Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


It’s no secret that I love historical fiction and Canadian fiction, so when I was asked if I wanted to review The Bride of New France I jumped.  I moved to Canada from the U.S. back in 1993.  I have learned quite a bit of Canadian history but I never really understood the French Connection.  I knew we had two official languages here, French and English.  I always wondered, why French.  The Bride of New France answered that question.

Book Description:

In 1669, Laure Beausejour, an orphan imprisoned with prostitutes, the insane and other forgotten women in Paris’ infamous Salpetriere, is sent across the Atlantic to New France as a Fille du roi. Laure once dreamed with her best friend Madeleine of using her needlework stills to become a seamstress on the Rue Saint-Honoré and to one day marry a gentleman. The King, however, needs French women in his new colony and he finds a fresh supply in the city’s largest orphanage. Laure and Madeleine know little of the place called New France, except for stories of ferocious winters and men who eat the hearts of French priests. To be banished to Canada is a punishment worse than death.

 Bride of New France explores the challenges of coming into womanhood in a brutal time and place. From the moment she arrives in Ville-Marie (Montreal), Laure is expected to marry and produce children with a French soldier who can himself barely survive the harsh conditions of his forest cabin. But Laure finds, through her clandestine relationship with Deskaheh, an allied Iroquois, a sense of the possibilities in this New World. 

What happens to a woman who attempts to make her own life choices in such authoritative times?


My Thoughts:

I loved this book except for the ending.  Laure Beausejour was snatched from her parents, at a young age, on the streets in France one night.  Why, what was their crime?  They were dirt poor and lived on the streets.  She was brought to Salpetriere, the same place where prostitutes and the insane were brought. 

She was lucky though, in a way.  She was on a floor where orphans were taught how to make lace and sew. She even had dreams of becoming a seamstress one day.  That dream what ripped away from her when she was put on a ship bound for New France, now known as Canada.  The king had prostitutes and teenage women beginning their child bear years sent to New France to marry the men there.  He wanted them to stay there and populate.  He gave men incentives and wives to entice them to stay.

Life in New France was hard.  Laurie’s new husband left her in their rugged (an understatement) cabin alone for the first entire Winter and after that, whenever he felt like it.  She had to learn new skills quick and had a hard time feeding herself.  On top of that, she finally gets pregnant and he still leaves.

Those are just the basic highlights because I don’t want to risk spoilers.  This is Suzanne Desrocher’s first book.  However, she took great command of  her pen with amazing that captured time and place.  Her characters were well drawn out and the essence of the new barren land was beautiful.

Like I said, I loved this book!  The only thing missing was a satisfying ending.  I felt like I was left hanging. What happens to poor Laurie?  Mrs. Desrochers, inquiring minds want to know!  Do I smell a sequel?  I sure hope so!  Highly recommended.

4/5

I received this book for my honest review.

Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Review: Vegan Pizza by Julie Hasson

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on September 16, 2013
Posted in Books Read in 2013Weekend Cooking  | 9 Comments

I haven’t done a weekend cooking post for a long time but I have more vegan cookbooks to review, so I thought this would be a perfect place to post them. 

Bill and I LOVE pizza, so I make it a lot!  However, since I received the Vegan Pizza Cookbook by Julie Hasson, I have been making a pizza every week!  Don’t get me wrong, I always made good pizza, just not restaurant quality pizza.

It cost me a total of $80 but now I make restaurant style pizza.  It now tastes like it came out of a brick oven and it has the crispy texture I always longed to create.  The secret is a pizza stone and pizza peel.  The pizza stone goes directly in the oven and the pizza peel is the paddle you use to get the pizza on and off the stone with out burning yourself.  You can keep the stone in the oven and put your cookware right on top of it as well.  Since I started doing that, everything I have put in the oven has cooked more evenly.  Let me tell you, both the stone and peel were well worth the investment.

The other trick to perfect pizza is the recipe.  There are several recipes in the book but my favorite is the basic.  It is quite a bit wetter than the dough I use to make, but that is the other trick required.  Use just enough flour to be able to roll the dough out. Then put it on parchment paper and on the pizza peel.  Put all your topping on and then put the pizza that is on the parchment paper directly on the pizza stone, in the oven. 

