alvin 79

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 21 September 2012

Kindle Fire Giveaway!! "The Angel and The Brown-Eyed Boy: Tales From Earth's End" by Sandy Nathan

Posted on 12:00 by batista

 
SUMMARY:  Tomorrow morning, a nuclear holocaust will destroy the planet. Two people carry the keys to survival: A teenage boy and an intergalactic traveler.

By the late 22nd century, the Great Recession of the early 2000s has lead to a worldwide police state. A ruined United States barely functions. Government control masks chaos, dissenters are sent to camps, and technology is outlawed. War rages while the authorities proclaim the Great Peace.

Finally it all breaks down. We’re in New York City on the eve of nuclear Armageddon. In the morning, ultimate destructive forces will wipe out all life on earth. Only Jeremy Edgarton, a 16-year-old, tech genius and revolutionary; and Eliana, the angelic, off-world traveler sent to Earth on a mission to prevent her planet’s death, can save the world.  Join Eliana and Jeremy as they begin a quest to save two doomed planets … and find each other.


You can visit Sandy online at www.SandyNathan.com.

 

A BOOKISH LIBRARIA WELCOMES MS NATHAN WITH THIS GUEST POST :




WHAT MAKES VISIONARY FICTION VISIONARY?

Sandy Nathan  © 8/28/2012


 

I write visionary fiction. A while back, I was surprised when one of my books was reviewed as science fiction. And then it happened again, and again. Earlier, my book Numenonwas reviewed as fantasy. I was shocked. To me, it was a write up of my meditation experience.

Now, I don’t really care. You can read my books as whatever you want, be it sci-fi, fantasy, or visionary.  Even so, I’d like you to know how I define visionary fiction and what about my books puts them in that category.

To me, visionary fiction rests on a core of moral principle. St. Thomas Aquinas’ famous maxim, “Do good and avoid evil,” spells it out about as clearly as it gets. Visionary fiction contains a moral core and a belief in the ability of individuals and society to evolve in a positive fashion, overcoming evil and generally setting the world right.

Does this mean that visionary fiction is by nature a Polly-Anna-ish or The Secret-ishexercise in “Keep up a cheery front and everything will be groovy in the sweet bye and bye”?

Some visionary fiction fits that mold and has been very well received by readers. This includes some of the best-known examples of the genre. That “happy ever after” quality fits the needs and expectations of many readers.

But! What if you aren’t the typical reader? What if you want a message with a wallop? A message with teeth, that addresses the hard issues you face in your life?

I’m like that. I hate anything easy, simpering, obvious, trite, and watered-down. My writing reflects my preferences. It contains violence, sexual situations, strong language, and doesn’t give away its ending until it ends. Happy endings are not guaranteed in my work. I’d give my novels an R rating if they were movies. (Though they’re way, way less violent than stuff I’ve seen on TV and in the movies. Like the TV series 24 and the smash hit book and movie, The Hunger Games.)

So what about this? Is my work visionary fiction? Should I make it sweeter or tone it down? Call it something else?

I’d like to share a story with you. I was at a meditation retreat a few years back. Some of us participants had corralled one of the monks in a hallway between meditation sessions and bombarded him with questions.

Someone asked, “Why do some people have very calm and undramatic spiritual paths, whereas other people have huge spiritual experiences and their lives go up and down and all over the place?”

The monk answered with something like, “Different people have different lives and spiritual needs. Some people live very quiet lives. They have spiritual realizations that are subtle and deep. Their spiritual experiences reflect this. They may be very profound, but they’re not showy. These people are absolutely on a spiritual path. They get what they need in quiet ways.”

On the other hand, he said, “Some people’s spiritual experiences are huge––dramatic lights, visions, voices, feeling like the hand of God has reached down to re-orientate their lives. These experiences fit the personalities of the people having them. Their lives are often tumultuous. They may have had abusive or traumatic experiences to overcome.

“The various types of spiritual experience fit the people who have them. One isn’t better than the other.  If you have subtle experiences, you don’t have to long for a whopper. Whatever experience you have is fine. The important thing is that you live in such a way that you have the experiences.”

That was one of the most useful teachings I’ve ever gotten. I am a person who has very large spiritual experiences, usually in connection with trauma or loss. I’ve always wanted to be one of those contained, tranquil, angelic babes that you see floating around in spiritual circles.

But it just isn’t me. That isn’t how my soul operates or my artistic vision, either. Years ago, I produced sculpture. Dynamic, emotion-filled pieces that won prizes in art shows. I longed to produce something gentle. I did, too! One piece. That was it.

When I began writing, my work was illuminated by spirit and filled with light. Also some of the nastiest bad guys and most hideous situations you’ll ever see. Jungians call that working on the dark side, and prize it. Some critics of my work haven’t been so kind.

