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Monday, November 23, 2009

Sea Witch, by Helen Hollick - Sea Witch Chronicles

Sea Witch
Helen Hollick

Sea Witch Chronicles, Vol. 1

If you like Jack Sparrow, you will love Jesamiah Acorne. Jesamiah is the hero of the "Sea Witch" series by author Helen Hollick, including the first volume, Sea Witch. It is a combination of adventure, fantasy and thoughtful historical fiction. I will say right now that I thoroughly enjoyed this pirate story with a healthy dose of romance with a "white' witch. Hollick knew when she sent it to me that I don't care much for fantasy novels, but there is enough good sense to her witchy character, Tiola, to make me happy. Hollick knows her Pagan traditions, as do I, so I am pleased with how it s amplified in Sea Witch.

Jesamiah Acorne is a pirate who wears blue ribbons in his hair and an acorn earring. He is dashing, courageous, funny, sexy as hell, and all that good stuff. Since he was a young boy he's known without entirely knowing it that there was someone out there that was protecting and comforting him through abuse from an older brother and life on the edge as a pirate. That person is Tiola, a hereditary white witch of the pagan variety who is growing into her craft. Jesssamiah is her soul mate and she is his. They finally meet, fall in love, and then are ill-used by those who are supposed to care for them and separate, told that each no longer wants the other. In the meantime, those supposed loved ones, his brother and her husband, decide Jesamiah needs to dance with Jack Catch, i.e. hang for being a pirate. It is only Tiola who can prevent it.

One thing I respected about this charming novel is that although the pirate and the healer are aware of the disconnect between their core values, it never disintegrates into the sory of preachy modern sensibilities that have infested historical fiction. The two come to accept each other as they are, the only way they really can be together. Sometimes you just have to choose whether your principles or that other precious soul is more important to you. Together this loving and passionate couple make a great team, he being a terrific seaman and she being able to call up the wind. Underlying it all, quite literally, is the spirit of the sea who wants Jesamiah. hey, who doesn't?

Child sexual abuse is a theme here, and that is part of why Jesamiah is so much a better character than other well known rollicking piracy committing rogues. He has depth. he has terrible memories, loneliness, a desire to be free and yet loved, and a real zest for life that is entirely credible. Tiola is the pwerful woman in a world where women cannot be powerful, who breaks free of those limitations to be with her beloved. They are each other's healer from childhood betrayal, and Hollick handles it all with sensitivity and respect.

The history is there, along with historical gifures as characters, but there is no pretense that honorable, happy, bathed pirates were commonplace. Hollick conscientiously cites any deviations from Eeal History in an author's note.

The author sent me a digital copy of the novel for my review and because she wanted me to meet Jesamiah. It is only available in paperback, but I know Hollick is working on finding a way to make it accessible.

Sea Witch is a wondrful caper, a delightful boyage that you hope will never end.

Short Story: Deliverance, by Aleksandr Voinov

Deliverance
Aleksandr Voinov

Deliverance is a short story in a gayhistorical fiction antholigy from Novle Romance called Forbidden Love. There are three other stories, My Outlaw by Stormy Glen, Forbidden by H. C. Brown and Poisoned Heart by Anna O’Neill. Forbidden takes place in Norman England, or a reasonable.. well not really.. facsimile thereof. I mean, one of the people mentioned in the story is El Cid, for Pete's sake. But I am perfectly aware of and accept that the point of this story was not necessarily anatomical accuracy no less historical.

So much the more astounding, then, is Deliverance by Aleksandr Voinov. It tells the story of William Raven of kent whose love for Guy, his tournament partner, was becoming so notorious that he escaped to the Holy Land and found "deliverance" by becoming a Knight Templar. Lo and behold Guy, still carrying a torch for William, shows up and William must battle his desire for Guy while coming to understand why Guy is so angry with him. The actual "deleverance" comes when he makes his decision about which oath, his first one to Guy and his second to the Templars, is the priorty.

The thing with this story is that it is good! It is easily the best written in the anthology and could stand alone as a well written story in any collection. the characterization is good, the writing better, and whaddya know, the author actually knows a great deal about the Crusades and the era. Aleksandr Voinov has done a fine job that will not make any historical accuracy obsessed reader shake his or her head. All that and erotica too.

This story is only available as part of the anthology, Forbidden Love., an ebook in several formats, at least two of them accessible for people with print impairments. I purchased my download of the book. It should go without saying, this is a novel for mature audiences only.

Friday, November 20, 2009

The Afflicted Girls, by Suzy Witten

The Afflicted Girls
Suzy Witten

Make sure to read our interview with Suzy Witten, author of The Afflicted Girls.

From the very first sentence, I was impressed with this book. The Afflicted Girls takes the familiar story of the Salem Village Witch Trials and gives it a chilling reality that will eclipse anything you have ever read or heard about it. Even more than that, it is brilliantly written. Suzy Witten, a screenwriter, brings to this novel all her skill at bringing the reader into a riveting tale.

The Afflicted Girls starts with two young women, Mercy and Abigail, on their way to Salem Village where Abigail is going to join her uncle, Rev. Parris's, household. Both are coming from life in an orphanage. An accident leads to the women being rescued by two young local men, one of which captures Mercy's heart immediately. Joseph is just back from England where his rich mother sent him, after having raised the sort of hell expected of a university student. Arrived in Salem Village, Abigail settles in to become the apple of her uncle's eye, while Mercy is placed in indenture to the bitter, lonely Putnam household. No, not Joseph's, but his resentful drunkard disinherited half brother. Abigail. we quickly learn, is a manipulative little bitch, while Mercy, who has some peculiar powers she keeps to herself, is the soul of kindness and brings what little joy there is to be into the Putnam children's lives.

The witchcraft arrives in the story as Mercy, smitten with Joseph, asks the local roadhouse keeper and "whore of Babylon", Bridget Bishop, for a love charm. Avbigail gets wind of the delicious secret. She has also discovered that the Parris's Caribbean slave has hidden some cakes made with a hallucinogenic plant, jimson weed, and that it does the most amazing things to the woman. Abigail, first with the slave's cakes and then with ones of her own making without the skill of the slave, starts passing them out. One girl after another, and one boy, start succumbing to the overdose and the hysteria about witches begins. For a complex variety of reasons including ambition, avarice, retribution, lust, and simple cruelty, the unhappy denizens not only of the Village but other towns in Massachusetts Colony begin the nightmare of the witchcraft trials which will culminate in the hanging of innocents.

One of the aspects of this novel I marveled at is Witten's use of language. The characters all speak with a feel of New England as it must have sounded in the late 1600s. She manages as well to weave the narration in such a way that the seamless intertwining of language works.

The characters are brilliantly drawn, few being perfectly sympathetic. Mercy has a strong sense of justice which she must repress in her place on the bottom of the power scale. Bridget is a free spirit who might be to generous with her special magical knowledge. The constable is an essentially good man doing his job, and he proves it by resigning when the charges Begin to be outrageous and obviously motivated by something other than religious devotion. The two slaves live in a separate world of their own, keeping out of and hoping to be overlooked in the village's excesses. The other characters are almost universally awful people, though Witten is not black and white in their portrayal. Ann Putnam is mad due to trauma of her own and the disappointments of her marriage, her husband Thomas is fatally bitter. Joseph is a self-indulgent vain man who is forced to sleep in the same bed with his mother. Parris is an incompetent minister, like Thomas bitterly aware of being cheated out his patrimony and knowing he is about to lose yet another job. The adolescents are confused and powerless to understand their own growing sexuality. Abigail, who saw her family butchered by Indians, is a sociopath who probably is incapable of recognizing the horror she unleashes.

The fiction is excellent, but the attention to historical detail is as well. The transcripts of the trials make their appearance in the narrative most expertly.

The Afflicted Girls is both a highly entertaining read and a real-life horror story. Witten chose to publish independently, a courageous step full of integrity, and as a result offers the lie to any belief that 'self-published" books cannot be superb. Someone, please, het a copy of The Afflicted Girls into Oprah's hands!

The book was just released this past week. It is only available in print at this point. Visit http://www.theafflictedgirls.com for more information on availability. Disclosure: The author provided a digital copy of her novel for this review.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Interview with Suzy Witten, Author, The Afflicted Girls

Read the rvbiew of The Allicted Girls in the next That's All She Read.

THE AFFLICTED GIRLS A Novel of Salem

It can be purchased now on Aamazon.com or barnesandnoble.com, or from powellsbooks.com as an eBook, or from my website: www.theafflictedgirls.com for author-signed copies

(Note: there is another book with the same title, so just be sure you're getting the 456 page novel by me, and not the book of poems by someone else)

ISBN: 978-0-615-32313-8

Something terrible happened in Salem in 1692 . . . but it isn't what you think!

THE AFFLICTED GIRLS A Novel of Salem by author-researcher Suzy Witten presents a startling new theory of the Salem Village witch-hunts, which is certain to put this 300-year-old unsettled mystery to rest . . . by expertly guiding readers through The Historical Record to revelation. Part parable, part star-crossed romance, and part supernatural venture, this is an intuitive human history—and inhuman—spun with a modern twist. A controversial debut by a new Historical storyteller . . . A Walt Disney Studios Fellowship Finalist. Historical Fiction, 456 pages, A Paperback Original from Dreamwand (also available as an eBook) www.theafflictedgirls.com

Nan: What got you interested in the Salem Witch Trials in the first place?

Suzy Witten: Initially I viewed the Salem events as a naturally dramatic story that begged to be told. I was a screenwriter at the time and saw Salem’s “afflicted girls” (a famous term from that history) as ideal characters to set at the center of a story. So I pitched this idea to a producer, got a positive response, and then began extensively researching and writing my screenplay for “The Afflicted Girls.” Then a funny thing happened in the course of my immersion into Salem, it became a mystery for me to solve also. No historians that I was reading--and I was reading every book on Salem available in the Los Angeles library at that time--could say definitively what had happened in Salem in 1692.

Nan: Your handling of the language is superb. How did you develop your knowledge of how they expressed themselves in 17th century New England?

Suzy Witten: A portion of my research centered on the vernacular and commonplace details of 17th century New England life. And something unusual happened here, too, in the midst of writing both the screenplay and then the novel: my characters began speaking from their own points of view, incorporating their own thoughts, emotions, needs and psychologies into that very vernacular as I wrote. It was almost as if I became their amanuensis. That’s why I categorize “The Afflicted Girls” as an “intuitive human history.” (Because as someone who has done a lot of meditation through the years, I may have developed an enhanced intuition.)

Nan: You clearly followed the transcripts and reports from the trials. Where does fiction come in in your writing?

Suzy Witten: It’s true. I have incorporated hundreds of established facts from the historical record into this story. As a writer of fiction, alongside being a researcher, while my aim was to fully develop my characters into flesh and blood people who live on the pages of a story, while each of my characters in “The Afflicted Girls” has a relatively factual back-story (a past) and a fully developed psychological profile and direction in the present, what happened when they interacted with each other in this story was utterly unforeseen and surprised even me. This story evolved from its characters.

Nan: How much of what you say happened to the characters afterwards is factual? How much is a further point you make? Why?

Suzy Witten: Most of the outcomes I describe have factual bases. Reverend Parris’ future is as stated. He was outcast and did become a glove peddler. Cotton Mather’s is also. Thomas Putnam never got his inheritance and continued in financial decline. Ann Putnam did lose many children in infancy. Abigail Williams’ fall from grace into prostitution is a conjecture by historians. (And Arthur Miller also incorporated this hint in his screenplay of the movie “The Crucible.”) The romance between Mercy Lewis and Joseph Putnam here is purely fictional, but many of the details of their individual lives are facts. Mercy’s future is fictional. But his marriage to Elizabeth Porter is a fact. And though Ben Nurse is fictional, the Nurse family clearly must have propagated and prospered, because only a few weeks ago I received a phone call from the Gallup Organization conducting a poll—a political survey about the current health insurance bill—and the woman who interviewed me was married to a man who was a direct Nurse descendent.

Nan: There aren't many sympathetic characters in this book. Why is that?

Suzy Witten: I think these are all flawed characters, but not truly unsympathetic ones when you incorporate an understanding of their range of mental illness, abuses and brutalities which have been suffered, not to mention having hopes, dreams and ambitions thwarted. These are people in families living side-by-side inside one divided village amid hard and confusing times. They’ve suffered and are still suffering afflictions. But I have tried to plant inside each villager at least some underlying explanation for the cause of their affliction—what has made them who they are in this story—to general sympathy for them in the reader. The only character I find unsympathetic myself is Chief Justice William Stoughton.

Nan: There are numerous theories as to what started the witch hysteria. You appear to ascribe, at least in the novel, to more than one. Why did you do that?

Suzy Witten: I’ve only told the story that the history tells. But what I’ve done that no one else has done before me is that I’ve identified the triggering event, and it isn’t what any historian has ever suggested. Mine is a new theory of the Salem Witch Hunt, but which finally explains it. It’s sure to be controversial. I have long thought that the reason Salem has been so clouded for 300 years is that there are too many strands to try to make sense of. I am the first writer to weave most of these strands into a cohesive picture—creating that tapestry of Salem Village in 1692 in which the picture is clear.

