Posts from the ‘Historical fiction’ Category

France Book Tours stops for Nov 3-9

Greenland Breach Sunday, November 3
Review + Giveaway at Gluten Free + 2

Monday, November 4
Review + Giveaway at Finding Time To Write

Review at Words And Peace

Tuesday, November 5
Review + Giveaway at Queen of All She Reads

Wednesday, November 6
Review at Confessions of a Word Addict

Interview + Excerpt + Giveaway at Words And Peace

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Paris Was The Place Sunday, November 3
Review  at Queen of All She Reads

Monday, November 4
Review  at Walkie Talkie Book Club

Tuesday, November 5
Review at Griperang’s Bookmarks

Wednesday, November 6
Spotlight at Caffeinatedlife.net

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Unravelled Monday, Nov 4
Review + Giveaway at
The French Village Diaries

Tuesday, Nov 5
Review + Giveaway at Words And Peace

Wednesday, Nov 6
Review + Giveaway at I Am, Indeed

Thursday, Nov 7
Review + Giveaway at Suko’s Notebook

Review + Giveaway at Vvb32 Reads

Friday, Nov 8
Review + Giveaway at Caffeinatedlife.net

Saturday, Nov 9
Review + Guest-Post at Jorie Loves A Story

First Chapter First Paragraph — The Summer of France

first paragraphEvery Tuesday,
Diane at Bibliophile by the Sea posts the first paragraph of her current read.
Anyone can join in.
Click on the logo to link your post.

I will share here the first paragraph of a book
in the Completed Tours category.

Summer of FrancePublication Date: October 2012230 pages, Oblique Presse,
available on Lulu.com ,
ISBN-10: 1300257334,
ISBN-13: 978-1300257332Available in ebook for $3.99
and paperback for $14 at Amazon.com
and in paperback for $14 at Lulu.com

The quiet of the house mocked me as I rummaged through the Sunday paper looking for the travel pages. I ignored the meticulously folded “Help Wanted” section of the newspaper and the yellow highlighter that my husband had placed on the counter to remind me that I’d been unemployed for two months and needed to find a job –soon. The ring of the kitchen phone saved me from isolation and from a job search as the thick accent of my aunt came across the crackly line inviting me to move to France.

Paulita Kincer’s website | The virtual book tour | My review

WHAT DO YOU THINK?
WOULD YOU KEEP READING?

 

Jean d’Ormesson on Tour: The Conversation

The Conversation Banner

The Conversation

Author Jean d’Ormesson

on Tour

December 2-6

with his

The Conversation:
The Night Napoleon Changed The World

Translated by Timothy Bent

[historical novel]

 Release date: November 6, 2013
by Arcade Publishing

ISBN: 978-1-61145-905-0
also available as an ebook

    128 pages

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SYNOPSIS

After pulling the French people back from the abyss of chaos and misrule, Napoleon Bonaparte is on the brink of declaring himself emperor. “An empire is a Republic that has been enthroned,” he says. And so history is made.

As Napoleon stands at the precipice of his new empire, Jean d’Ormesson’s novel The Conversation: The Night Napoleon Changed the World captures a fictional conversation in which the thirty-year-old, struggling between revolutionary ideals and his overwhelming thirst for power, declares his secret intention to ascend the throne.

Second Consul Jean-Jacques Cambacérès, a brilliant law scholar and close ally, bears witness to the birth of this self-created legend: a man who left his mark upon time not through birth, but with ambition, and whose hubris is still invoked as a cautionary tale. Their imagined conversation brilliantly captures the tenuous moment when one man’s dream becomes reality. History, of course, records Napoleon’s dizzying triumphs and subsequent fall. [provided by the publisher]

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Jean d’Ormesson is the author of more than fifteen books, has a PhD in philosophy, graduated from the École Normale, and is a distinguished member of the Académie Française. He lives in Paris.

Timothy Bent has translated a number of books from French, including Brassaï’s Henry Miller: The Paris Years, Emmanuel Carrère’s I Am Alive and You Are Dead: A Journey into the Mind of Philip K. Dick, and Stéphane Audeguy’s novel, The Theory of Clouds. A former editor at Arcade Publishing, St. Martin’s Press, and Harcourt, he is currently Executive Editor, Trade, at Oxford University Press in New York, where he focuses upon history, biography, and current events.

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PRAISE FOR THE CONVERSATION

“D’ORMESSON SEIZES THE FRAGILE MOMENT WHEN A MAN’S AMBITION TURNS THE WORLD UPSIDE DOWN.” —LE POINT

“In this imaginary conversation between men, a sort of docufiction, d’Ormesson focuses brilliantly on the man who would be emperor.” —Le Récit

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VIRTUAL BOOK TOUR SCHEDULE

Monday, December 2
Review + Giveaway at Enchanted By Josephine

Tuesday, December 3
Review + Giveaway at I Am, Indeed

Wednesday, December 4
Review + Excerpt + Giveaway at
Musings of a Writer and Unabashed Francophile

Thursday, December 5
Review + Giveaway at Words And Peace

Friday, December 6
Review + Giveaway at Making My Mark

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