Tag Archives: historical fiction

First Line Friday — In High Cotton

14 Jun

Happy Friday! Today I am featuring another book recommended by a friend. In High Cotton by Ane Mulligan is an historical novel set in Georgia in 1929. Rural south Georgia is already suffering economic woes, so what else can the Stock Market Crash and the Great Depression bring? I look forward to reading about the women who survive and thrive.

Here’s the first line:

Sadie always says, “Southern women may seem as delicate as flowers, but we’ve got iron in our veins.”

While the rest of the world has been roaring through the 1920s, times are hardscrabble in rural South Georgia. Widow Maggie Parker is barely surviving while raising her young son alone. Then as banks begin to fail, her father-in-law threatens to take her son and sell off her livelihood—the grocery store her husband left her. Can five Southern women band together, using their wisdom and wiles to stop him and survive the Great Depression?

While a large, floppy straw hat is her favorite, Ane Mulligan has worn many different ones: hairdresser, legislative affairs director (that’s a fancy name for a lobbyist), drama director, playwright, humor columnist, and bestselling novelist. Her lifetime experience provides a plethora of fodder for her Southern-fried fiction (try saying that three times fast).

Ane firmly believes coffee and chocolate are two of the four major food groups. Her passion when she isn’t writing her Southern-fried Fiction is Community Theatre. She’s Chairman of the Board of Players Guild@Sugar Hill, a non-profit Community Theatre company, where she and her husband act, direct, build sets, and are chief go-fors.

Contributor to the award-winning literary site, The Write Conversation, Ane resides in Sugar Hill, GA, with her artist husband, her chef son, and a rascally Rottweiler.

You can find Ane on her website and blog: http://www.anemulligan.com.

Top 10 Tuesday — Wishing for Books

11 Jun

Happy Tuesday! I don’t have a book wishlist primarily because my family and friends look around my house and proclaim I already own too many. What do they know!? LOL! But if I did keep a wishlist these books would be on it.

For more bloggers’ wishlists, check out https://www.thatartsyreadergirl.com.

Top 10 Books I Would Put on A Wishlist If I Had One

The British Booksellers by Kristy Cambron

The Crown Conspiracy by Connie Mann

Fatal Domain by Steven James

The Forgotten Names by Mario Escobar

The Garden Girls by Jessica R. Patch

Hidden in The Night by Elizabeth Goddard

The Hudson Collection by Jocelyn Green

One Final Target by Janice Cantore

A Place to Land by Lauren K. Denton

Shelterwood by Lisa Wingate

Book Review: Embers In The London Sky

5 Jun

My book club chose Embers in The London Sky for last month’s selection because Sarah Sundin is one of our must-read authors. Her latest WWII-era novel was a hit! Below are a few of my thoughts on this highly recommended read.

As the German army invades the Netherlands in 1940, Aleida van der Zee Martens escapes to London to wait out the Occupation. Separated from her three-year-old son, Theo, in the process, the young widow desperately searches for her little boy even as she works for an agency responsible for evacuating children to the countryside.

When German bombs set London ablaze, BBC radio correspondent Hugh Collingwood reports on the Blitz, eager to boost morale while walking the fine line between truth and censorship. But the Germans are not the only ones Londoners have to fear as a series of murders flame up amid the ashes. 

The deaths hit close to home for Hugh, and Aleida needs his help to locate her missing son. As they work together, they grow closer and closer, both to each other and the answers they seek. But with bombs falling and continued killings, they may be running out of time.

Sarah Sundin enjoys writing about the drama and romance of the World War II era. She is the bestselling and Christy Award-winning author of Embers in the London Sky (February 2024), The Sound of Light (2023), Until Leaves Fall in Paris (2022), When Twilight Breaks (2021), and several World War II series.

Sarah’s novels have received starred reviews from Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, and Booklist. Until Leaves Fall in Parisreceived the 2022 Christy Award and was a semi-finalist for the 2023 Carol Award, The Sound of LightWhen Twilight Breaks, and The Land Beneath Us were finalists for the Christy Award, and The Sky Above Us won the 2020 Carol Award.

A mother of three, Sundin lives in Southern California and enjoys speaking to community, church, and writers’ groups. Sarah serves as Co-Director for the West Coast Christian Writers Conference.

My Impressions:

There are a lot of WWII-era novels out there. Believe me I have read a bunch. But I have to say that Sarah Sundin keeps writing fresh and unique stories. Her latest novel, Embers in The London Sky captures the very real fear when faced with an unknown future and outcome. The story revolves around a young mother who has lost her son in the escape from the Netherlands during the German invasion. She ends up in England hoping against hope that her child has been brought there as well. I can’t imagine what the people facing this real-life scenario went through. Themes of trusting God’s plans and goodness, the welcome/rejection of refugees by the Brits, and sacrificing desires for another’s good are all examined. This book really made me think. It also really touched me. I cried several times while reading, something that is a rare occurrence for me. The historical details were great — Sundin is a wonderful researcher, and the characters relatable. There’s some romance and a good twisting mystery. This book really has it all!

I can’t say enough about how good Embers in The London Sky is. It truly is highly recommended.

Highly recommended.

Audience: Adults.

(Thanks to NetGalley for a complimentary copy. All opinions expressed are mine alone.)

Top 10 Tuesday — I Get All Emotional, Baby!

4 Jun

Happy Tuesday! Today’s TTT topic is books that bring out all the feels — sadness, joy, anger — you name it! My list includes books that made me really feel what the characters were feeling. Thanks to all the fabulous authors that can elicit that in a reader. That makes me very happy! 😉

For more emotional reads, check out https://www.thatartsyreadergirl.com

Top Books That Gave Me All The Feels

Darkness Calls The Tiger by Janyre Tromp

Embers in The London Sky by Sarah Sundin

The Foxhole Victory Tour by Amy Lynn Green

He Should Have Told The Bees by Amanda Cox

Letters from My Sister by Valerie Fraser Luesse

Night Falls on Predicament Avenue by Jaime Jo Wright

The Rhythm of Fractured Grace by Amanda Wen

A River Between Us by Jocelyn Green

Up from The Dust by Heather Kaufman

The Wind Blows in Sleeping Grass by Katie Powner

If You Liked . . . Embers in The London Sky

31 May

Sarah Sundin is a must-read author for my book club. Her latest historical novel set during WWII was a huge hit with my members. If you liked Embers in The London Sky, I have a couple of recommendations for you. If you haven’t read it yet, what are you waiting for! It is so good!

To Read:

The Blitz Detective by Mike Hollow

Saturday 7th September, 1940. The sun is shining, and in the midst of the good weather Londoners could be mistaken for forgetting their country was at war – until the familiar wail of the air-raid sirens heralds an enemy attack. The Blitz has started, and normal life has abruptly ended – but crime has not.

That night a man’s body is discovered in an unmarked van in the back streets of West Ham. When Detective Inspector John Jago is called to the scene, he recognises the victim: local Justice of the Peace, Charles Villiers. The death looks suspicious, but then a German bomb obliterates all evidence. War or no war, murder is still murder, and it’s Jago’s job to find the truth.

Secrets of A Charmed Life by Susan Meissner

The author of A Bridge Across the Ocean and The Last Year of the War journeys from the present day to World War II England, as two sisters are separated by the chaos of wartime…

Current day, Oxford, England. Young American scholar Kendra Van Zant, eager to pursue her vision of a perfect life, interviews Isabel McFarland just when the elderly woman is ready to give up secrets about the war that she has kept for decades…beginning with who she really is. What Kendra receives from Isabel is both a gift and a burden—one that will test her convictions and her heart.

1940s, England. As Hitler wages an unprecedented war against London’s civilian population, hundreds of thousands of children are evacuated to foster homes in the rural countryside. But even as fifteen-year-old Emmy Downtree and her much younger sister Julia find refuge in a charming Cotswold cottage, Emmy’s burning ambition to return to the city and apprentice with a fashion designer pits her against Julia’s profound need for her sister’s presence. Acting at cross purposes just as the Luftwaffe rains down its terrible destruction, the sisters are cruelly separated, and their lives are transformed…

To Watch:

Foyle’s War

Combining uncompromising historical accuracy with compelling mysteries, this acclaimed PBS series continues with three feature-length episodes. Michael Kitchen (Out of Africa) stars as DCS Christopher Foyle, investigating wartime crimes in an English coastal town. With the end of World War II slowly but inevitably approaching, Foyle and his fellow citizens learn the price of victory and face a peace that will transform their lives in unexpected ways. 

Top 10 Tuesday — You Just Don’t Listen!

28 May

Happy Tuesday! Today’s TTT topic is all about buying books and then not reading them. I have that issue across formats! Today my list contains 10 (there are more) audiobooks that I have acquired, but have not listened to yet. Most were either on sale or included with my Audible subscription. If you have read/listened to any on my list, let me know what you thought.

For more book lists, check out https://www.thatartsyreadergirl.com.

