Thanks to Courtney Brach of Touchstone Publicity/Simon & Schuster, Inc., I am giving away one copy of What the Dog Knows.
Book Description:
Posted by Teddyrose@1 on November 27, 2013
Posted in My Past Giveaways | 5 Comments
Thanks to Courtney Brach of Touchstone Publicity/Simon & Schuster, Inc., I am giving away one copy of What the Dog Knows.
Book Description:
Posted by Teddyrose@1 on November 26, 2013
Posted in My Past Giveaways | 8 Comments
Thanks to Laura Etzkorn of Wunderkind PR, I am giving away both Dead Man’s Time and Not Dead Yet to two different winners. Each winner will receive one of the books. The books are part of a series but can be read as stand alones.
Book Description of Not Dead Yet:
Roy Grace tracks a stalker obsessed with a Hollywood starlet in Not Dead Yet, the latest from #1 international bestselling author Peter James
Days before one of Hollywood’s hottest stars, Gaia Lafayette, leaves her Bel Air home for a movie role on location in Brighton, England, there is a bungled attempt on her life. The whole city of Brighton awaits Gaia’s arrival, including her dangerously obsessive Number One fan looking for revenge and an anxious Detective Superintendent Roy Grace, charged with protecting Gaia.
When a mutilated torso is found on a chicken farm miles away in the countryside, Roy Grace has no reason at all to connect this to the star’s visit to the county. But as events rapidly begin to unfold, Roy Grace and his team find themselves in a desperate race against time to save Gaia’s life from a clever maniac who will stop at nothing to kill her.
Book Description of Dead Man’s Time:
Roy Grace finds himself up against that most dangerous of all adversaries—a man with fury in his heart who has nothing to lose.
New York, 1922. Five-year-old Gavin Daly and his seven-year-old sister, Aileen, are boarding the SS Mauretania to Dublin—and safety. Their mother has been shot and their Irish mobster father abducted. Suddenly, a messenger hands Gavin a piece of paper on which are written four names and eleven numbers, a cryptic message that will haunt him all his life, and his father’s pocket watch. As the ship sails, Gavin watches Manhattan fade into the dusk and makes a promise, that one day he will return and find his father.
Brighton, 2012. Detective Superintendent Roy Grace investigates a savage burglary in Brighton, in which an old lady is murdered and £10m of antiques have been taken, including a rare vintage watch. To Grace’s surprise, the antiques are unimportant to her family—it is the watch they want back. As his investigation probes deeper, he realizes he has kicked over a hornets nest of new and ancient hatreds. At its heart is one man, Gavin Daly, the dead woman’s ninety-five-year-old brother. He has a score to settle and a promise to keep—both of which lead to a murderous trail linking the antiques world of Brighton, the crime fraternity of Spain’s Marbella, and New York.
Roy Grace, in a race against the clock to stop another killing, has met his most dangerous adversary yet.
About Peter James:
Posted by Teddyrose@1 on November 25, 2013
Posted in Books Read in 2013 | 3 Comments
Book Description:
For fans of The Paris Wife, Loving Frank, The Other Boleyn Girl and Shanghai Girls . . . a novel inspired by the true-life love affair between Sigmund Freud and his sister-in-law, Minna Bernays.
Minna Bernays is an overeducated woman with limited options. Fired yet again for speaking her mind, she finds herself out on the street and out of options. In 1895 Vienna, even though the city is aswirl with avant-garde artists and writers and revolutionary are still very few options for women besides marriage. And settling is not something Minna has ever done.
Out of desperation, Minna turns to her older sister, Martha, for help. But Martha has her own problems — six young children, a host of physical ailments, a household run with military precision, and an absent, overworked, disinterested husband who happens to be Sigmund Freud. Freud is a struggling professor, all but shunned by his peers and under attack for his theories, most of which center around sexual impulses, urges, and perversions. While Martha is shocked and repulsed by her husband’s “pornographic” work, Minna is fascinated.
Minna is everything Martha is not—intellectually curious, an avid reader, stunning. But while she and Freud embark on what is at first simply an intellectual courtship, something deeper is brewing beneath the surface, something Minna cannot escape.
My Thoughts:
I was really excited when I heard about this book. I tend to gravitate towards historical fiction with famous people that I know a bit about. Since one of my degrees is in social work, I took quite a few psychology courses and learned about Sigmund Freud and his theories. I didn’t know he had a mistress but it didn’t surprise me.
Though it has be speculated and some evidence has come to light, the authors explain at the end that it isn’t a proven fact. What made the speculation interesting is that it is speculated to be Freud’s sister in law, Minna.
Minna was never married and ended up moving in with the Freuds’ when she was in her late 20’s. She was never married and lived with the Freud’s for 42 years. Karen Mack and Jennifer Kaufman wrote a fiction novel based on that and what they uncovered in their research.
This book was hit and miss for me. Sometimes it was really interesting and I couldn’t put it down and then there were times that it dragged on and I contemplated not finishing it. However, I didn’t give up. I loved the period detail and some of the discussions around Freuds’ theories. The day to day details of the Freud household, I could have mostly done without.
Towards the end, the book jumped from Vienna to England and just said that the Freuds’ received assistance in getting out of their German occupied country at the beginning of World War II. I would have loved more detail about that. They also just mentioned Freud’s death himself but jumped to the end of Minna’s life. The end was strong but I found the jump a bit abrupt. Especially, since there was less interesting detail that could have been taken out.
My favourite part of the book was the author’s note at the end. It went into their research and what they knew to be true.
I certainly do recommend this book for anyone who has interest in the time period and Freud.
3/5
I received the ebook from Edelweiss for my honest opinion.
About Karen Mack and Jennifer Kaufman: