Showing posts with label Susanna Kearsley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Susanna Kearsley. Show all posts

Thursday, January 3, 2019

2018: A Year in Review


Happy New Year!

I’ve been sick for over a week (this is actually Round 2 with the Cold From Hell in the last month), and instead of continuing to go full-tilt like I normally do, I’ve taken the time to rest and relax, plus reflect on the past year and plan for the year ahead. One thing I know for sure going into the new year: I need to be more mindful. It was something I intended to work on in 2018, but now when I look back and so much of the year was a blur, I realize the life of intention and mindfulness I wanted to lead turned into a big jumbled mass of days with a few highlights in between. Despite that, unlike the last several years, I can look back and say 2018 was mostly good.
Here are a few of the highlights of 2018:

I wrote and published a new contemporary romance, ONLY YOU, plus worked on a few other projects. I thought 2018 would be the year I finally got back into the swing of writing and publishing, but it was still a struggle. I’m proud of what I did accomplish though, and I love this sweet, funny, sexy romance.

In June, I met one of my favourite authors, Susanna Kearsley. My mum and I have been big fans of hers for years, so I was excited we could share that experience. Susanna was so lovely, warm, and funny, and I had a total fangirl moment when she immediately recognized me and came over to hug us and speak to us. She spoke for an hour or so about writing, publishing, and researching, and then signed books. If you follow me on bookstagram, you'll recognize Foxy, my little felt fox in the picture below; I brought him along and Susanna didn't bat an eye when I asked if he could be included in one of our pictures. It made me love her even more!

I didn’t travel far in 2018, but I did get to go to one of my absolute favourite cities (Kingston, Ontario) twice to visit my friend Krista. It was hot as hell when I visited in July, but we had so much fun playing tourist, eating a ton of amazing food, and vegging at her apartment. One of the highlights was visiting Queen’s University while it was completely deserted and getting to wander around and take a bunch of pictures. My trip in November was equally amazing, especially because we got to attend a Victorian Christmas tea; we’d wanted to do a high tea when we visited London in 2015 but didn’t have time, so this was amazing. The November trip was an early 35th birthday celebration for me since my birthday is so close to Christmas and I rarely get to do anything out of the ordinary. Both trips and all the new memories I made with Krista are high on my list of best days of 2018.

Bookstagram continued to be a huge source of joy for me. I’ve made so many wonderful friends there, and I love the creative outlet it gives me. Two major highlights this year: being chosen as a July rep for Canterbury Road Co and recently being asked to be a rep for 1107Studio. I love these companies (and their respective owners) and it’s such an honour to get to represent them.

Looking ahead at 2019...

I have a lot of writing-related goals this year. I'm currently working on a companion book to ONLY YOU, and after that, there will be one more book in that standalone series. I also have a romcom I wrote year before last that I plan to edit and publish toward the end of the year. I've also been thinking about mixing things up and working on something different from my norm...but it's early days yet, so you'll have to stay tuned to see what I'm talking about!

I read 105 books in 2018, and my goal for 2019 is to read at least 80 books.

I want to be more consistent about blogging. After 8 years of having this blog, I finally bit the bullet just before writing this post and officially bought a .com domain for it. No more .blogspot.com for me! Hopefully that'll inspire me to do something with this little of the net and produce more content. My goal is going to be at least one post a week, ranging from bookish and writing posts to travel posts to general lifestyle posts.

I don't have any concrete plans yet, but I decided last year that 2019 is the year I'm finally going to Scotland. Stay tuned for more as I figure out the how and when and all that fun stuff. I'm going to make it happen!
My word for 2019 is CONNECT. I want to connect to my self - be more mindful, intentional, and work on a lot of personal things that are important to me. That also includes connecting to my body and working on getting healthier and stronger. I want to connect to readers, both old and new, and make them laugh, feel, and fall in love when they read my stories. I want to connect to my roots by finally visiting Scotland. I want to connect to nature and not spend so much time at my desk. I feel good about this word because it's broad and it covers a lot, but it can be specific in a million little ways that mean a lot to me.



How was 2018 for you? What were some of your stand-out moments? Do you have any goals or big plans for 2019? Do you have a word for the year?



Previous Yearly Recaps:

2017: A Year in Review

2016: A Year in Review
Looking Back on 2015
Reflecting on 2014 and Looking at the Year Ahead 
2012: A Year in Review
2010: A Year in Review



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Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Review: A Desperate Fortune by Susanna Kearsley

A Desperate Fortune by Susanna Kearsley  
Series: Standalone
Published: April 21st, 2015
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Canada
480 pages (ARC)
Genre: A mix of contemporary and historic fiction
Acquired this book: From the publisher in exchange for honest consideration
Warning: May contain spoilers
{GoodReads || Buy this book: Amazon || Chapters/Indigo}


 
{Read my review of The Winter Sea || Read my review of The Firebird}

For nearly 300 years, the mysterious journal of Jacobite exile Mary Dundas has lain unread — its secrets safe from prying eyes. Now, amateur codebreaker Sara Thomas has been hired by a once-famous historian to crack the journal's cipher. But when she arrives in Paris, Sara finds herself besieged by complications from all sides: the journal's reclusive owner, her charming Parisian neighbor, and Mary, whose journal doesn't hold the secrets Sara expects.

It turns out that Mary Dundas wasn’t keeping a record of everyday life, but a first-hand account of her part in a dangerous intrigue. In the first wintry months of 1732, with a scandal gaining steam in London, driving many into bankruptcy and ruin, the man accused of being at its center is concealed among the Jacobites in Paris, with Mary posing as his sister to aid his disguise.

When their location is betrayed, they’re forced to put a desperate plan in action, heading south along the road to Rome, protected by the enigmatic Highlander Hugh MacPherson.

As Mary's tale grows more and more dire, Sara, too, must carefully choose which turning to take...to find the road that will lead her safely home.

Susanna Kearsley earned a spot on my auto-read list after I read The Winter Sea and The Firebird. I fell in love with the stories, the characters, the settings, and Kearsley’s ability to move seamlessly between the present and the past and weave a story that’s full of romance, intrigue, and excitement. Her latest release, A Desperate Fortune, is no different.

This book started out quite slow. For about the first hundred pages or so it was hard to get interested or invested in either of the dual story lines. But I had faith in Ms Kearsley and was sure A Desperate Fortune would end up wowing me as her other books did. If it had been any other author, I would have set the book aside after that first night of reading, but by the next night when I picked it up again, the story picked up too, and I found it easy to get lost in the pages.

I liked Sara a lot, and found it fascinating how her mind worked. The portrayal of her life and struggles with Asperger’s was done really well. Her relationship with her cousin Jacqui, who was basically her champion, was also quite interesting. Jacqui understood how Sara’s mind worked and what her triggers were, and she wanted Sara to live as ‘normal’ a life as possible. She thought she knew what was best for Sara, and sometimes her idea of helping kept Sara sheltered and stifled, but it was obvious that it came from a place of love. You don’t see many close cousin relationships in books, and I enjoyed the dynamics between the two. I also really enjoyed the relationships Sara developed while she was working in France - Denise, Noah, and Claudine were all great characters and they each had something to teach Sara about life, love, and companionship. Then there was Luc. One of my favourite thing about all of Susanna Kearsley’s books is the romantic element. She sure knows how to write swoonworthy men! I loved how patient and understanding Luc was, and how he quietly made a place for himself in Sara’s life without pushing her. 


As with Ms Kearsley’s other books, it was the historic aspect of the story that grabbed my attention (and heartstrings) the most. Mary wanted more excitement in her life and she got it when she was asked to pose as the sister of someone King James had a special interest in. I loved how the story unravelled slowly, with the reader kept wondering about things as much as Mary was. Mary and her companions made a motley crew, and each of them had secrets to keep, partly for their own protection, partly for Mary’s, and sometimes just because that was their nature. The romance in the historic parts of The Winter Sea and The Firebird were amazing, so I was sure it would be no different in A Desperate Fortune, and I was right. It wasn’t what I was expecting at all, but once I realized what was happening, I fell in love right alongside Mary. I longed for more scenes with them together, and hoped everything would fall into place for them. As much as I loved Luc, it was Mary's love interest who really stole my heart. And just like with Sara and Luc, Mary's love interest quietly made a place for himself in her life. Their romance was slow and sweet and beautiful, and I could have continued reading about it forever.

Susanna Kearsley has written another incredible book. A Desperate Fortune is compelling, intriguing, romantic, and unique. There are so many little details in her stories that make you smile, touch your heart, and ultimately make her tales unforgettable.





Susanna Kearsley and Genevieve Graham are going on tour together from May 9th to 13th. If you'd like to meet these two fantastic authors, check out the Timeless Tour site for more information.
    
Have you read A Desperate Fortune? What did you think? If you haven't read it, do you plan to? Have you read any of Susanna's other books? Let's talk here or on Twitter!

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: New-to-me authors in 2013

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish
 
 
Top Ten New-To-Me Authors I Read In 2013
 
1. Susanna Kearsley {The Winter Sea & The Firebird}
I heard of Susanna Kearsley last year and thought her books sounded interesting, but I didn’t really have time to read any. When Simon & Schuster Canada sent me a copy of The Firebird - a companion novel to The Winter Sea - for review, I decided I should read The Winter Sea. I’m so glad I did. It rekindled my love of historic fiction, and I’ve read a bunch of historic books, both YA and adult, since.

CJ’s Summer series is amazing. The Boys of Summer was one of my favourite books of 2013, and I’m so excited that That One Summer comes out this week!

The Demon Lover was the first book I read in 2013, and I was so glad all three books came out this year so I could read them close together. This is one of my favourite paranormal trilogies.

4. Gayle Forman {Just One Day & Just One Year}
What can I say? Paris. Romance. Life-changing situations. Beautiful writing. I need to read Gayle’s other books, pronto.

5. Tamara Ireland Stone {Time Between Us & Time After Time}
Wibbly wobbly timey wimey with a lovely romance. I can’t wait to see what Tamara comes up with next. 

6. Lisa Becker {Click & Double Click}
These books are written in email form between a group of friends, and they’re so funny. I didn’t realize until recently that there’s going to be a third book, and I’m so excited!

7. RJ Anderson {Ultraviolet & Quicksilver}
ALIENS. Set in Canada, written by a Canadian. These books are a total mindfuck in the best way. 

8. Leila Howland {Nantucket Blue}
Leila’s debut, Nantucket Blue, was one of my favourite books of the year

9. Jennifer Banash {White Lines}
The 80s. New York City. Clubs. This book was written for me.

I’d heard a lot of great things about the Night Huntress series and finally read the first book during a read-a-thon earlier this year. I didn’t love it but decided to give the series a fair chance and I’m so glad I did because I ended up falling in love with it. I’m eager to continue on with the series next year!
 
Have you read any of these authors? Who are some of your favourite new-to-you authors of 2013?

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Review: The Firebird by Susanna Kearsley



The Firebird by Susanna Kearsley
Series: Companion to The Winter Sea
Published: April 30th, 2013
Publisher: Touchstone
484 pages (paperback)
Genre: A blend of contemporary and historic fiction
Acquired this book: From the publisher in exchange for an honest review
Warning: May contain spoilers
{GoodReads || Buy this book: Book Depository || Amazon || Chapters/Indigo}

{Read my review of The Winter Sea}

Whoever dares to seek the Firebird may find the journey — and its ending — unexpected.

Nicola Marter was born with a gift. When she touches an object, she sometimes sees images; glimpses of those who have owned it before. It’s never been a gift she wants, and she keeps it a secret from most people, including her practical boss Sebastian, one of London’s premier dealers in Russian art.

But when a woman offers Sebastian a small wooden carving for sale, claiming it belonged to Russia’s first Empress Catherine, it’s a problem. There’s no proof. Sebastian believes that the plain carving — known as “The Firebird” — is worthless. But Nicola’s held it, and she knows the woman is telling the truth, and is in desperate need of the money the sale of the heirloom could bring.

Compelled to help, Nicola turns to a man she once left, and still loves: Rob McMorran, whose own psychic gifts are far greater than hers. With Rob to help her “see” the past, she follows a young girl named Anna from Scotland to Belgium and on into Russia.

There, in St. Petersburg — the once-glittering capital of Peter the Great’s Russia — Nicola and Rob unearth a tale of love and sacrifice, of courage and redemption…an old story that seems personal and small, perhaps, against the greater backdrops of the Jacobite and Russian courts, but one that will forever change their lives.

