Posts from the ‘Women’s fiction’ Category

France Book Tours stops for Oct 28-Nov 3

The Mona Lisa Speaks Monday, Oct 28
Review + Giveaway at I Am, Indeed

Tuesday, Oct 29
Review + Excerpt + Giveaway at
Musings of a Writer And Unabashed Francophile
Review + Guest-post at Vvb 32 Reads

Wednesday, Oct 30
Review at Words And Peace

Thursday, Oct 31
Review at Mommasez…

Friday, Nov 1st
Review at Caffeinatedlife.net
Interview at Words And Peace

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Greenland Breach Monday, Oct 28
Review + Giveaway at
Musings of a Writer And Unabashed Francophile

Tuesday, Oct 29
Review + Giveaway at I Am, Indeed

Wednesday, Oct 30
Review + Giveaway at Booklover Book Reviews

Thursday, Oct 31
Guest-post + Giveaway at CMash Reads

Friday, Nov 1
Review + Giveaway at Mommasez…

Saturday, November 2
Review at Twin Spin
Review + Giveaway at Turning The Pages

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Paris Was The Place Monday, Oct 28
Review  at Chocolate & Croissants

Tuesday, Oct 29
Review  at From L.A. To LA

Wednesday, Oct 30
Review  at Mommasez…

Thursday, Oct 31
Review at Words And Peace

Friday, Nov 1
Review + Giveaway at I Am, Indeed

Saturday, November 2
Review at The Most Happy Reader
Interview at Words And Peace

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Unravelled: official release day today

Unravelled tour banner

Today is the official release day of Unravelled!

Read more about it here

 

Unravelled

Author M. K. TOD

will be on an upcoming Tour

November 4 – 13,  2013

with her historical novel / women’s fiction:

Unravelled

 Release date: September 19, 2013
from Tod Publishing

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SYNOPSIS

Two wars, two affairs, one marriage.

 In October 1935, Edward Jamieson’s memories of war and a passionate love affair resurface when an invitation to a WWI memorial ceremony arrives. Though reluctant to visit the scenes of horror he has spent years trying to forget, Edward succumbs to the unlikely possibility of discovering what happened to Helene Noisette, the woman he once pledged to marry. Travelling through the French countryside with his wife Ann, Edward sees nothing but reminders of war. After a chance encounter with Helene at the dedication ceremony, Edward’s past puts his present life in jeopardy.

When WWII erupts a few years later, Edward is quickly caught up in the world of training espionage agents, while Ann counsels grieving women and copes with the daily threats facing those she loves. And once again, secrets and war threaten the bonds of marriage.

With events unfolding in Canada, France and England, UNRAVELLED is a compelling novel of love, duty and sacrifice set amongst the turmoil of two world wars. [provided by the author]

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AUTHOR

I have enjoyed a passion for historical novels that began in my early teenage years immersed in the stories of Rosemary Sutcliff, Jean Plaidy and Georgette Heyer. During my twenties, armed with Mathematics and Computer Science degrees, I embarked on a career in technology and consulting continuing to read historical fiction in the tiny snippets of time available to working women with children to raise.

In 2004, I moved to Hong Kong with my husband and no job. To keep busy I decided to research my grandfather’s part in the Great War. What began as an effort to understand my grandparents’ lives blossomed into a fulltime occupation as a writer. Beyond my debut novel UNRAVELLED, I have written two other novels with WWI settings. I have an active blog—www.awriterofhistory.com—on all aspects of historical fiction including interviews with a variety of authors and others involved in this genre. Additionally, I am a book reviewer for the Historical Novel Society. I live in Toronto and I’m happily married with two adult children.

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Susan Conley on Tour: Paris Was The Place

Paris Was The Place Banner

Paris Was The Place

Author Susan CONLEY

on Tour

October 28 – November 6

with her novel:

Paris Was The Place

[literary fiction/family life]

 Release date: August 7, 2013
from Knopf/Random House

    354 pages

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SYNOPSIS

With her new novel, Paris Was the Place (Knopf, 2013), Susan Conley offers a beautiful meditation on how much it matters to belong: to a family, to a country, to any one place, and how this belonging can mean the difference in our survival. Novelist Richard Russo calls Paris Was the Place, “by turns achingly beautiful and brutally unjust, as vividly rendered as its characters, whose joys and struggles we embrace as our own.”

When Willie Pears begins teaching at a center for immigrant girls in Paris all hoping for French asylum, the lines between teaching and mothering quickly begin to blur. Willie has fled to Paris to create a new family, and she soon falls for Macon, a passionate French lawyer. Gita, a young girl at the detention center, becomes determined to escape her circumstances, no matter the cost. And just as Willie is faced with a decision that could have dire consequences for Macon and the future of the center, her brother is taken with a serious, as-yet-unnamed illness. The writer Ayelet Waldman calls Paris Was the Place “a gorgeous love story and a wise, intimate journal of dislocation that examines how far we’ll go for the people we love most.” Named on the Indie Next List for August 2013 and on the Slate Summer Reading List, this is a story that reaffirms the ties that bind us to one another.   [provided by the publisher]

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SELECT ADVANCE PRAISE
[AS FEATURED ON THE AUTHOR’S WEBSITE]

Susan Conley’s Paris Was the Place has the kind of emotional weight you hope for in a novel. Its world, by turns achingly beautiful and brutally unjust, is as vividly rendered as its characters, whose joys and struggles we embrace as our own.  ­— Richard Russo, author of Elsewhere and Empire Falls

Sensual and seductive, Paris Was the Place pulls you in and doesn’t let you go. Find your nearest chair and start reading. With her poet’s eye, Conley has woven a vivid, masterful tale of love and its costs.  ­— Lily King, author of Father of the Rain

Paris Was the Place renders viscerally just how the personal becomes the political, and vice-versa: it’s beautifully eloquent on the shortfall we so keenly feel between the comfort and support we can offer loved ones and the comprehensive safety we wish we could provide. It reminds us through the openheartedness of its compassion of the infinity of ways in which doing what we can for others might represent the best we can do in terms of saving ourselves.  — Jim Shepard, author of You Think That’s Bad

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VIRTUAL BOOK TOUR SCHEDULE

Monday, Oct 28
Review  at Chocolate & Croissants

Tuesday, Oct 29
Review  at From L.A. To LA

Wednesday, Oct 30
Review  at Mommasez…

Thursday, Oct 31
Review at Words And Peace

Friday, Nov 1
Review + Giveaway at I Am, Indeed

Saturday, November 2
Review at The Most Happy Reader
Interview at Words And Peace

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