Nan: Cotton Mather was present during some of the trials and appeared to me to be prepared to overlooked the truth. What do you think?

Suzy Witten: The way I’ve presented Cotton Mather, who is only an ancillary character, is that he believes what everyone in Reverend Parris’ faction believes and what Judge Stoughton, his parishioner, believes: that the afflictions of the Salem Village girls were the result of curses, sent out by witches residing and doing the devil’s business in Salem Village. In the book it is actually Governor Phips who learns the accusations are allegedly “lies,” and puts an immediate end to the trials. This is a historical fact. .

Nan: You told me you are a screenwriter. Can you share more about that?

Suzy Witten: I’ve worn many hats in the entertainment industry. I was a filmmaker, screenwriter and an editor in the past, but I also have marketing, advertising and publicity experience. In recent years, I’ve been working exclusively on this novel. Which, by the way, I’ve written cinematically (i.e., anyone reading the book is also watching a movie) and I hope to get a miniseries made based on my book. That will be my next push.

Nan: Is this your first novel? You are publishing it independently. Why did you make that choice?

Suzy Witten: Yes, this is my first novel. I did try at first working through an agent, but then decided that since her time was limited and as I already had a production company for my film work, also the skills, and an exceptional product to produce, that I might as well form a publishing company myself. I have always enjoyed opening new doors. So this was a very practical solution to generate a revenue stream in these challenging economic times. It doesn’t hurt that this was also perfect timing, because the means to do this sort of endeavor are now here for any individual to take hold of. Yes, I’d say I was in the right place at the right time with the right product.

Nan: More than once in the novel, you write that Salem Village was more prone to lawsuits, resentments and ill will towards other residents. Is that taken from history?

Suzy Witten: Absolutely true. Salem Village, in year 1692, was the most litigious community in the Massachusetts Commonwealth, and had that reputation then. Everything I write about politically and economically in my book was taking place inside that bubbling cauldron of rancor between neighbors.

Nan: This story is one of the most appalling tales in American history. Do you agree?

Suzy Witten: Oh, I agree, Nan. But, of course, I’m the only one to solve the mystery of how it happened.

Nan: How did you research the novel?

Suzy Witten: The novel “THE AFFLICTED GIRLS A Novel of Salem” grew out of my original screenplay, which was a finalist in the Walt Disney Studios Screenwriting Fellowship competition in the mid-1990s (It had been chosen as one of 8 finalists out of 1000 submissions). And “The Afflicted Girls” screenplay was originally researched by reading every book available in our two Los Angeles library systems. At that time there wasn’t any Salem material available yet through the Internet. So I read everything I could find in the library. Now, though, there’s so much available. So more recently in writing the novel, I was able to authenticate additional facts online, which was a fabulous tool, because my goal was always to maintain historical authenticity and integrity. I’m very pleased with the result. Screenwriting Fellowship competition in the mid-1990s (It had been chosen as one of 8 finalists out of 1000 submissions). And “The Afflicted Girls” screenplay was originally researched by reading every book available in our two Los Angeles library systems. At that time there wasn’t any Salem material available yet through the Internet. So I read everything I could find in the library. Now, though, there’s so much available. So more recently in writing the novel, I was able to authenticate additional facts online, which was a fabulous tool, because my goal was always to maintain historical authenticity and integrity. I’m very pleased with the result.

Nan: What is your philosophy of the purpose of historical fiction as opposed to historical narrative?

Suzy Witten: I guess I see the same difference as between a feature film about an event and a documentary film about that same event; and there many examples of this. But they’re just different mediums of storytelling. In any creative work, there will always be uniqueness of the voice. Thus, in fiction no two voices writing about the same event will ever be the same nor will they be the same in historical narrative. That’s why each writer, researcher or historian proposes his/her own theory of certain episodes in a selected form . . . like I have done here.

Nan: What have you taken from what you learned about the people involved in this event? What do you hope readers take from your novel about it?

Suzy Witten: I am hoping my book and these characters will finally settle for all readers that 300-year-old mystery of what really happened in Salem in 1692.

Nan: This is a beautifully written, moving and compelling book. Thanks for sharing it with us.

Suzy Witten: Thanks for considering this book, Nan. And thanks, again, for helping me get the word out.

Be sure to check out review of The Afflicted Girls in the next That's All She Read

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Sharpe's Gold, by Bernard Cornwell (Richard Sharpe Adventure Series)

Sharpe's Gold
Bernard Cornwell

Richard Sharpe Adventure Series

First, if you saw the movie Sharpe's Gold, you have no idea what this book is about, other than that Sharpe is in it. There is no resemblance whatsoever. The movie was about some wacky archaeologist or mapmaker who finds Aztec gold in a cave and Sharpe and his soldiers find it and keep it. I am myself glad the book was not about that, since it was easily the weirdest of the movies and not in a good way. Though it is wonderful to watch Sean Bean and Darragh O'Malley. You can only imagine them in the book.

Okay, with that cleared up, let's talk about the book, which, as all the others we have read so far, is quite a bit better than the movie. Bernard Cornwell is just plain good at this. he has apparently rather little to do with the movies than perhaps signing the checks for the rights, so you miss out on that aspect in the movies. This book is no exception. It is a great story with some odd moments towards the end, but still a more complex and engaging story than Aztec gold.

Wellington sends Sharpe, who is in trouble for talking back to the army provost, sort of the prosecutorial arm of the army, to go and fetch some gold that belongs to the Spanish and bring it to him because, as he says threateningly, without it the British will get their butts kicked out of Portugal and that will be that. Sharpe is chosen for this duty because, as he tells Hogan, Sharpe is the only person he knows who will never fail. So Sharpe goes, figures out the partisans, led by a nasty piece of work called El Catholico, have it and don't intend to give it up. First Sharpe falls in love with EC's fiancee Teresa -- so that's where she was hiding! He and the boys steal the gold and they and Teresa make tracks. They run into the French all over the place and are forced to take refuge in a doomed fortress, Almeda. Up against a wall, Sharpe comes up with a pretty darn drastic means -- one subtitle is "The Destruction of Almeda", after all -- for getting away with the gold, thus Saving the Day. This story is based on a real disaster in Almeda and gold from some source being used to build a Wonder of the Military World, hillfort like rings around Lisbon that never were used again and are still there.

It's vintage Sharpe, grumbling through impossible acts of endurance, dealing with incompetent and overnice officers, wanting to tell Nosey where he can put his gold, falling in love in his usual ill-fated way, and taking the most extraordinary moves to defeat an enemy, such as when he makes El Catholico shove his rapier deep into Sharpe's thigh so he can't pull it out and Sharpe can clobber him. Yeresa is appealing for those of us who have found his ladyloves too frilly so far. She's mean, she fights, she doesn't need fancy things, just rifles, and she has a hobby.. destroying the French. All of them. And not for the reason the movie Teresa does. She just hates them to pieces, that's all. And, lest we forget, Sharpe is still waiting to get his promotion apprived by Whitehall.

This novel has crawlings about in cemeteries, coming in contact with lots of rotting bodies, and Harper finding gold buried in a pile of manure, so don't sit down to read this with a sandwich.

My husband read this book, which we bought, to me.

Availability

Harback US, UK
Paperback US, UK
Large Print UK
Audio CD US, UK
Audio Cassettes UK
Audio Download US UK
Preloaded audio deviceUK
National Library Services for the Blind (US) DB in process
BookShare.org yes
Languages: English

Monday, November 9, 2009

The Whispering Bell, by Brian Sellars

The Whispering Bell , by Brian Sellars

It interests me that although I have to tell my readers that this book has serious problems, one look at the swan on the cover nearly brought a tear to my eyes. I wish Brian Sellars had had a better editor but in spite of that, The Whispering Bell is a mocving story and worth the read for other reasons too.

The Whispering Bell is the story of Wynfl;aed, a Saxon woman living in Mercia, a Saxon kingdom of England, in the seventh centry. It is the time of the mercian King Penda's wars with just about everybody in reach. Penda was the last pagan king in Saxon England, and Wybflaed and those around her are mostly themselves followers of Frig and Wden and the other Germanic gods. She lives with the man who rescued her from her dying mother's arms until handsome young Wulfric, one of the great warriors of the King's army. They are married and he breaks his sword and vows never to go to battle again. In the meantime Wynflaed makes a thorough go of a lead mine that was her morning gift. When Wulfric's father guilts him into responding to Penda's next call for warriors, Wynflaed is left at the mercy of her husband's older disabled brother, Rendl. Wulfric is reported killed in battle Rendl starts plotting Wynflaed's downlfall. He manages to get her declared outlaw, and starts to plot her young son's death as well. Wynflaed has lots of unfortunately not politically pwerful friends. They help her find sanctuary with the woman whose father had taken Wunflaed in as a baby. This woman's husband gets the hots for her though, so the woman turns her over to slavers. All Wynflaed can think of now is how to escape and how to regain her children without damaging their chance at the life to which their station permits them.

