Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


The Queen of Last Hopes by Susan Higginbotham

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on January 4, 2011
Posted in Books Read in 2010  | 1 Comment

Last year I finally read my first Susan Higginbotham novel, The Stolen Crown and was hooked.  I was anxiously awaiting her latest novel, The Queen of Last Hopes and was lucky enough to receive a review copy.  I was not disappointed.

This book is all about the controversial,  Margaret of Anjou, Queen of England, for a time anyway.  She was sent from her native France to marry King Henry VI.  The alliance was to help bring peace between the two countries but it did not.

I took many years for Margaret to become pregnant and she was destined to only have one child.  When Edward was born, King Henry was in a stupor, totally unresponsive.  He eventually came out of it and proudly met his son.  However, there were many months before he recovered and Richard, the Duke of York, decided he should be in charge.  Margaret tried to become Regent until her husband was well again but failed and Richard succeeded.

Even when King Henry is well again, Richard of York has plans to take over.  Thus began the turbulent, War of the Roses.  Richard accused Margaret of having an affair and therefore, Edward was a bastard so could never be king.  There was no proof of course, just speculation, but enough to raise doubts of England.  Enough to help raise an army against the Lancaster king. 

Many battles happened back and forth.  Sometimes Henry was King but and Margaret Queen but for long periods, not.  It was not decided until the final battle between the Yorks and the Lancasters, with many dead or put to death.

I have read other books that take place during the War of the Roses.  Susan Higgnbotham shows Margaret in a more favourable light. 

I liked how she had dates displayed at the beginning of each chapter with little, if any “flashbacks”, which can cause confusion.  Each chapter had a different narrator and was in the title of each chapter.  It made it easy to follow along and see history unfold from many perspectives.

Some of the war scenes got to be a bit repetitious for me but were necessary for historical accuracy.  That is my only complaint but I cannot call it a flaw.  I loved Higginbotham’s author Note at the back explaining what happened to the remaining main characters, such as Margaret, herself and what parts of the book were completely imagined by her.  However, she did stick to historical fact throughout, with just a few events here and there to spice it up.

4.5/5

Please join me at So Many Precious Books on January 27th in welcoming Susan Higganbothom.  She will be telling us even more about Margaret of Anjou.

Thanks to Beth Pehlke of Sourcebooks for the review copy of this book.

Also reviewed by:

Historical-Fiction

The Burton Review 

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

Tears of the Mountain by John Addiego

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on December 31, 2010
Posted in Books Read in 2010 

It is July 4, 1876 and Jeremiah McKinley is looking forward to a day of Centennial Independence Day celebration in Sonoma, California.However, a boy shows up at his doorstep claiming to be Jeremiah’s deceased father, Daniel.  Then, Jeremiah receives a strange message of warning.
The story takes place on this one day however there are a lot of flashbacks that are from as far back as 1831.  Jeremiah reflects on his youth and all the violence that his family and others endured moving to the West. 
The part of the story taking part on the present day, July 4, 1876 was the best part of the book, IMO.  I don’t know how writing about the wild west could be written flatly.  There was so much action and violence going on back then but somehow Mr. Addieco managed it.  
I found myself nodding off durning the flashback scenes.  Also, this book was not marketed as Christion Lit. but you could have fooled me.  A good portion of the book contained quotes from the bible.  I refuse to read Christian Lit.  For that readon and because I could not stay awake while reading it, I did not finish.

This is the second book I have read by Mr. Addiego, the first was The Islands of Divine Music

which, I did finish.  John Addiego has strong character development so he does have potential as a writer.  I recommend he work on his story development.

DNF/5

Please note that I did read a much more favorable review, at Royal Reviews.

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

The Nobody by Jeff Lemire

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on December 30, 2010
Posted in Books Read in 2010graphic novels  | 2 Comments

After I completed Jeff Lemire’s graphic trilogy,Essex County, I have been craving more by Jeff Lemire. Yes, I am a graphic novel convert.  Blame Jeff Lemire and a couple fellow bloggers for that.  LOL! I checked my local library website and found that The Nobody was available.  So, I snatched it up.
The Nobody is quite different than the Essex County Trilogy.  It is Jeff Lemire’s re-telling of H. G. Well’s The Invisible Man.
A man all wrapped up in bandages shows up in the small town, Large Mouth.  He calls himself Griffen and he gets a motel room.  There is talk about him in the town bar and the cafe.  Some of the town’s people are very suspicious of him.  
However, a teenager, Vickie is curious about Griffen. and goes to his motel room to talk.  They strike up a kind of friendship but Griffen is not the kind of man that Vickie think she is.  He has a big secret and has come to Large Mouth to hide
.
I enjoyed this story but not as much as the Essex County Trilogy.  Lemire didn’t capture the emotions of his characters like he did in Essex County.  The characters in this story were quite two-dimensional and quite stereotypical.   However, the relationship between Vickie and Griffen was interesting.  Where Lemire did shine is with his drawing.  It was the calibre of drawing that I have come to expect from him.
3.5
See My reviews of the Essex County Trilogy:

Essex County Vol.1: Tales From the Farm by Jeff Lemire

Essex County Volume 2: Ghost Stories by Jeff Lemire

Essex County Vol. 3: The Country Nurse by Jeff Leire

Also reviewd by:

The Book Mine Set

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