
|
|
Archive for February, 2010
Thursday, February 25th, 2010
Today I am reviewing DEEP HARBOR by Lisa Tawn Bergen, the second in the Northern Lights series.This is a wonderful Christian historical novel which deals with the themes of redemption, second chances, and waiting on God’s perfect timing. Initially, I found it hard to get into, since I had not read the first book in the series, THE CAPTAIN’S BRIDE. And I found the first female protagonist presented, Tora Anders, very difficult to relate to, for she is selfish, manipulative and very much into the pleasure of riches and power. But it was Tora who won my heart as she became broken, lost her wealth and the man she craved. She became very much a nineteenth century female version of the Prodigal Son. One of the other female protagonists, Kaatje, is a hardworking farm woman whose husband had an affair with Tora, then left for Alaska, causing Tora to leave their baby with Kaatje. Kaatje took baby Jessica in, then feared someday Tora would someday return to claim her. The last of the three heroines, Elsa, is the wife of a ship’s captain who sails with him. The three women are all connected as Bergensers (Norwegians who immigrated to America), and their stories intersect continually in a way that really drew me in.
I found Elsa, the widow of a ship’s captain who bears his posthumous child after he falls overboard and drowns, hardest to sympathize with. I did like that she aided Tora in her quest to become a new person in Christ. But knowing there is a pirate looking for her in a desire for revenge since the first book, and knowing he is still looking for her in the second book, she nonetheless goes back to sea with her children along, including the baby, and writes articles to the New York Times detailing her whereabouts, which the villain takes full advantage of. This seems not only foolish but not what God would have a responsible mother do to ensure her children’s safety. It seems she is a little carried away by pride, especially since she is known as “The Heroine of the Horn” from the first book. But this weakness never seems to change or is even portrayed as a weakness. And I realize this may only be my own opinion. The redemption of Tora and hints that she will eventually marry her true love do a lot to compensate for Elsa.
I had a couple of minor quibbles with the author’s style–one, that she repeatedly refers to Tora before her redemption as a “maven” of roadhouse development. The word “maven” was not used in the late 1800’s; it is a Yiddish word which first comes into American use in the 1950’s or ’60’s, depending which dictionary one consults. This jarred me out of the nineteenth-century atmosphere the author had conveyed. And she uses “quip” as a dialogue tag far too often. As an author myself, I realize that there is often a word or words that I’ve overused in the manuscript, but these should get edited out by the author or during the publisher’s editing.
As I said, these are minor things which may only bother me. This was a very spiritually uplifting book about hardworking, determined Christian women and the equally determined men who love them. I found the eventual reconciliation of Tora and Kaatje inspiring. The story will be continued in the next book in the series, MIDNIGHT SUN, in which the characters all journey to Alaska to forge new lives. I would recommend this book.
This book was provided for review by Waterbrook.
Blessings, Laurie Kingery
Tags: Christian fiction, DEEP HARBOR, Lisa Tawn Bergen, Northern Lights series, Waterbrook Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010
Every winter since we’ve been married, my husband and I plan a remodeling project during his downtime when remodelling jobs become scarce. This year it’s rugs for the master and guest bedrooms. We decided to do the guestroom first, which necessitated moving hundreds of books from my two TBR (to-be-read, as every booklover knows) bookcases–and a task I’ve been looking forward to and dreading at the same time.
I’ve accumulated a lot of books over the years, more than any one person (at least one with a job) could possibly read. If one loves books, one is given them in stacks when people clear out their own bookshelves. Writers and aspiring writers are given them free at conferences, and buy them by the dozens too. I used to come home with a lot more freebies than I do now, not only because I’ve become more selective but because airline baggage charges have made that too expensive a practice to continue. I used to think I would get to every book I owned, eventually. I always had, and I never ever wanted again to be in the horrific (to a booklover) position of having Nothing To Read, as I was in the Blizzard of ‘78. And so I had accumulated romances and novels of all kinds–historicals, category romance, suspense, horror, vampire, even some glitz-and-glamour from the 80’s. (I just want to say I did NOT buy that!)
And I’d come to the conclusion that, since I’ve becoming a published author, not only had my available reading time shrunk, but my tastes had changed. I’m now an author of Christian fiction, and there was no way I would ever read some of these books. Not even during a blizzard. So I embarked on the Great Discard. I set up two series of boxes, one for the Kidney Foundation, one for my sister-in-law Carole, who loves the old, lush historicals once disdainfully referred to as bodice rippers. The contemporary fiction went to the Kidney Foundation.
I kept a lot of them–about half. All the Christian fiction, and the best of the historicals, the westerns, medievals and Regencies, as well as many suspense and legal thrillers. A whole shelf of vampire romance. I now have a manageable amount on those two bookcases, with room for more. Looking at those old covers, reading the back blurbs, was like walking down the memory lane of my book-collecting life. How the covers have changed! Much more tasteful now–at least the ones I like. Nothing that would embarrass me to be seen reading it in public. But there was something really appealing in the best of those old lush covers of the longer books of that era when historicals really hit it big.
I bought a lot more books in those days “to be nice,” frankly. I bought books of email contacts I thought were friends. Not all of them really were. I’ve stopped buying books that way any more. I’m more careful with my book dollars, as I suspect most of us are.
Now I have some vacant shelf space–where is that book catalogue? I need to buy some more!