Top 10 Audiobooks I Have Not Listened To

Conspiracy of Silence by Ronie Kendig

Emilienne by Pamela Binnings Ewen

Love in A Broken Vessel by Mesu Andrews

More Than We Remember by Christina Suzann Nelson

Outbreak by Davis Bunn

The Queen by Steven James

Things We Didn’t Say by Amy Lynn Green

Waiting On Love by Tracie Peterson

Watch over Me by Christa Parrish

The Way It Should Be by Christina Suzann Nelson

TTT — Must-Read Authors

21 May

Today’s TTT topic is authors I’d love a new book from. For me that translates into must-read authors! Of course, I want a new book from these authors! My list encompasses a variety of genres, so you can find a new must-read author too. I have included their last published book or the next one up to whet your appetite! 🙂

For more authors who need to write a new book soonest, check out That Artsy Reader Girl.

Top Must-Read Authors

Amanda Barrett — The Warsaw Sisters

Lynette Eason Target Acquired (available 8/20)

Susie Finkbeiner — The All-American

Irene Hannon (contemporary romance) — Sandcastle Inn

Irene Hannon (romantic suspense) — Over The Edge (available 10/24)

Valerie Fraser Luesse — Letters to My Sister

Katie Powner — The Wind Blows in Sleeping Grass

Sarah Sundin — Embers in The London Sky

Kimberly Woodhouse (romantic suspense) — 70 North (available 10/24)

Jaime Jo Wright — Specters in The Glass House (available 10/24)

First Line Friday — Embers in The London Sky

17 May

Happy Friday! I am featuring Embers in The London Sky by Sarah Sundin today. My book club is reading this novel this month — Sundin is one of our must-read authors. I am loving it, and early reports are that my book club members love it too!

Here’s the first line:

As soon as she escaped to England, Aleida van der Zee Martens would cut her hair and have her son photographed for the first time.

As the German army invades the Netherlands in 1940, Aleida van der Zee Martens escapes to London to wait out the Occupation. Separated from her three-year-old son, Theo, in the process, the young widow desperately searches for her little boy even as she works for an agency responsible for evacuating children to the countryside.

When German bombs set London ablaze, BBC radio correspondent Hugh Collingwood reports on the Blitz, eager to boost morale while walking the fine line between truth and censorship. But the Germans are not the only ones Londoners have to fear as a series of murders flame up amid the ashes. 

The deaths hit close to home for Hugh, and Aleida needs his help to locate her missing son. As they work together, they grow closer and closer, both to each other and the answers they seek. But with bombs falling and continued killings, they may be running out of time.

Sarah Sundin enjoys writing about the drama and romance of the World War II era. She is the bestselling and Christy Award-winning author of Embers in the London Sky (February 2024), The Sound of Light (2023), Until Leaves Fall in Paris (2022), When Twilight Breaks (2021), and several World War II series.

Sarah’s novels have received starred reviews from Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, and Booklist. Until Leaves Fall in Paris received the 2022 Christy Award and was a semi-finalist for the 2023 Carol Award, The Sound of Light, When Twilight Breaks, and The Land Beneath Us were finalists for the Christy Award, and The Sky Above Us won the 2020 Carol Award.

A mother of three, Sundin lives in Southern California and enjoys speaking to community, church, and writers’ groups. Sarah serves as Co-Director for the West Coast Christian Writers Conference

Book Review: Every Time We Say Goodbye

16 May

Every Time We Say Goodbye by Natalie Jenner is set in Rome during its heyday of film making just 10 years after the end of WWII. The contrast of glitz and glamour and the lingering effects of war create a novel of reality vs. illusion. Perfect for those who love historical novels set in the mid-20th century.

The bestselling author of The Jane Austen Society and Bloomsbury Girls returns with a brilliant novel of love and art, of grief and memory, of confronting the past and facing the future.

In 1955, Vivien Lowry is facing the greatest challenge of her life. Her latest play, the only female-authored play on the London stage that season, has opened in the West End to rapturous applause from the audience. The reviewers, however, are not as impressed as the playgoers and their savage notices not only shut down the play but ruin Lowry’s last chance for a dramatic career. With her future in London not looking bright, at the suggestion of her friend, Peggy Guggenheim, Vivien takes a job in as a script doctor on a major film shooting in Rome’s Cinecitta Studios. There she finds a vibrant movie making scene filled with rising stars, acclaimed directors, and famous actors in a country that is torn between its past and its potentially bright future, between the liberation of the post-war cinema and the restrictions of the Catholic Church that permeates the very soul of Italy.

As Vivien tries to forge a new future for herself, she also must face the long-buried truth of the recent World War and the mystery of what really happened to her deceased fiancé. Every Time We Say Goodbye is a brilliant exploration of trauma and tragedy, hope and renewal, filled with dazzling characters both real and imaginary, from the incomparable author who charmed the world with her novels The Jane Austen Society and Bloomsbury Girls.