 

*While The Firebird is technically a companion, I’d personally call it more of a sequel and would recommend reading The Winter Sea first.*

You guys. This book. My heart. *sigh*

I honestly don’t know where to begin. I guess first I’d like to thank the amazing Simon and Schuster Canada for sending me this book as an unsolicited ARC because if they hadn’t, I might never have read The Winter Sea, and in turn, never read The Firebird, it’s companion. And that would be a crime because these books…I honestly don’t think I can do them justice in a review. I attempted a coherent review with The Winter Sea, but having just finished The Firebird, I’m a jumble of emotions, and it’s so rare that a book can do that these days.

I said in my review of The Winter Sea that the book single-handedly rekindled my love of historic fiction. I couldn’t wait to immerse myself in another of Kearsley’s worlds, knowing the setting would be rich and vibrant, and as I journeyed with both Nicola and Anna through time and multiple countries, I fell in love with Kearsley’s writing all over again. She has a gift for seamlessly weaving the present with the past and creating a story that is breathtaking in its details, revelations, and characters.

And, oh, the characters. I thought it would be hard to top the characters in The Winter Sea, but I think I might just like Anna even more than I liked Sophia. Anna was strong, fearless, and selfless. She would do anything for the people she loved, and even sacrifice her own happiness to protect them. I was so happy to be reunited with Colonel Graeme and see his affection for Sophia pass to young Anna. Captain Jamieson was sweet and gentle with an air of mystery about him, and I loved his interactions with Anna as a little girl, and the promises he made to her (I get choked up just thinking about it). I won’t mention other characters by name because it seems a bit spoiler-y, but it was nice to see other familiar faces as well, and I adored Edmund as Anna’s love interest. He challenged her in more ways than one - he spoke freely and wasn’t the gentlemanly sort she was used to, but I liked that he was a bit rough around the edges, and I found myself falling for the sexy, roguish Irishman. He challenged Anna, and it was clear she was up for the challenge.

As with The Winter Sea, the historic aspects of The Firebird were my favourite. I couldn’t wait to be transported back to eighteenth century Russia to be reunited with Anna and learn her fate. I enjoyed the present-day parts too. Nicola was a great character, and while I thought Carrie’s story in The Winter Sea was more of a vehicle for Sophia’s story, it felt like Nicola’s story was really thought-out and fleshed out. She started out uncertain and embarrassed by her abilities, but with Rob’s help and encouragement, she grew to not only accept her gifts, but hone them, and it was nice to see. I also really enjoyed the romance between them, and I felt their connection from the very beginning. It’s no secret I’m a sucker for a Scotsman, and I fell hard for the ones in this book.

On a purely emotional level, I would give The Firebird 5 stars. I loved it so much, and I know these characters and their stories will stay with me for a long time. However, on a more critical level, I don’t feel I can actually give it those full 5 stars. The story started out a bit slow and there were times when it really dragged. It took me almost two weeks to read this book, and I’d like to say it was because I was savouring each detail, but it was more because there were times I felt like I was slogging through. I enjoyed the whole story, don’t get me wrong, but it felt like it could have been shorter. However, the last half or so of the book really picked up and it got to the point where I didn’t even want to go to bed because I was finally enjoying the story so much and I wanted to find out what was going to happen.

The Firebird is a beautifully written story with characters that practically leap off the pages, a story that alternately broke my heart and healed it, and a pair of romances (or a trio, more accurately) that made me fall in love. This book made me laugh, made me cry (I seriously bawled happy tears through the last 30 or so pages), and made me certain that Susanna Kearsley has a talent like no other.


Have you read The Winter Sea or The Firebird? What did you think? Have you read any of Kearsley's other books? How about books set both in present day and the past? Do you enjoy historic fiction? I want to hear from you!
 

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Review: The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley


The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley
Series: Standalone
Published: September 22nd, 2008
Publisher: Allison & Busby
527 pages (paperback)
Genre: Contemporary/Historic fiction
Acquired this book: From the library
Warning: May contain spoilers
{GoodReads || Buy this book: Book Depository || Amazon || Chapters/Indigo}

The past won’t let you forget…

When bestselling author Carrie McClelland visits the ruins of Slains Castle in Scotland to research her new book, she is unprepared for the magnetic pull the local area has on her. Enchanted by the stark and beautiful Scottish landscape, she rents an old stone cottage near the windswept ruins and decides to set her new historical novel at the castle itself.