The thing is, we write what we’re given. I have lived through some situations so horrifying that I will never talk about them. Directly. My fiction is a way of working through my emotional debris. It’s not always bright and shiny. It may not show humanity pointing in an upward direction––right then.

But the moral core is there, and so is my abiding belief that at least some of us are on the good road. The road of spirit and light.

Some people needthe grittier type of material I write. My work is for people who have been impacted by alcoholism, drug abuse, or mental illness. This could be their own illness, addiction, or disease or what they’ve had to face due to evil perpetrated upon them by others. My writing is for those lovely, blissful souls who have the smooth path, but like a thrill now and then. It’s also for those of us who know the other side.

It’s for those who know what can happen, and also know that the scars can be erased and the trauma overcome if you’re willing to work.

So that’s the source of my stories.

About Sandy Nathan:

Sandy Nathanwrites to amaze and delight, uplift and inspire, as well as thrill and occasionally terrify. She is known for creating unforgettable characters and putting them in do or die situations. She writes in genres ranging from science fiction, fantasy, and visionary fiction to juvenile nonfiction to spirituality and memoir.

“I write for people who like challenging, original work. My reader isn’t satisfied by a worn-out story or predictable plot. I do my best to give my readers what they want.”

Mrs. Nathan’s books have won twenty-two national awards, including multiple awards from oldest, largest, and most prestigious contests for independent publishers. Her books have earned rave critical reviews and customer reviews of close to five-star averages on Amazon. Most are Amazon bestsellers.

Sandy was born in San Francisco, California. She grew up in the hard-driving, achievement orientated corporate culture of Silicon Valley. Sandy holds Master’s Degrees in Economics and Marriage, Family, and Child Counseling. She was a doctoral student at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business and has been an economic analyst, businesswoman, and negotiation coach, as well as author.

Mrs. Nathan lives with her husband on their California ranch. They bred Peruvian Paso horses for almost twenty years. She has three grown children and two grandchildren.

Her latest books are The Angel & the Brown-Eyed Boy, Lady Grace: A Thrilling Adventure Wrapped in the Embrace of Epic Loveand Sam & Emily: A Love Story from the Underground,which are all part of the Tales from Earth’s End series.

You can visit her website at www.sandynathan.com.

Visit her blogs: http://sandranathan.netand http://yourshelflife.com(blog for writers)  http://talesfromearthsend.com (series blog)

Follow her on Twitter:  www.twitter.com/sandyonathan

Friend her on Facebook:   https://www.facebook.com/sandy.nathan.author

To purchase a paperback copy of Sandy Nathan’s The Angel & the Brown-eyed Boy at Amazon:  http://www.amazon.com/Angel-Brown-eyed-Boy-Sandy-Nathan/dp/0976280906

Purchase at Barnes & Noble:  http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-angel-the-brown-eyed-boy-sandy-nathan/1028502802?ean=9780976280903



"The Angel and the Brown-Eyed Boy" is~

Winner of Four National Awards:

●        2011 IPPY (Independent Press) Award Gold Medal in Visionary Fiction.

●        2011 Indie Excellence Award in Visionary Fiction (Winner of Catergory)

●        Best Books of 2011, USA Book News:
  1. Winner, New Age Fiction
  2. Finalist Fantasy/Sci-Fi
308 pages
You can visit Sandy online at www.SandyNathan.com.

Book Excerpt:

When the girl appeared on the sidewalk, the edges of her body and clothing were fuzzy, as though all of her hadn’t arrived. She looked up and down the street, the way a person would if she’d forgotten an address or lost her way.
Her hair was frizzed and matted, sticking out akimbo. She was thin, had a dirty face, and wore a scratchy coat that was far too big. Its sleeves were rounded little capes; her arms stuck out of them like chopsticks protruding from a napkin. The coat slipped off her shoulders, first to one side, then the other. She hitched it up and kept walking. When she walked, the coat opened to reveal her feet and lower legs.
Her thin socks, trimmed with grayed lace, were pulled up to make a ruffle below her knees. Pink satin laces held up the socks, their Xs snaking up her shins from her shoes. She looked pretty much like everyone she saw, except for her shoes. Long pink ballet slippers stuck out from beneath her coat, as improbable as roses sprouting from the cement.
Eliana made her way along the sidewalk, knowing that she was dirty, feeling the grit in her hair and on her skin. When she had reached the planet’s atmosphere, clothes and all sorts of things had rushed at her with great force, tossing her over and over. Dirt had come, too. She had found the clothes she needed and put them on the way her teachers had shown her. Then her people had put her where she was.
Humans passed, but no one stopped or said anything to her. A paper blew against her leg. More dirty papers blew and piled up everywhere. Streaked and grimy buildings rose near her. Writing in different colors covered their walls. She looked carefully, but couldn’t make out the words. She’d learned to read and write English, but those words mystified her.
“Hey, you!” a person said loudly.
“Yes?” She spoke to a human for the first time, politely bowing. The human was dirty like Eliana, with torn clothes and matted hair. She couldn’t tell if it was a he or a she.
“Get out of here!” the ragged person shouted. “You don’t belong here.” Eliana cowered, but the stranger rushed past her, clawing at something Eliana couldn’t see. “Stay away,” the human said, and then stood with feet braced, shouting, “Get out of here, all of you. Stay away!” The human hadn’t seen Eliana at all.
The girl realized that her people were right; they had put her where no one would notice her. Now she needed to tell them that she had arrived. She raised one foot, turning it gracefully and resting it easily on the other knee. She flicked the shoe with her finger, listening. A trill of clear notes deep within her brought the hint of a smile. She held the coat closed and stood still. She was where she was supposed to be. It had begun.
She fingered the piece of paper in her pocket. Her map. Beneath it, in the pocket’s depths, was the notebook. What was written on it would get her where she needed to go. She had all she needed.
She walked a long way along the hard path. More humans passed her. To her left, gray, inert structures rose high in the sky, blocking the sun. She touched the see-through parts of their lower levels, looking at the humans inside. They looked at each other with darting eyes, speaking rapidly. Everyone outside rushed frantically, noticing nothing. They didn’t see her, just as her people had said.
Eliana choked when a very large carrier passed, spewing a foul odor. The carrier floated above the hard surface where the vehicles moved. Her teachers had told her about the floating. Though she couldn’t see it, a force lived under the machines that made them go. It would kill her if it touched her. She didn’t know what kill meant; kill did not exist in her world. Her mother had explained that she would be like a dead pet. She had seen dead pets before they whisked them away. Motionless husks. She moved away quickly. Better get on with her purpose. She didn’t have much time.
A man with a round stomach and a gray hat walked out of an opening in the ground with many others. He walked like he had a mission. His coat was the same scratchy stuff as hers, but it was buttoned up and looked new. He looked new; his face was ruddy and clean. His shoes reflected the pale sunlight. The trill of notes resounded in her mind once again.
He was the one! She stood in front of him to make him stop. She hoped he could comprehend her speech.
“Will you help me?” she said, working to form the strange words.
 
 
 

Rafflecopter for Kindle Fire Giveaway :  Visit http://www.pumpupyourbook.com/2012/08/28/pump-up-your-book-presents-tales-from-earths-end-virtual-book-publicity-tour-kindle-fire-giveaway/  to fill out the form!!!
 
 

Good Luck to my readers!!! 

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in angels, Author Sandy Nathan, earth's end | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • GIVEAWAY!! "Pure" by Julianna Baggott~Post-Apocalypse Drama!
    SUMMARY :    We know you are here, our brothers and sisters . . . Pressia barely remembers the Detonations or much about life during the Bef...
  • "Her Majesty's Will" by David Blixt~Guest Post with the Author
    SUMMARY : From the Author HER MAJESTY'S WILL is many things. It's a spy novel. It's a Tudor novel. It's a Shakespeare nov...
  • "The Imposter Bride" by Nancy Richler~Beautifully Written...
    SUMMARY: The Imposter Bride  by Nancy Richler is an unforgettable novel about a mysterious mail-order bride in the wake of WWII, whose sudde...
  • "Uglies" by Scott Westerfeld~YA Dystopian
    SUMMARY : Tally is about to turn sixteen, and she can't wait. Not for her license -- for turning pretty. In Tally's world, your sixt...
  • "The Book of Someday" by Dianne Dixon~Ravishing
    SUMMARY : With a tone reminiscent of Jodi Picoult, Kristin Hannah, and Carol Cassella, Dixon pulls at the threads between regret and nostalg...
  • "The Sleeping Dictionary" by Sujata Massey~Exotic and Enticing...
    SUMMARY : In 1930, a great ocean wave blots out a Bengali village, leaving only one survivor, a young girl. As a maidservant in a British bo...

