Posts from the ‘World War I’ Category

The Secret Language of Stones: giveaway winners and excerpt

We have winners!

Secret Language of Stones winners

won a copy of

The Secret Language of Stones

The Secret Language of Stones

(historical fiction)

 Release date: July 19, 2016
by Atria Books/Simon & Schuster

ISBN: 978-1-4767-7809-9
320 pages

Author’s page | Goodreads

SYNOPSIS

AS WORLD WAR I RAGES AND THE ROMANOV DYNASTY REACHES ITS SUDDEN, BRUTAL END, A YOUNG JEWELRY MAKER DISCOVERS LOVE, PASSION, AND HER OWN HEALING POWERS IN THIS RICH AND ROMANTIC NOVEL BY NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR M.J. ROSE.
Nestled deep within Paris’s historic Palais Royal, safe inside La Fantasie Russie’s once-bustling workshop, young, ambitious Opaline Duplessi spends her days making trench watches for soldiers at the front and mourning jewelry for the mothers, wives, and lovers of those who have fallen. Opaline has a rare gift, a form of lithomancy that allows her to translate the energy emanating from stones. Certain gemstones enable her to receive messages from beyond. In her mind, she is no mystic, but merely a messenger giving voice to soldiers who died before they were able to properly express themselves to loved ones. Until one day, one of these fallen soldiers communicates a message—directly to her. So begins a dangerous journey that will take Opaline into the darkest corners of wartime Paris and across the English Channel, where the exiled Romanov dowager empress is waiting to discover the fate of her family.

Full of romance, seduction, and a love so powerful it reaches beyond the grave, The Secret Language of Stones is yet another “entrancing read that will long be savored” (Library Journal, starred review).
“Spellbinding.” —Alyson Richman, author of The Lost Wife

 

EXCERPT

The Secret Language of Stones,
Excerpt from  Chapter 1
©Atria Books, a division of Simon & Schuster

 

“But I don’t want you in Paris,” my mother argued. “Of all places,

Opaline, Paris is the most dangerous for you to be on your own

and . . .”

The rest of her sentence was swallowed by a burst of crackling.

In 1905, we’d been one of the first families to have a telephone. A

decade later almost all businesses and half the households in France

had one, but transmission could still be spotty.

“What did you say?” I asked.

“It’s too dangerous for you in Paris.”

I didn’t ask what she meant, assuming she referred to how often

the Germans were bombarding Paris. But now I know she wasn’t

thinking of the war at all but rather of my untrained talents and the

temptations and dangers awaiting me in the city where she’d faced

her own demons.

I didn’t listen to her entreaties. No, out of a combination of guilt

over Timur’s death and patriotism, my mind was set. I was committed

to living in Paris and working for the war effort. Only cowards

went to America.

I’d known I couldn’t drive ambulances like other girls; I was disastrous

behind the wheel. And from having three younger siblings, I

knew nursing wasn’t a possibility—I couldn’t abide the sight of blood

whenever Delphine, Sebastian, or Jadine got a cut.

Two months after Timur died, his mother, Anna Orloff, who had

been like an aunt to me since I’d turned thirteen, wrote to say that,

like so many French businesses, her husband’s jewelry shop had lost

most of its jewelers to the army. With her stepson, Grigori, and her

youngest son, Leo, fighting for France, she and Monsieur needed

help in the shop.

Later, Anna told me she’d sensed I needed to be with her in

Paris. She had always known things about me no one else had.

Like my mother, Anna was involved in the occult, one reason she

had been attracted to my mother’s artwork in the first place. For

that alone, I should have eschewed her interest in me. After all, my

mother’s use of magick to cure or cause ills, attract or repel people,

as well as read minds and sometimes change them, still disturbed

Too often I’d seen her blur the line between dark and light,

pure and corrupt, with ease and without regret. That her choices

disturbed me angered her.

Between her paintings, which took her away from my brother

and sisters and me, and her involvement with the dark arts, I’d

developed two minds about living in the occult world my mother

inhabited with such ease.

Yet I was drawn to Anna for her warmth and sensitive nature—

so different from my mother’s elaborate and eccentric one. Because

I’d seen Anna be so patient with her sons’ and my siblings’ fears, I

thought she’d be just as patient with mine. I imagined she could be

the lamp to shine a light on the darkness I’d inherited and teach

me control so I wouldn’t accidentally traverse the lines my mother

crossed so boldly.

Undaunted, I’d fled from the dock in Cherbourg to Paris, and for

more than three years I’d been ensconced in Orloff ’s gem of a store,

learning from a master jeweler.

