By Nora Roberts
Rated 4 Stars
From: Library
It looks like Nora Roberts has returned to her roots with this new series. I am so happy that she has because I think she is a much better Romance writer than she was with whatever it was she was trying to write with all the paranormal, mystery mish mash that she has been writing for the last several years. It seems like she has finally got her groove back just when Mary Balogh appears to have lost hers. Oh well, as long as I have one Romance writer at a time to read I will be happy.
PUBLISHER DESCRIPTION: Mackensie “Mac” Elliot had the perfect job and the best friends in the world, Emma, Laurel, and Parker. Together, the four were Vows, Connecticut’s hottest wedding-planning company. So what if Mac hadn’t found her own Mr. Right yet. Then Mac literally bumps into shy, scholarly, yet surprisingly sexy Carter Maguire when he turns up for his sister’s wedding-planning meeting, and Mac quickly discovers exactly what is missing from her up-until-now satisfactory life. After blending paranormal and fantasy elements in her last four romance trilogies, consistently engaging Roberts returns to basics and her literary roots. The result is a thoroughly charming contemporary romance that neatly showcases this reigning romance author’s flair for sharp, clever writing and realistically complicated characters in a compelling celebration of the power of friendship and love. --John Charles
There is no Frigate like a Book To take us Lands away, Nor any Coursers like a Page Of prancing Poetry – This Traverse may the poorest take Without oppress of Toll – How frugal is the Chariot That bears a Human soul.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
63. Scandalous Risks
By Susan Howatch
Rated 5+ Stars
From: My bookshelves
Book 4 in the Starbridge Series this re-read has turned into a long leisurly visit with a well loved series. I will have to add though that finishing it up at the same time when I am getting into Elmer Gantry has been . . . interesting. Not that Neville was anything at all like Gantry was there is enough hypocrisy in both books to remind each one of the other at times. Neville does so much damage to the people whom he loves but he means well. Gantry was just plain bad through and through.
AMAZON: A commanding novel of substance and heart, Howatch's fourth in her Church of England series (following Ultimate Prizes ), is narrated by Venetia Flaxton, a young woman of intellect and means but no direction, and centers around her strange affair in 1963 with 61-year-old Neville Aysgarth, dean of Starbridge Cathedral. Related mainly through their letters and conversations, the progress--and explosive dissolution--of their relationship is set in the context of a real-life theological controversy in England crystallized by the publication of Honest to God , a bestselling, situational-ethics view of God's relevance to modern man. Neville and Venetia's mutual needs and fantasies are masterfully revealed by Howatch, who treats romance, sex, love and religion with the seriousness and humor of the best 19th-century novelists. Perfectly limned lesser characters, familiar from the earlier books, include Neville's superior, Bishop Charles Ashworth, and his wise enigmatic wife, Lyle; Canon Eddie Hoffenbach, who adores Venetia; the mystical, sensible Father Jon Darrow and his son Nicholas; Venetia's bumbling wonderful father and Neville's best friend, Lord Flaxton. An affirmation of the printed word, this thumping great, richly nuanced novel of ideas, morality and deep compassion offers itself as a counter to Venetia's observation that "faith had been wrecked, trust destroyed, love annihilated."
Rated 5+ Stars
From: My bookshelves
Book 4 in the Starbridge Series this re-read has turned into a long leisurly visit with a well loved series. I will have to add though that finishing it up at the same time when I am getting into Elmer Gantry has been . . . interesting. Not that Neville was anything at all like Gantry was there is enough hypocrisy in both books to remind each one of the other at times. Neville does so much damage to the people whom he loves but he means well. Gantry was just plain bad through and through.
AMAZON: A commanding novel of substance and heart, Howatch's fourth in her Church of England series (following Ultimate Prizes ), is narrated by Venetia Flaxton, a young woman of intellect and means but no direction, and centers around her strange affair in 1963 with 61-year-old Neville Aysgarth, dean of Starbridge Cathedral. Related mainly through their letters and conversations, the progress--and explosive dissolution--of their relationship is set in the context of a real-life theological controversy in England crystallized by the publication of Honest to God , a bestselling, situational-ethics view of God's relevance to modern man. Neville and Venetia's mutual needs and fantasies are masterfully revealed by Howatch, who treats romance, sex, love and religion with the seriousness and humor of the best 19th-century novelists. Perfectly limned lesser characters, familiar from the earlier books, include Neville's superior, Bishop Charles Ashworth, and his wise enigmatic wife, Lyle; Canon Eddie Hoffenbach, who adores Venetia; the mystical, sensible Father Jon Darrow and his son Nicholas; Venetia's bumbling wonderful father and Neville's best friend, Lord Flaxton. An affirmation of the printed word, this thumping great, richly nuanced novel of ideas, morality and deep compassion offers itself as a counter to Venetia's observation that "faith had been wrecked, trust destroyed, love annihilated."
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