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tometraveller

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About tometraveller

  • Birthday 09/19/1967

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    http://thetometraveller.blogspot.com/

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  1. The 19th Wife was really interesting and I liked the way the author bounced from present day to the past. Life After Genius has a sort of abrupt ending that not everyone liked but it made sense for the character's development. Happy reading!

  2. Hi there! I just visited your blog, which gave me several good (I hope! ;-) ) reading ideas. I added The 9th wife, Life after Genius and the Peculiar crimes unit series to my TBR list. Thanks!

  3. Hello :-)

    I'm happy to send Restitution to you so please could you PM me your address?

  4. thank you. I had a lovely day just lazing around . . . reading, eating chocolate and relaxing. Heavenly!

  5. :balloons::bestw:

     

    Hope you had a very Happy Birthday!

  6. Try "I, Elizabeth" by Rosalind Miles. Very good fiction about Elizabeth I.
  7. Katie Hickman's "The Aviary Gate" is a story within a story. In present day Oxford Elizabeth Staveley, a graduate student, is looking through the Bodleian Library archives in search of material for her thesis on captivity narratives. She finds a fragment of a manuscript which describes a shipwreck and the unfortunate aftermath when the ship is boarded by Turkish pirates. The captain of the ship is murdered and several of the women are taken captive by the pirates, among them the captain's daughter, Celia. Elizabeth immediately feels a connection with Celia and wants to find out more of her story. At the same time her personal life is experiencing upheaval. The man she is in love with is a wandering womanizer and as much as Elizabeth would like to break away, she is having trouble severing her ties to him. On an impulse, she abruptly leaves her life in Oxford and flies to Istanbul, not knowing what she is looking for but anxious to do SOMETHING. She seizes on following Celia's trail as a way to force change in her own life. Woven in to Elizabeth's story are segments of Celia's life in 1599 Constantinople. She is bought for the Sultan's harem, intended to be his next "favorite" concubine. The reader sees the secretive world of the Ottoman harem. The female population is full of political maneuvering and infighting and Celia struggles to learn the hierarchy and her place in it. They even have a silent language they use amongst themselves when speaking is prohibited. For Celia it is a prison full of confusing rules, conflicting gossip, drama and backstabbing. When she discovers that her fiancee is in Constantinople on an errand for Queen Elizabeth I, she dreams of a chance to see him again. The author paints a lush and beautiful picture of the secluded world of the harem and the women who inhabit it. Present day Istanbul is also described well. She presents an interesting peep into how that world might have been. I love books that transport you to a place which you can never visit, and make it seem like you have been there. I enjoyed the book and look forward to reading other titles by this author. The Aviary Gate was released by Bloomsbury on May 27, 2008.
  8. First time Canadian author Andrew Davidson's novel The Gargoyle is an intriguing, unexpected story. The narrator, who is never given a name, is an unapologetic drug addict and pornographer who admits that he has never known love. He is driving in a drug-induced haze when his car sails off of a cliff into the ravine below. He is severely burned and narrowly escapes death. As he lays in his hospital bed he plans his suicide in detail, believing that he could never live with what his body has become. Marianne Engel, a temporary patient in the psychiatric ward, enters his room one day and speaks to him as if she knows him, though he has never seen her before. She claims that she was born in the year 1300 and that they had been married when they both lived in Medieval Germany. She is a sculptor of stone gargoyles and she says that the talent does not belong to her but that she is guided by God to produce her statues. Though the narrator thinks that she must be mentally ill, he is nevertheless drawn to her and to the stories that she tells him. They become close and when he is released from the hospital she takes him into her home. Unfortunately he continues his addictions, this time to morphine, and has a hard time letting go of his lifetime habits. This book centers on the gradual redemption of the narrator's soul and the fulfillment of Marianne Engel's life purpose. The author weaves in references to and instances from Dante's Inferno that illustrate the narrator's hellish journey from his pre-accident immoral life to the ultimate decision that redeems him. I found this book well written with vividly described scenes and interesting historical detail. The storyline was fascinating, though the ending stops short of answering all of the reader's questions. It is among the most unique novels that I have ever read. The Gargoyle is scheduled to be published on August 5, 2008 by Doubleday.
  9. Hello and welcome!

  10. Love your avatar! Welcome to the forum. :):readingtwo:

  11. You're here! I'm sure you'll love it! :) :)

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