Categories

  • 1100's
  • 13th c
  • 1600's
  • 1600's England
  • 1660s
  • 1800's Paris
  • 1800s
  • 1930's setting
  • 1960's
  • 19th c London
  • 200th Anniversary of Pride and Prejudice
  • 2013
  • 2013 Review of Books
  • 2014
  • A Divided Inheritance
  • A Fatal Likeness
  • A History of the Present Illness
  • A Killing of Angels
  • A Lack of Temperance
  • A Murder At Rosamund's Gate
  • A Thing Done
  • A White Room
  • A White Wind Blew
  • abolution
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • Acquitaine
  • action novel
  • adoption
  • Afghanistan
  • Africa
  • Al Quaeda
  • Alaina Claiborne
  • alchemy
  • Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
  • Alice Hoffman
  • aliens
  • Allegiant
  • Always Watching
  • Amarok
  • American history
  • American novel
  • American Revolution
  • Amity & Sorrow
  • An Italian Obsession
  • Ancient Athens
  • Angel Baby
  • Angelology
  • angels
  • Angels Assassin
  • Ann Boleyn
  • Anne Boleyn
  • Antarctica
  • antebellum
  • apocalypse
  • apple orchard
  • Archers of Avalon
  • Archetype
  • art forgeries
  • art world
  • artist
  • Aryan race
  • Astor + Blue Editions Publishers
  • Astor Place Vintage
  • asylum
  • At Home In Mitford
  • Atria books
  • audio book
  • Audio CD
  • Audio CDs
  • Austensibly Ordinary
  • Author Alana White
  • Author Alice Hoffman
  • Author Allen Wyler
  • Author Alyssa Goodnight
  • Author Amanda Scott
  • Author Amy Hatvany
  • Author Angela Hunt
  • Author Angela J. Townsend
  • Author Anne Easter Smith
  • Author Anton Disclafani
  • Author Becky Aikman
  • Author Brunonia Barry
  • Author Catherine McKenzie
  • Author Chelsea Fine
  • Author David Morrell
  • Author Deb Elkink
  • Author Deborah Swift
  • Author DL Bogdan
  • Author Elin Hilderbrand
  • Author Ella Chase March
  • Author Erika Robuck
  • Author Hannah Fielding
  • Author Heather Gudenkauf
  • Author Henry Massie
  • Author Irina Shapiro
  • Author Jeffrey Deaver
  • Author Jennifer Laam
  • Author Juliette Fay
  • Author Karin Slaughter
  • Author Kfir Luzzatto
  • Author Khanh Ha
  • Author Kirsten Miller
  • Author Kristyn Kusek Lewis
  • Author Lynn Shepherd
  • Author Maggie Stiefvater
  • Author MD Waters
  • Author Melody Carlson
  • Author Michelle Diener
  • Author Morgan K Wyatt
  • Author Nelson DeMille
  • Author nna Loan-Wilsey
  • Author Paula Brackston
  • Author Robin Bridge
  • Author Sam Thomas
  • Author Sandra Byrd
  • Author Stephanie Carroll
  • Author Stephanie Lehmann
  • Author Susan Gregg Gilmore
  • Author Susanna Calkins
  • Author Suzanne Jenkins
  • Author Tiffany Baker
  • Author Tinney Sue Heath
  • Author Wally Lamb
  • Author Abigail Reynolds
  • Author Adam McOmber
  • Author Alissa Nutting
  • Author Ally Condie
  • Author Alyxandra Harvey
  • Author Amanda Coplin
  • Author Amanda Hocking
  • Author Ann Leary
  • Author Ann Weisgarber
  • Author Anne Easter Smith
  • Author Anthony V. Aqua
  • Author ASA Harrison
  • Author Barbara Kyle
  • Author Benjamin Constable
  • Author Blair Richmond
  • Author Brandy Purdy
  • Author C W Gortnor
  • Author Carol Tibaldi
  • Author Catherine McKenzie
  • Author Cathy Marie Buchanan
  • Author Chelsea Cain
  • Author Chevy Stevens
  • Author Colleen McCullough
  • Author Cornelia Read
  • Author Crystal Leigh McVea
  • Author Curtis Sittenfeld
  • Author Cynthia Woolf
  • Author D. J. Niko
  • Author Danielle Trussoni
  • Author Darien Gee
  • Author David Blixt
  • Author David Cristofano
  • Author Dean Crawford
  • Author Dianne Dixon
  • Author DJ Niko
  • Author Donna Fletcher Crow
  • Author Donna Tartt
  • Author Eben Alexander MD
  • Author Edie Eckman
  • Author Eleanor Catton
  • Author Elin Hildebrand
  • Author Elizabeth Berg
  • Author Elizabeth Black
  • Author Elizabeth Flock
  • Author Elizabeth Fremantle
  • Author Elizabeth Loupas
  • Author Emma Donoghue
  • Author Erika Mailman
  • Author Frances Mayes
  • Author Francisco Haghenbeck
  • Author Gail Godwin
  • Author George Eliot
  • Author Gerbrand Bakker
  • Author Gillian Flynn
  • author guest post
  • Author Hank Phillipi Ryan
  • Author Hannah Kent
  • Author Heather A Clark
  • Author Heather Webb
  • Author Hilary Mantel
  • Author Hugh Brewster
  • Author Ian McEwan
  • Author JA Jance
  • Author James Houston Turner
  • Author James MacManus
  • Author James Markert
  • Author Jan Karon
  • Author Jane Grey
  • Author Jason Mott
  • Author Jean Burnett
  • Author Jean Zimmerman
  • Author Jeannie Lin
  • Author Jennie Fields
  • Author Jennifer Chiaverini
  • Author Jennifer Cody Epstein
  • Author Jennifer duBois
  • Author Jennifer McMahon
  • Author JL Spelbring
  • Author Jo Baker
  • Author Joelle Hoverson
  • Author Joyce Carol Oates
  • Author Judith Kischt
  • Author Judith Merkle Riley
  • Author Julianna Baggott
  • Author Juliet Grey