Have you ever thought to put potatoes on a pizza?  I know, sounds crazy but trust me it’s not.  I made the
Potato and Wild Mushroom pizza from the book.  OMG, it was so good. In fact, there was only one lonely peace left for me to take a photo of.

I highly recommend the Vegan Pizza Cookbook!  You don’t even have to be vegan to love it!

5/5

I received the ebook version of this cookbook from Net Galley for my honest review.
Tweet

Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Giveaway: DECLAN’S CROSS by Carla Neggers

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on September 13, 2013
Posted in My Past Giveaways  | 12 Comments

Thanks to Veronica Grossman of Meryl L. Moss Media Relations, Inc., I am giving away one print copy of Declan’s Cross.

Book Description:

An escape to an idyllic Irish seaside village is about to turn deadly in this riveting new novel by master of romantic suspense Carla Neggers.

For marine biologist Julianne Maroney, two weeks in tiny Declan’s Cross on the south Irish coast is a chance to heal her broken heart. She doesn’t expect to attract the attention of FBI agents Emma Sharpe and Colin Donovan—especially since a Donovan is the reason for her broken heart.

Emma and Colin are in Ireland for their own personal retreat. Colin knows he’s a reminder of everything Julianne wants to escape, but something about her trip raises his suspicion. Emma, an art crimes expert, is also on edge. Of all the Irish villages Julianne could choose…why Declan’s Cross? 

Ten years ago, a thief slipped into a mansion in Declan’s Cross. Emma’s grandfather, a renowned art detective, investigated, but the art stolen that night has never been recovered and the elusive thief never caught.

From the moment Julianne sets foot on Irish soil, everything goes wrong. The well-connected American diver who invited her to Ireland has disappeared. And now Emma and Colin are in Declan’s Cross asking questions.

As a dark conspiracy unfolds amid the breathtaking scenery of Declan’s Cross, the race is on to stop a ruthless killer…and the stakes have never been more personal for Emma and Colin.

Praise for Carla Neggers:
“Heron’s Cove gives romantic suspense fans what they want…complex mystery with a bit of romance. Negger’s skillfully created a compelling puzzle, refusing to reveal all the pieces until the very end.”
– Top Pick, RT Book Reviews
“Once in a while, a writer who’s been at it seemingly forever reaches a new pinnacle. Such is the case with Carla Neggers in her latest superb adventure of romantic suspense!”
– Providence Journal
“Carla Neggers has emerged as the queen of the romantic suspense novel…Heron’s Cove is a novel that is written with a gripping and suspenseful style that will surely have the most astute armchair sleuths and amateur detectives scratching their heads and guessing right up until the very end. Neggers does a first-rate job of creating scenes with images that are so vivid, one can almost breathe in the briny salt air along Maine’s craggy coast.”
– Nashua Sunday Telegraph

About Carla Neggers:


Carla Neggers has been spinning stories ever since she climbed a tree with pad and pen at age eleven. Now she has millions of copies of her books in print in more than 30 countries, and more than two dozen of her books have placed on the New York Times, USA TODAY and Publishers Weekly bestseller lists. Declan’s Cross is the third novel in her acclaimed Sharpe & Donovan romantic suspense series that launched with Saint’s Gate and Heron’s Cove and has been praised as “a breathtaking reading experience” (Providence Journal), “gripping and suspenseful” (Nashua Telegraph), and “outstanding” (USA TODAY). Her popular Swift River Valley series debuted with Secrets of the Lost Summer, which spent four weeks on the New York Times bestseller list and garnered rave reviews, including a starred review from Booklist and a Top Pick from RT Book Reviews. 

Growing up in rural western Massachusetts with three brothers and three sisters, Carla developed an eye for detail and a love of a good story. Her imagination, curiosity and sense of adventure are key to creating the complex relationships, fast-paced plots and deep sense of place in her books.

This giveaway is restricted to Canada and the U.S. and ends on September 27. 2013.  Please use Rafflecopter to enter.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tweet

Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.