To teach me his craft, Monsieur had me work on a variety of

pieces, but my main job involved soldering thin bars of gold or

silver to create cages that would guard the glass on soldiers’ watch

faces.

To some, what I did might have seemed a paltry effort, but in

the field, at the front, men didn’t have the luxury of stopping to pull

out a pocket watch, open it, and study the hour or the minute. They

needed immediate information and had to wear watches on their

wrists. And war isn’t kind to wristwatches. A sliver of shrapnel can

crack the crystal. A whack on a rock as you crawl through a dugout

can shatter the face. Soldiers required timepieces they could count

on to be efficient and sturdy enough to withstand the rigors of

combat.

Monsieur Orloff taught me how to execute the open crosshatched

grates that fit over the watch crystal through which the soldiers could

read the hour and the minute. While I worked, I liked to think I

projected time for them. But the thought did little to lift my spirits.

It was their lives that needed protecting. France had lost so many, and

still the war dragged on. So as I fused the cages, I attempted to imbue

the metal with an armor of protective magick. Something helpful to

do with my inheritance. Something I should have known how to do.

After all, I am one of the Daughters of La Lune.

But as I discovered, the magick seemed to only make its way into

the lockets I designed for the wives and mothers, sisters and lovers

of soldiers already killed in battle. The very word “locket” contains

everything one needs to know about my pieces. It stems from old

French “loquet,” which means “miniature lock.” Since the 1670s,

“locket” has been used to describe a keepsake charm or brooch with

a personal memento, such as a portrait or a curl of hair, sealed inside,

sometimes concealed by a false front.

My lockets always contained secrets. They were made of crystal,

engraved with phrases and numbers, and filled with objects that had

once belonged to the deceased soldiers. Encased in gold, these talismans

hung on chains or leather. Of all the work I did, I found that it

wasn’t the watches but the solace my lockets gave that proved to be

my greatest gift to the war effort.

Eiffel Tower Orange

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

mj-roseM.J. Rose
grew up in New York City
exploring the labyrinthine galleries
of the Metropolitan Museum
and the dark tunnels and lush gardens of Central Park
—and reading her mother’s favorite books
before she was allowed.
She is the author of more than a dozen novels,
the co-president and founding board member of International Thriller Writers,
and the founder of the first marketing company for authors, AuthorBuzz.com.
She lives in Greenwich, Connecticut.

Please visit her website, her blog: Museum of Mysteries
Subscribe to her mailing list and get information about new releases, free book downloads,
contests, excerpts and more.
Or send an email to TheFictionofMJRose-subscribe at yahoogroups dot com

To send M.J. a message and/or request a signed bookplate, send an email to mjroseauthor at gmail dot com

Follow her on Facebook and Twitter

Buy the book:  Amazon  |  Barnes & Noble
Indiebound | Books A Million

CLICK ON THE BANNER
TO ACCESS REVIEWS

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August 2016 Books of the month giveaway

This month,
there will be 2 winners!

Click on the book covers
to know more about them

 Paris Runaway cover  The Secret Language of Stones

Enter here

Giveaway Tools will draw 2 winners on September 1st

Good luck!

What book do you absolutely want
to read before the end of summer?

 

The Secret Language of Stones: tour quotations

M. J. Rose

on Tour

July 19-28

with

The Secret Language of Stones

The Secret Language of Stones

(historical fiction)

 Release date: July 19, 2016
by Atria Books/Simon & Schuster

ISBN: 978-1-4767-7809-9
320 pages

Author’s page | Goodreads

SYNOPSIS

AS WORLD WAR I RAGES AND THE ROMANOV DYNASTY REACHES ITS SUDDEN, BRUTAL END, A YOUNG JEWELRY MAKER DISCOVERS LOVE, PASSION, AND HER OWN HEALING POWERS IN THIS RICH AND ROMANTIC NOVEL BY NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR M.J. ROSE.
Nestled deep within Paris’s historic Palais Royal, safe inside La Fantasie Russie’s once-bustling workshop, young, ambitious Opaline Duplessi spends her days making trench watches for soldiers at the front and mourning jewelry for the mothers, wives, and lovers of those who have fallen. Opaline has a rare gift, a form of lithomancy that allows her to translate the energy emanating from stones. Certain gemstones enable her to receive messages from beyond. In her mind, she is no mystic, but merely a messenger giving voice to soldiers who died before they were able to properly express themselves to loved ones. Until one day, one of these fallen soldiers communicates a message—directly to her. So begins a dangerous journey that will take Opaline into the darkest corners of wartime Paris and across the English Channel, where the exiled Romanov dowager empress is waiting to discover the fate of her family.