  • Author Justin Cronin
  • Author Kate Atkinson
  • Author Kate Rhodes
  • Author Kathy Reichs
  • Author Kayla McLaren
  • Author Ken Follett
  • Author Kim Rendfeld
  • Author Kimberly Elkins
  • Author Laini Taylor
  • Author Laura Joh Rowland
  • Author Laurel O Donnell
  • Author Lauren Willig
  • Author Lee Martin
  • Author Lee Smith
  • Author Leila Meacham
  • Author Lisa April Smith
  • Author Lisa Carter
  • Author Liz Curtis Higgs
  • Author Liz Jensen
  • Author Lousie Aronson
  • Author M J Rose
  • Author Marci Jefferson
  • Author Marci Nault
  • Author Maria Semple
  • Author Marlene Dietrich
  • Author Mary Sharratt
  • Author Maryanne OHara
  • Author Maurice Sendak
  • Author Melissa Darnell
  • Author Mia March
  • Author Michael Schofield
  • Author Michelle Diener
  • Author Michelle Madhok
  • Author Millicent Monks
  • Author Mingmei Yip
  • Author MJ Rose
  • Author MK McClintock
  • Author Mo Hayder
  • Author Nancy Bilyeau
  • Author Nancy Richler
  • Author Naomi Alderman
  • Author Nelson DeMille
  • Author Nina Benneton
  • Author of Sharp Objects
  • Author Patricia Cornwell
  • Author Peggy Riley
  • Author R Ira Harris
  • Author Rachel Cohn
  • Author Rachel Urquhart
  • Author Raymond Khoury
  • Author Richard Lange
  • Author Rick Yancey
  • Author Rita Gerlach
  • Author Robert Garnett
  • Author Ronald Frame
  • Author Sandy Nathan
  • Author Sarah Jio
  • Author Sarah Raynor
  • Author Sarah Selecky
  • Author Scott Westerfeld
  • Author Sophie McKenzie
  • Author Stephanie Thornton
  • Author Sue Monk Kidd
  • Author Sujata Massey
  • Author Suzanne Desrochers
  • Author Syrie James
  • Author T. J. Brown
  • Author Tarina Tarantino
  • Author Tatiana de Rosnay
  • Author Tess Gerritsen
  • Author Therese Anne Fowler
  • Author Tom Rob Smith
  • Author Tracy Chevalier
  • Author Tracy Guzeman
  • Author Vanessa Diffenbaugh
  • Author Veronica Roth
  • authors
  • Authors Julie Mannix von Zerneck and Kathy Hatfield
  • Authors Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl
  • Bad Girls of the Bible
  • Ballet
  • Banquet of Lies
  • Barbara Delinsky
  • Baudelaire
  • beachy
  • Beautiful Creatures
  • Becoming Josephine
  • Bermuda Triangle
  • Bernadette
  • Beside Two Rivers
  • Best Books of 2012
  • Beta
  • Beyond the Valley
  • biography
  • Black Dahlia and White Rose
  • Black Venus
  • Blackberry Winter
  • Blood Between Queens
  • Blood Prophecy
  • body parts
  • bombing of Japan
  • Bones of the Lost
  • Book Anew
  • Book Last to Die
  • Book My Bookshop
  • Book Songbird
  • Book Finds
  • Book haul
  • Book Haul 10 13
  • Book Haul 11 9 13
  • Book Haul 1st Nov
  • Book Haul 3 27 14
  • Book Haul 4 22 13
  • Book Haul 5 2013
  • Book Haul 8 17 13
  • Book Haul 8 2014
  • Book Haul Dec 2
  • Book Haul December End
  • Book Haul End of April
  • Book Haul Feb March
  • Book Haul March April 2013
  • Book Haul My Purchase 10 24 13
  • Book Haul week Jan 26 2013
  • Book Hauls Belated 3 26 14
  • Books
  • Books in Review
  • books in the mail
  • books read
  • Border Bride
  • Boston based book
  • Boston-based
  • Brad Meltzer
  • Break the Skin
  • Bring Up The Bodies
  • British Empire colonialism
  • British novel
  • British Thriller
  • brothel
  • Burial Rites
  • Buried Treasure
  • Burning Embers
  • cadavers
  • Call Me Zelda
  • Canada
  • Canadian American Author
  • Canadian authors
  • cancer survival
  • Carnegie
  • Carolina Reckoning
  • Cartwheel
  • Cascade
  • Castles
  • Catching Fire
  • Celts
  • Charlemagne
  • Charles Dickens
  • Charles Dickens In Love
  • Charleston SC
  • Charlotte NC
  • Chicago
  • Child 44
  • child abduction
  • child abuse
  • child kidnapping
  • child murder
  • childhood mental illness
  • childhood schizophrenia
  • China
  • Chinese culture
  • christian fiction
  • Christmas 2013
  • Christmas at the White House
  • Clann Series
  • Clara and the Mouse King
  • clones
  • Close My Eyes
  • Close Your Eyes Hold Hands
  • clothes and dressing
  • coming of age novel
  • communes
  • Compulsively Mr. Darcy
  • Confessions of Marie Antoinette
  • Connect the Shapes Crochet Motifs
  • Contemporary Fiction
  • Contemporary novel
  • Contest
  • convent
  • courtesans
  • Covet
  • crafts
  • cremation
  • crime novel
  • Crochet
  • cross over fiction
  • cross stitching
  • Cuba
  • Cuban Revolution
  • cults
  • Cumberland Island
  • Customs and Kings
  • Daddy Love
  • Dangerous Illusions
  • Daniel Deronda
  • Darkness Dwellers
  • Daughter of the Sky
  • Daughters of the Potomac
  • Days of Blood and Starlight
  • death and dying
  • December TBR
  • demons
  • Desert
  • Divergent series
  • doctors
  • Drake Vampires
  • Dream Lover
  • Dream When You're Feeling Blue
  • Druids
  • Dust
  • dwarf
  • dystopian
  • dystopian novel
  • early1900s
  • earth's end
  • ebooks
  • eclectic reading