Blessings, Laurie
Tags: books, TBR pile, writing life Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Monday, February 22nd, 2010
Today I’m reviewing SECRETS by Robin Jones Gunn for Random House/Multnomah. I’ve read several of Gunn’s “Sisterchicks” books, so I was happy to receive this book to review.
Jessica Morgan is a woman with secrets who comes to Glennbrook to begin a new life. Fleeing her past–and the reader is not let in on what is her dark secret that she flees from until much later–Jessica Morgan arrives in Glenbrook to take up the job of teacher. Because she crashes her car on the way in, the first person she meets is a friendly, handsome paramedic, Kyle, who rescues her and takes her to the hospital. Here she finds out her friend and confidant, the principal of the school, has had a stroke and Jessica must begin her new life on her own. She goes astray immediately by taking on a false last name to hide her past, fearing her last name would reveal her secret and drag her back into the life she is trying so desperately to escape. She might have succeeded but for the suspicious meddling of the unfriendly interim principal and the continued interest of the paramedic, who is a Christian. His caring leads Jessica on a quest to learn to trust. Accompanying Kyle and some Christian kids on a mission trip to Mexico, she meets her Lord and learns she can trust Him as well as the man he has picked out for her, Kyle.
Gunn’s style is very readable. The book is a page turner and has undeniable spiritual value in teaching the reader that secrets can build a wall that keep us from trusting our Lord and those who would help us and enrich our lives. Yet I felt there are parts that could have been made more believable–the car crash, her treatment in the E.R. (I’m an E. R. nurse), the heroine’s existing on practically no food until her first paycheck, and the fact that the school seems to have no way of checking the heroine’s teaching license status–even though the book was originally written in 1995, that seems a bit unbelievable . And the past that the heroine is fleeing doesn’t seem all that dire, when it’s finally revealed. The book really gains strength during the mission trip when Jessica comes to grips with her Savior. And I have to admit I enjoyed the spiteful interim principal’s comeuppance.
I felt the good parts of the book far outweighed the parts that could have been better and I remain a fan of Robin Jones Gunn.
This book was provided free for review by Random House/Multnomah.
Blessings, Laurie Kingery
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Sunday, February 7th, 2010
The storm that swept through the midwest Friday and went on to bury Washington D.C. has left my little part of the world a winter wonderland. We have about ten inches of snow here, and thanks to my wonderful husband who shovels it by hand and our wonderful neighbor who frequently shows up to plow out our driveway with his truck, I can mostly just sit here and enjoy its beauty, rather than having to do the backbreaking work of shoveling it myself. I had to work at the ER last night, so I had to get out and drive in it, but I really have to admit I find driving in snow something of an adventure. It’s as close to living on the edge as I really want to be. I’m aware that I probably wouldn’t like it at all if I’d ever had an accident because of the snow…
Thanks to a low census undoubtedly due to the weather, I was privileged to come home after only 8 hours last night, and got to experience the adventure again, along with the deep peace that driving along in the dark with the countryside all silver and white, with snowflakes swirling all around me. It didn’t get at all scary until I reached my own road, which hadn’t been blessed by the snowplow since the afternoon. Getting into the garage from the driveway, which had drifted over somewhat, was a challenge too, but I made it, so I said a prayer of thanks and went to bed early!
I’d really prefer the glories of spring, but as long as it must be winter, let it snow! Do you like the snow? Write and let me know.
Blessings, Laurie
Tags: seasons, snow Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Saturday, February 6th, 2010
I’m actually a little late announcing this, but it’s been a busy week. I can finally say I’ve sold two more books in the Simpson Creek Brides series! The book I am presently writing, working title THE WEDDING TREE, will be the first book in the contract. It’s Prissy’s story. Prissy Gilmore was the best friend of Sarah Matthews in THE DOCTOR TAKES A WIFE, and I felt it was time she had her own story–and her own hero, Sam Bishop, a down-on-his-luck gambler who decides he needs a different location after he runs afoul of gambling hall kingpin Kendall Raney in Houston. He also wants a different direction in his life, and thinks nothing could be better than marrying a pretty girl who is also conveniently rich. Prissy is a girl who’s in love with love. She’s watched several others of the Simpson Creek Spinsters’ Club find their matches, including best friend Sarah, and she’s more than ready to find her own true love. Neither is what the other expected, and the course of love never does run smooth, to quote Shakespeare–but if it did, that would make for a mighty short book. My deadline for this book will be June 1, and I’m already revising the first part a bit per my editor’s suggestions.
Book 2 in the contract, as yet untitled, is Caroline Wallace’s story. She’d thought she’d found her forever true love, but the flu epidemic in THE DOCTOR TAKES A WIFE cost the life of the man she’d met through the Spinsters’ Club. Caroline is sure she’s lost her chance at love and is meant to live as a single woman the rest of her life. Since she will never have children, she throws her energy into teaching Simpson Creek’s children, but when the brother of her late fiance comes to town, unaware that his brother has died and expecting his brother and his new wife to watch his two children while he traipses off to Montana, the fireworks begin…
I don’t have publishing dates for these two books yet, but it’s nice to know I’ll be able to bring two new Simpson Creek Brides stories to you!
Blessings, Laurie
Tags: Christian fiction, Steeple Hill Love Inspired historicals, THE DOCTOR TAKES A WIFE, THE WEDDING TREE, writing life Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
|
|