Natalie Jenner is the USA Today and internationally bestselling author of THE JANE AUSTEN SOCIETY and BLOOMSBURY GIRLS, which have been translated in over twenty languages worldwide. Natalie’s third novel, EVERY TIME WE SAY GOODBYE, releases on May 14, 2024. Born in England and raised in Canada, Natalie has been a corporate lawyer and career coach and once owned an independent bookstore in Oakville, Ontario, where she lives with her family and two rescue dogs.

My Impressions:

Every Time We Say Goodbye follows Vivien Lowery who readers first met in Bloomsbury Girls. After her latest London play receives negative reviews, Vivien travels to Rome to find both a new start and a closure for old heartbreaks. This novel is set during the film heyday that Italy enjoyed in the 1950s. American screenwriters, directors, and actors enjoyed a kind of freedom not found during the McCarthy-era witch hunts in Hollywood. But with this “freedom” comes a new kind of censorship from the Catholic church. I found this thread of the novel interesting, and real-life Hollywood stars make their appearances, giving the novel a touch of glitz and glamour. But it is the second plot line that I found the most intriguing. The reader is introduced to the Italian resistance fighters of WWII. I found the fabricated fairytale lives of those in the film making industry an insightful backdrop to the selflessness of those who sacrificed so much. There is so much contradiction — those wanting to forget or tidy up the past and those who want to expose it in all its harsh reality. In the end the novel is one of finding purpose and truth in a world that seems only to want a perfect storybook ending.

Fans of Jenner’s earlier novels and those who love historical fiction set in the mid-20th century will not want to miss this book!

Recommended.

Audience: Adults.

(Thanks to NetGalley for a complimentary copy. All opinions expressed are mine alone.)

Book Review: Darkness Calls The Tiger

15 May


Wow! That’s what I have to say about Janyre Tromp‘s newest historical novel, Darkness Calls The Tiger. This book will easily make my best of 2024 list. Besides its unique setting, the characterization is masterful. You do not want to miss this one!

After the attack on Pearl Harbor, Imperial Japan devours the southern portion of Burma, intent on taking over mainland Asia. Unaware of the coming darkness, Kailyn Moran drifts in her role as the only daughter of a widowed missionary.

As whispers of war snake through the Kachin mountains, Kai’s father is convinced God will protect the mission. He entrusts the village to her and the kind yet inexperienced new missionary, Ryan McDonough, while he makes routine visits to neighboring villages.

War descends like a tempest upon the mountain peaks, and an unbreakable bond forms between Kailyn and Ryan as they unite to provide solace to both villagers and the flood of refugees. Despite their tireless efforts, a brutal enemy shatters almost everything they love, pushing Kailyn to embark on a path of unrestrained vengeance.

Afraid he’s losing the woman he loves, Ryan fights to protect Kai from the deadly consequences of her choices. But in the face of destruction, can he convince her of the power and freedom of forgiveness?

Janyre Tromp is an award-winning and best-selling writer and veteran editor with a deep love for history.

Her mid-20th century historical novels always simmer with a healthy pinch of deliciously creepy suspense and include Darkness Calls the Tiger, Shadows in the Mind’s Eye, and O Little Town.

And all that editing and writing happens in her unfinished basement when she’s not hanging out with her family, two troublesome cats, and slightly eccentric Shetland Sheepdog.

You can find her all over social media or on her website.

And just in case you get to meet in person some day, you pronounce that first name Jan-ear.

My Impressions:

Darkness Calls The Tiger is one of those books that stays with you long after you turn the last page. This historical novel set in Burma (modern-day Myanmar) during WWII is above-the-top excellent. The setting is so very unique — the mountain villages of the Himalayan range of Burma combined with the Japanese invasion — that I was googling as I read. This is a time and place I knew nothing about, but now feel like I was there along with the characters. And what characters they are! The narrative switches between the first person POV of Kailyn Moran and the third person POV featuring Ryan McDonough. Each has trouble identifying their place and purpose in the world. Kailyn is a child of the jungle, yet is an outsider. A child of missionaries, she has one foot in Burmese culture and another in the foreign-to-her world of her American ancestry. Ryan is in Burma to honor his mother, but wonders if he will ever feel at home. And home is important for both of them. As the Japanese attempt the conquest of the country, the two take very different paths to rectify their failings and guilt. In order to avoid spoilers, I will just say that Kai and Ryan become people they feel destined to be, but is that what God really wants? Both have foundations in faith, but war, loss, and fear twists that all around.

The novel is a riveting page-turner. It portrays the ugliness, brutality, and evil of a world at war, but strongly shines a light of redemption and restoration that pierces that darkness. It is a must-read for those who love historical fiction, especially from a new perspective or for those who love a really good story.

Very Highly Recommended.

Great for Book Clubs.

Audience: Adults.

(I received a complimentary copy from NetGalley. All opinions expressed are mine.)