  • Edgar Degas
  • Edited compilation
  • Edith Wharton
  • Edwardian England
  • Elephant in the Sky
  • Elizabeth Boleyn
  • Elizabeth I
  • Elizabeth of England
  • Ellen Gilchrist
  • Emile Zola
  • Emily Dickinson
  • England
  • English history
  • English queen
  • English setting
  • English spys
  • English writer
  • environment
  • espionage
  • Everything I Never Told You
  • Exceeding Expectations
  • Exploration
  • Expressionist art
  • F Scott Fitzgerald
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • faeries
  • family dynamics
  • fantasy
  • fashion
  • Father Christmas
  • Father Christmas update
  • Favorite Books of 2013
  • favorite bookshops
  • Felice's Worlds
  • feudal Japan
  • Fiction
  • Finding Colin Firth
  • Flesh
  • Flora
  • Florence 1400s
  • Florence Italy
  • flowers
  • forensics novel
  • Forgotten
  • Forgotten Tales of China
  • France
  • Frances Stuart
  • French
  • French poet
  • French Revolution
  • Friendship Bread
  • friendships
  • Frog Music
  • Fuse
  • futuristic
  • Galveston TX
  • gangsters
  • General Fiction
  • Germany
  • ghosts
  • Gilded Lives Fatal Voyage
  • Girl on the Golden Coin
  • Giveaway winners
  • giveaways
  • gold hunting
  • gold rush
  • Gone Girl
  • Goodwill Hunting
  • gothic mystery
  • Grief
  • Guests on Earth
  • Havisham
  • healing
  • Heat Like Mine
  • heaven
  • Henry VIII
  • Her Majestys Will
  • Highland Fling
  • Hildegard von Bingen
  • Hiroshima
  • historical fiction
  • Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours
  • historical India
  • historical romance
  • Holland
  • Hollywood
  • Holocaust
  • Holocaust survivor
  • home and garden
  • horror
  • horses
  • How I Came to Sparkle; grief
  • How I Read Books
  • human trafficking
  • Huntingtons Disease
  • Iceland
  • Illuminations
  • illustrations
  • immortal love
  • In My Book Stacks
  • incest
  • India
  • individual booksellers
  • infidelity
  • insane asylum
  • insanity
  • inspirational fiction
  • Insurgent
  • iPad cover case
  • Island of the White Rose
  • IVFertilization
  • Jack Caffery
  • Jacobean
  • Jane Austen
  • Jane Austen Christmas Week
  • Jane Austen inspired
  • Jane Grey
  • Jani
  • January First
  • Japan
  • Jeffery Deaver
  • Jeffery Deavers
  • Jennifer Gilmore
  • jesters
  • Jesus
  • jewelry
  • jewelry making
  • Jewish culture
  • Jhumpa Lahiri
  • Josephine Bonaparte
  • June 1st week Book Haul
  • Karin Slaughter
  • Katerina Trilogy Vol II
  • Katherine Grey
  • Katherine Parr
  • kidnapping
  • Kiki Strike
  • King Arthur
  • King Charles I
  • KKK
  • knitting
  • Knitting classic style
  • LasVegas
  • Laura Bridgman
  • Laura Lippman
  • lesbians
  • Library Loot
  • Library Loot Haul
  • Literary Fiction
  • Little Brown and Co.
  • Little Mercies
  • London
  • London 1600's
  • London England
  • Longbourn
  • Louis of France
  • Louisville KY
  • love story
  • Lullaby
  • Lydia Bennet
  • MA
  • MA author
  • mafia
  • magical
  • Maine
  • Manhattan
  • Marie Antoinette
  • Marilyn Monroe
  • marriage
  • Martinique
  • Mary Grey
  • Mary Queen of Scots
  • Mary Shelley
  • Mary Todd Lincoln
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • medical thriller
  • Medici
  • medieval England
  • Memoirs and Non-Fiction
  • Memoirs and Other
  • mental illness
  • Mercy Snow
  • Mexican cartel
  • Mexico
  • Midnight Witch
  • Midwifery
  • MJ Rose
  • moral issues
  • More Last Minute Knitted Gifts
  • motherhood
  • mothers
  • mountains
  • Moving Target
  • Mr. Darcy
  • Mr. Darcy's Refuge
  • Mrs. Keckley
  • Mrs. Lincolns Dressmaker
  • multi-cultural
  • murder
  • Murder As A Fine Art
  • murder mystery
  • My Purchasing Criteria
  • mystery
  • mystery and suspense
  • Mystery Writers of America
  • mystery/thriller
  • mystical creatures
  • Mything You by Greta Buckle
  • mythology
  • Nantucket
  • Napoleon
  • Napoleonic era
  • Narrator Mary Beth Hurt
  • NC
  • NC novel
  • NDE afterlife experiences
  • necromancy
  • needlework
  • Nephilim
  • New Amsterdam
  • New England
  • New France
  • New York
  • New York City
  • news reporter
  • Non-fiction
  • NonFiction about Jane Austen books
  • North Carolina
  • nuns
  • NW USA
  • NYC
  • obsessive love
  • Old South
  • Oleander Girl
  • One Kick
  • orphans
  • overcoming rejection
  • Paradise Misplaced
  • paranormal
  • Paris
  • past lives
  • pedophile
  • Penguin
  • Penguin classics
  • Perfection
  • Playlist Pride and Prejudice
  • Polio
  • polygamy
  • Poppet
  • post traumatic stress disorder
  • Post war Europe
  • post-apocalypse
  • Pride and Prejudice
  • Princeton
  • prohibition
  • Proof of Heaven
  • prophesy
  • prostitute
  • prostitution
  • psychological novel
  • Quakers
  • queen
  • Queen Elizabeth I
  • Queen Mary Tudor
  • Queens Gambit
  • Rasputins Shadow
  • recipes
