Giveaway winners: The French House

The French House winnerswon  a print copy of

French house cover

AND a French gift basket, with chocolates!!

French House Gift Basket (452x800)

The French House:
An American Family, a Ruined Maison,
and the Village That Restored Them All

[memoir]

 Release date: June 3, 2014
at Sourcebooks

336 pages

ISBN: 978-1402293313

Visit the author’s website, his blog

Follow him on Facebook  |   Twitter | Goodreads | Google + | LinkedIn

Disappointed you didn’t win his book?

Buy it on: Sourcebooks, Amazon (paperback or kindle), B&N (Paperback or Nook), BAM, IndieBound, Indigo

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SYNOPSIS

When life hands you lemons, make citron pressé.

Shortly after Don and Mindy Wallace move to Manhattan to jump-start their writing careers, they learn of a house for sale in a village they once visited on a tiny French island off the Brittany coast. Desperate for a life change, the Wallaces bravely (and impulsively) buy it almost sight unseen.

What they find when they arrive is a ruin, and it isn’t long before their lives begin to resemble it—with hilarious and heartwarming results.

Redolent with the beauty and flavors of French country life, The French House is a lively, inspiring, and irresistibly charming memoir of a family that rises from the rubble, wins the hearts of a historic village, and finally finds the home they’ve been seeking off the wild coast of France. [provided by the publisher]

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COME BACK TOMORROW FOR TOUR QUOTATIONS!

 

 

France Book Tours stops for July 21-25

French house cover

Monday, July 21
Review + Guest-post + Giveaway at
Queen of All She Reads

Tuesday, July 22
Review + Excerpt + Giveaway at
The Avid Reader

Wednesday, July 23
Review + Giveaway at
Musings of a Writer and Unabashed Francophile

Thursday, July 24
Review + Giveaway at
Griperang’s Bookmarks

Friday, July 25
Review + Interview + Giveaway at
Words And Peace

 

You can enter the giveaway
on the book blogs participating in this tour.
Be sure to follow each participant on Twitter/Facebook
[just follow the directions on the entry-form]
to give you more chances to win!

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The giveaway is open to US/Canada residents.
We will have 5 winners:
each will receive a print copy of this book
AND a French gift basket, with chocolates!!

French House Gift Basket (452x800)

France Book Tours Alphabet: C is for…

France Book Tours Banner

C

is for

Ruth Hull CHATLIEN

Ambitious Madame Bonaparte bannerAuthor’s website  |  Goodreads

SYNOPSIS

As a clever girl in stodgy, mercantile Baltimore, Betsy Patterson dreams of a marriage that will transport her to cultured Europe. When she falls in love with and marries Jerome Bonaparte, she believes her dream has come true—until Jerome’s older brother Napoleon becomes an implacable enemy.Based on a true story, The Ambitious Madame Bonaparte

 

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C

is also for

Adria J. CIMINO

paris rue des martyrs banner finalAuthor’s website | Goodreads

SYNOPSIS

There are encounters that make a difference. The paths of four strangers cross amid the beauty, squalor, animation and desolation found on a Parisian street called the Rue des Martyrs.
Each one faces some sort of struggle:
A young man’s search for his birth mother leads him to love and grim family secrets.
An unsatisfied housewife finds her world turned upside down by the promise of a passionate liaison.
An aging actor, troubled by the arrival of the son he abandoned years ago, must make a choice: either lose him forever or put aside pride and seek redemption.
A young woman, betrayed by her fiancé, travels to Paris to begin a new life and forget about love… at least that is her intention.
Four stories entwine, four quests become one in Paris, Rue des Martyrs

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and

C

is also for

Susan CONLEY

Paris Was The Place Banner

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.

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Be sure to check the authors’ websites.
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