History has all but forgotten the spring of 1708, when an invasion fleet of French and Scottish soldiers nearly succeeded in landing their exiled James Stewart in Scotland to reclaim his crown. Realizing one of her own ancestors, Sophia Paterson, lived around the same time, Carrie creates a fictional life for Sophia and places her at Slains to be a narrator for the events leading to the Jacobite uprising. It is a time seething with political unrest and there is no shortage of spies and clandestine meetings at Slains. Soon, the characters in her book come alive with almost frightening intensity and Carrie is shocked when she learns that Sophia was indeed a resident at the castle at the time. When further coincidences confirm her fiction is closer to fact, Carrie realizes that this story is not entirely her own. As Sophia’s memories draw Carrie more deeply into the intrigue of 1708, she comes to understand that a hitherto unrealized bond with her ancestor is providing her with an immediate window into the true events of the time - and the two women have more in common than one might think.

Mesmerizing and rich in historical detail, The Winter Sea is a haunting tale of two women’s experiences of love and personal betrayal in two very different times. 

 

Susanna Kearsley’s The Winter Sea has single-handedly rekindled my love of historic fiction. This book is unlike anything I’ve ever read. It skillfully weaves the past and present into a story of intrigue, romance, and danger, and will keep you guessing and hoping, while falling in love with the characters. 

The story starts off with Carrie, an author of historic fiction, who had been in France attempting to write her next novel. When she visits Scotland, she’s drawn to Slains Castle, and decides to stay in Scotland and work on her story because it just wasn’t happening in France. When she realizes the story needs to be told from a woman’s perspective, she decides to create a fictional life for her ancestor, Sophia Paterson. The story comes with such ease, and in such a vivid manner, Carrie wonders if Sophia’s story is fact rather than fiction, and if her memories have somehow been awakened in Carrie.

What follows is a story so rich in detail and so intricately woven, it nearly took my breath away. Set against a harsh winter background on the Scottish seaside, the story goes back and forth between Carrie in the present day and Sophia in the early 1700s. In a time of political and religious turmoil, Sophia’s life at Slains is surrounded by clandestine meetings, spies, and plans to bring James Stewart back to Scotland from France to take the throne. Things are further complicated when Sophia falls in love with a man marked with a price on his head.

This novel is full of wonderful, three-dimensional characters. Every character has a purpose, and I found myself getting very attached to them. I related easily to both Carrie and Sophia, and was eager to see where their stories led. At times it felt like Carrie’s side of the story was simply there to move things along, and there was less development on her end, and while I enjoyed it very much, I was always eager to get back to Sophia’s story. 

Quite possibly my favourite part of each woman’s story was the romance. Neither love story came easily, and it was especially hard to believe Sophia would get a happily ever after, but with the swoonworthy Scots Kearsley created, I think it would be hard not to fall in love with them. I was especially enamored of Sophia and John’s romance. John had this quiet, understated way about him, and he didn’t say much but when he did, he made his words count. I just wish we’d seen more of him throughout the story!

I wasn’t familiar with the history of the Franco-Scottish plans of 1708, so I found the history aspect of it fascinating (even though it was a bit hard to keep up with at times). It was clearly well-researched, and laid out in a way that was both interesting and entertaining. While the overall pacing of the book was a bit slow at times, I never lost interest.

The Winter Sea is a beautiful, gripping story about fate and the power of enduring love. I was so invested in the story that towards the end, even though I had a feeling I knew what was coming, I was on the edge of my seat, turning pages as fast as possible with tears building in my eyes. I was so enthralled with it, I didn’t want it to end. It made me laugh, it made me cry, and it made me certain that this will be the first of many books by Susanna Kearsley I will read.


“Ye were mine from the moment I first saw ye.” ~ John Moray, page 305

“Ye told me once I had your heart…And ye have mine…It does not travel with me, lass, across the water. Where you are, it will remain. Ye’ll not be on your own…And I’ll no more be whole again till I return.” ~ John Moray, page 307-8

Whatever might become of them, she knew that there was nothing that could rob them of that happiness. For they had lived their winter, and the spring had finally come. ~ page 513


Have you read The Winter Sea? What did you think? Have you read any of Kearsley's other books? How about books set both in present day and the past? Do you enjoy historic fiction? I want to hear from you!


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