  • Reddevil 4
  • Reformation
  • reincarnation
  • Rennaissance
  • restauranteur
  • Restoration Period
  • Review Questionnaire
  • Richard III
  • River's End
  • rivers in MA
  • Rizzoli and Isles
  • Roaring 20's
  • Romance
  • romance novel
  • Roses Have Thorns
  • Royal Mistress
  • Russia
  • Russian mafia
  • Russian secret service
  • Salem MA
  • sanitorium
  • Saturday Night Widows
  • Scarlet Letter
  • scary story
  • schizophrenia
  • scientific
  • Scotland
  • Scottish
  • Scottish History
  • scrap booking
  • seafaring
  • seances
  • secret society
  • Secret Storm
  • Seduction
  • Sensory Integration Disorder
  • Sensory Processing Disorder
  • Sept 2012 Finds
  • series
  • series book
  • servants
  • sex slave
  • sexually explicit
  • Shakers
  • Shakespeare
  • Shanghai
  • Sharing Reading Habits
  • Shelley
  • Shieldmaiden
  • short stories
  • Simo and Schuster
  • sirens
  • Sisterland
  • sisters
  • Sisters of Treason
  • ski town
  • slavery
  • Snatched
  • snow
  • Socialism
  • soldiers
  • Somerset
  • Songs of Three Islands: A Memoir
  • Sourcebooks
  • South America
  • Southern Gothic
  • Southern town
  • Spain
  • speakeasy
  • spiritual novel
  • Spun
  • St. Martin's Press
  • step mothers
  • Summer read
  • Summer Reading List
  • Summerset Abbey
  • summertime
  • supernatural
  • surrogacy
  • Survival Lessons
  • Suspense Thriller
  • Suspense Thrillers
  • Sweden
  • Sweet Tooth
  • Sweetness #9
  • sy fy
  • syfy
  • syfy inclined
  • Tampa
  • teachers
  • techno thriller
  • Ten White Geese
  • Tennessee Textile workers
  • terrorism
  • Texas
  • The 5th Wave
  • The Accursed
  • The Accused
  • The Age of Desire
  • The Ashford Affair
  • The Avalon Ladies Scrapbooking Society
  • The Bad Miss Bennet
  • The Beautiful Mystery
  • The Blue Bistro
  • The Boleyn Bride
  • The Bone Bed
  • The Book of Fragrances
  • The Book of Someday
  • The Chalice
  • The Cross and the Dragon
  • The Drowning House
  • The Emperor's Conspiracy
  • The Emperors Conspiracy
  • The Forgotten Queen
  • The Funeral Dress
  • The Ghost Runner
  • The Gilded Lily
  • The Girl She Used To Be
  • The Girl With All The Gifts
  • The Gods of Heavenly Punishment
  • The Goldfinch
  • The Good House
  • The Gravity of Birds
  • the grotesque
  • The Hands of Time
  • The House I Loved
  • The Imposter Bride
  • The Independence of Mary Bennet
  • The Inheritors
  • The Invention of Wings
  • The Jade Temptress
  • The Jazz Age
  • The Killing Room
  • The Lace Reader
  • The Ladys Slipper
  • The Lake House
  • The Language of Flowers
  • The Last Runaway
  • The Liars Gospel
  • The Lowlands
  • The Luminaries
  • The Matchmaker
  • The Midwife's Tale
  • The Missing Manuscript of Jane Austen
  • The Mothers
  • The Nine Fold Heaven
  • The Nutcracker
  • The Offering
  • The onahlossee Riding Camp for Girls
  • The Orchardist
  • The Orphanmaster
  • The Other Woman
  • The Painted Girls
  • The Panther
  • The Paris Architect
  • The Passage
  • the plague
  • The Postmistress
  • The Predator
  • The Promise
  • The Queen's Dwarf
  • The Queens Rivals
  • The Quest
  • The Raven Boys
  • The Red Lily Crown
  • The Reformation
  • The Returned
  • The Riddle of Solomon
  • The Sea House
  • The Secret Book of Frida Kahlo
  • The Secret Daughter of the Tsar
  • The Secret History Empress Theodora
  • The Secret Keeper
  • The Shogun's Daughter
  • The Shortest Way Home
  • The Sign of the Weeping Virgin
  • The Silent Wife
  • The Sleeping Dictionary
  • The Snugg
  • The Sparkle Factory
  • The Tenth Saint
  • The Tudor Conspiracy
  • The Uninvited
  • The Visionist
  • The Winter People
  • therapy
  • This Cake Is For The Party
  • Thomas Cromwell
  • Three Lives of Tomomi Ishikawa
  • thrillers
  • Titanic
  • Tsar
  • tuberculosis
  • Tudor England
  • Two Week Wait
  • Uglies
  • Undercover Rebel
  • Underground Railroad
  • Unfailing Light
  • unwed mothers
  • Valley of Ashes
  • Vampires
  • Vanity Fair magazine
  • Vermont
  • Vespucci
  • Victor Hugo
  • Victorian era
  • Vietnam
  • Viking history
  • vintage clothing
  • violence
  • Waking Up In Heaven
  • war
  • Waverly Hills Sanatorium
  • We Are Water
  • Wear This Now
  • Weekly Book Haul
  • Western
  • Western Romance
  • What Happened To My Sister
  • What I'm Reading
  • What Is Visible
  • What's in the mail
  • Whats on my shelf
  • Where'd You Go
  • White Forest
  • Who I Review
  • Why I Buy Books
  • widowed
  • witches
  • witness protection agency
  • wolves
  • Woman of Ill Fame
  • Women Authors
  • Women Writers
  • women's friendships
  • Women's issues
  • women's temperance league
  • womens story
  • Woodrow Wilson
  • World Without End
  • writers
  • WWI
  • WWII
  • YA fiction
  • YA Novel
  • Z A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald
  • Zelda Fitzgerald

