa Barr. There are two separate threads of storyline within the novel. One focuses on the relationship between the cousins from their initial meeting, to a summer vacation that goes terribly wrong, and how it is that Rosa came to be living with Mariella and her family. In some ways, some of this background seemed a little superfluous, although I guess that it was supposed to show us that Rosa had always been rebellious and headstrong.

The other thread of the storyline is initially a trip for Mariella to locate and care for her fiance, Henry Thewell, who is a doctor serving in the Crimea. He has however been invalided back to Italy, and Mariella and her companion are shocked to find him in a terrible condition. It transpires that he has crossed paths with Rosa whilst in the Crimea because she has gone off to become a nurse. After Mariella somewhat shockingly comes to realise that Henry is not exactly the man that she thought he was, she makes her way to the Crimea to try and search for Rosa because there has been no correspondence from her from some time. Rosa has left her supervised post, and appears to have made her own way to work more closely with the injured soldiers and it seems as though something very terrible may have happened to her.

The girls (or I should say young ladies) seem to have a somewhat obsessive preoccupation with each other. They are very different creatures, and yet love each other deeply - the main word that I could come up with to describe their relationship was besotted. Mariella is a the very model of a middle-class young lady. Her time is taken up with family, sewing and charitable causes, whereas Rosa is brash and impulsive, involved with people and causes that are not acceptable in polite society. Even Rosa's decision to go off and nurse is not quite above board. She initially was rejected by Miss Nightingale as a nurse, and so filled with determination that she would go, even if it is on her own, she has to find another way to get taken to the Crimea.

Where this novel is good is in the descriptions of the siege conditions and battles. The author does not sugar coat the horrors that accompanied warfare in the 1850s, let alone sanitise the suffering that was caused by cholera and Crimean fever that was rampant amongst the nurses and troops who had the misfortune to be posted to the siege at Sebastopol. She also did a great job at describing the indignation of the British people when they learnt that their young man were being sent to a place where there wasn't enough medical equipment to cover the most basic of war injuries, despite the promises made otherwise before the conflict began.

What didn't work so well for me was the never ending search for Rosa to try and determine what exactly happened for her. It seemed as though that part of the novel just dragged and dragged. Could she be here, maybe she's there. In the end, it was resolved but not until the last couple of pages of the novel.

Along the way, Mariella, who really is the main protagonist, learns a lot about herself, under going a physical and emotional journey that will leave her changed for the rest of her life.

This was a somewhat uneven attempt to portray a time that is not really all that commonly covered in historical fiction and yet is quite a fascinating time. This is one occasion where the two different time frames being told alternately within the narrative really didn't work all that well.

It is something of a surprise to me that such a romanticised figure like Florence Nightingale hasn't been given the HF treatment that I know of, or at least not all that recently.

This is my first book completed for the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge.

Cross posted at Historical Tapestry


Other Blogger's Thoughts:

Word Lily

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Wherein I ignore the elephant in the strawberry patch (or the cat in the brown paper bag as the case may be!)


So, I am feeling pretty pleased with myself. It's January 15th, I've finished 8 books so far this year, and I have written reviews for all of them! GO ME!! The latest review is up over at Historical Tapestry and is for The Alchemist's Daughter by Katharine McMahon.

So what am I hiding? Well...we just won't mention the fact that I have got a bucket load of reviews from the books I finished last year still to write.


Shhhh.......I said we weren't mentioning that!!
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