Full of romance, seduction, and a love so powerful it reaches beyond the grave, The Secret Language of Stones is yet another “entrancing read that will long be savored” (Library Journal, starred review).
“Spellbinding.” —Alyson Richman, author of The Lost Wife
Eiffel Tower Orange

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

mj-roseM.J. Rose
grew up in New York City
exploring the labyrinthine galleries
of the Metropolitan Museum
and the dark tunnels and lush gardens of Central Park
—and reading her mother’s favorite books
before she was allowed.
She is the author of more than a dozen novels,
the co-president and founding board member of International Thriller Writers,
and the founder of the first marketing company for authors, AuthorBuzz.com.
She lives in Greenwich, Connecticut.

Please visit her website, her blog: Museum of Mysteries
Subscribe to her mailing list and get information about new releases, free book downloads,
contests, excerpts and more.
Or send an email to TheFictionofMJRose-subscribe at yahoogroups dot com

To send M.J. a message and/or request a signed bookplate, send an email to mjroseauthor at gmail dot com

Follow her on Facebook and Twitter

Buy the book:  Amazon  |  Barnes & Noble  | Indiebound | Books A Million

VIRTUAL BOOK TOUR QUOTATIONS

Diary of an Eccentric

Rose is truly a painter of words.
It was a beautifully written page-turner from start to finish, and one of my favorite books I’ve read this year.
The Secret Language of Stones is M.J. Rose at her best. There are so many layers to this story, and the characters and descriptions are so well done that I wasn’t ready for it to end.
Rose is a fantastic storyteller, and The Secret Language of Stones is a definite on my Best of 2016 list.

Just One More Chapter

MJ Rose has fast become one of my favorite authors, she has a wonderful way with words.  With a distinct writing style, that sounds poetic at times.
The Secret Language of Stones is a compelling story of  love and lost during wartime.
My interest is peaked to see what happens next.
Definitely a series and author I highly recommend.

Savvy Verse & Wit

Rose’s characters are dynamic and strong-willed women who navigate the unknown and often dark mysteries of the worlds beyond reality. Rose packs her narrative with history and artistry in a way that will fully absorb readers from page one.

Queen of All She Reads

Using the darkness of World War I, and the political, social and emotional upheaval it caused, Ms. Rose makes you feel as if you are in Paris through one if it’s most difficult periods.
Still, this is Paris and Ms. Rose reminds us of its beauty and charm, a beauty and charm that no war can fully destroy.
Ms. Rose’s voice as an author is well established and highly enjoyable.

From L.A. to LA

This book had all I’ve come to expect with Rose’s books. A bit of eerie magical-ness mixed with historical fiction. There’s a few passionate love scenes, and of course it ends with a somewhat surprising ending.
I know I’ll be coming back to Rose’s work again.

I’m Lost in Books

Much like the previous book, The Witch of Painted Sorrows, I immediately fell in love with both M.J. Rose’s writing and the main character.
M.J. Rose has really been honing her craft and the writing is beautiful.

A Holland Reads

The author always has a way of drawing you into her books and the next thing you know you are lost in another time and place. She has a way with her words that includes such detail that you feel like you are really a part of the story.
I felt as if I was really in Paris.

History from a Woman’s Perspective

This book has a romance, mystery, and a beautiful ghost-story. I really like how it was set in WWI.
The writing is very beautiful and the story was entertaining.
I recommend this story to anyone who is interested in the Romanovs, WWI love stories, and suspenseful, paranormal stories.

The author did a great job with the setting of the book.
The author created so many emotions with this book it was easy to be transported to that world while reading.
I loved the ending of this book.

Poof Books

THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF STONES is my favorite M.J. Rose novel to date.
Pick up this or another novel from M.J. Rose if you like a historical fiction backdrop with characters that are well-developed and a glimmer of something magical.

Book Nerd

I really enjoyed “The Secret Language of Stones” by M.J. Rose.  I enjoy books set during WW I and Rose’s characters always feel real and developed.
Rose is a very unique author who blends characterizations well with plot and this book was no exception.

Svetlana’s Reads and Views

What I really liked was getting to know France during the Great War and learning even more about it. I also found it interesting to see how White Russians learned and survived after the Romanov Dynasty had died out.

Bookramblings

All in all, I loved this book and would have wanted to know what happens next. I look forward to the next book!

From L.A. to LA

This book had all I’ve come to expect with Rose’s books. A bit of eerie magical-ness mixed with historical fiction. There’s a few passionate love scenes, and of course it ends with a somewhat surprising ending.
I know I’ll be coming back to Rose’s work again.

Eiffel Tower Orange

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