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (39)
    • ►  August (2)
    • ►  July (7)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (7)
    • ►  March (9)
    • ►  February (8)
    • ►  January (5)
  • ►  2013 (182)
    • ►  December (13)
    • ►  November (17)
    • ►  October (22)
    • ►  September (6)
    • ►  August (15)
    • ►  July (12)
    • ►  June (16)
    • ►  May (13)
    • ►  April (17)
    • ►  March (11)
    • ►  February (10)
    • ►  January (30)
  • ▼  2012 (79)
    • ►  December (33)
    • ►  November (17)
    • ►  October (16)
    • ▼  September (13)
      • "The After Wife" by Gigi Levangie Grazer ~Not for ...
      • "What Happened To My Sister" by Elizabeth Flock
      • "The Orchardist" by Amanda Coplin ~ Powerful Read!
      • "River's End" by Melody Carlson ~ Inspired Fiction
      • "Tame A Wild Bride" by Cynthia Woolf~Wild Western!
      • "Bride of New France" by Suzanne Desrochers
      • GIVEAWAY!! "Dream Lover" by Suzanne Jenkins~Roman...
      • Kindle Fire Giveaway!! "The Angel and The Brown-E...
      • Kindle Fire Giveaway!! "Greco's Game" by James Hou...
      • Giveaway!! "Willow Pond" by Carol Tibaldi~Roaring ...
      • "Dead Ringer" by Allen Wyler ~Medical Thriller
      • "Felice's Worlds" by Henry Massie~An Interview
      • In My Book Stacks ~ What I'm Reading Sept 2012
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

batista
View my complete profile