This is where the book starts to fall apart, I am sorry to say. I could describe The Whispering Bell's plot as a rickety bridge over a deep gorge. The first wooden slats as you step off onto it are a bit wobbly, but as you cross the bridge seems stronger and you make good progress. Suddenly the slats start to have gaps between them, some are very narrow pieces of wood and they are alternately secure and loose. Then as you approach the other side of the bridge there is a huge gap that you can't quite leap across. You are left standing and unable to complete your journey.

The first hint that the going was becoming uneven was the introduction of a character who is the outlaw king of Sherwood Forest. His name is Rabbian. Rabbian of Sherwood, get it? Hey, I'm Robin Hood's number one fan, but c'mon! Guess what he does? He takes from the rich and gives to the poor. Yep, you guessed it. More than this bizarre plot twist, it is just a little before Rabbian's introduction that the story itself becomes choppy. After the first part of the book being a nice, direct narrative that picks up its pace as it goes along, you find yourself jumping from one character to another and never staying all that long with any of them. Finally you find yourself abruptly at the end with numerous questions unresolved. It really is too bad, as the novel had lots to commend it.

I will switch to those. It's a good story with good characters. You care about them, perhaps too much in one or two instances. I wound up feeling awful for Rabbian. Sellars clearly knows a great deal about Saxon England, not only its kingdoms and kings but the nature of daily life and its customs. Quite impressive in fact. If he tens to use the Saxon words for various things a little more than is helpful, I forgive him, being a Saxon England Geek.

Before I present my spoilers, I have one more bone to pick. The two main bad guyrs are both disabled. Rendl has a bum leg. The randy husband of Wtnflaed's friend is visually impaired. I really wish authors would not use disability as a recognizable sign of bad guyness. If not downright objectionable, then it's just old and tired writing.

OK, now for the SPOILERS. You are left at the end of the book with some major holes unplugged. Rabbian decides he loves Wynflaed so much that he leaves her to go find her beloved Wulfric. My question about Wulfric is, he is supposed to have been a slave for some time. Yet when Rabbian saves him, he is brought on the shiip on a stretcher. How many people employ slaves who are that sick or injured? And what happens when Wulfric gets home and discovers Rabbian's bun in Wynflaed's oven? Finally, we guess that the sour apple slave, Emma, is in fact Wynflaed's baby sister left behind by accident when Wynflaed is adopted. We know that, but no one else ever does. Why have it in the story then?

Again, the swan. The line is, from Wulfric, that swans mate for life. At the end he sees a swan swiimming nearby and is heartened. Their love story is definitely eppic and sweet at the same time. Too bad The Whispering Bell could not have been that sweet and epic.

The publisher, Quaestor2000, provided me with a digital copy of this novel for my review. I read it on my Kindle2. As far as I know, there are no accessible versions of the novel bor is it translated into any languages besides English.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Introducing "Book Maven"!



We are thrilled to announce a new regular feature on That's All She Read! Brandy Purdy, whom you all know as a wonderful author, has a part-time business as a book maven. That is, she takes requests to find particular books and through her expertise at locating evcen rare and obscure books, fulfills her client's fond wishes.

One aspect of that gift is having an encyclopedic knowledge of, in particular, historical fiction. And that's where this blog comes in. Whenever I have wanted to find a book I have read or heard of but am unsure of the author or title, I always turn to Brandy. Now you can too. Just send your questions to us here at That's All She Read, we will forward it to Brandy and publish what she finds out. No charge!

Here is her latest find.

Julia asks: "What is the name of the book I have heard about that concerns Cleopatra's children by Mmark Antony?"

Book Maven replies:

There are two.




Cleopatra's Daughter by Michelle Moran
After the death of her legendary parents Marc Antony and Cleopatra, young Selene Cleopatra II and her twin Alexander are delivered back to Rome, where they are installed in the household of Octavia, Emperor Augustus's sister and the jilted lover of Marc Antony. Surrounded by the opulence and power of ancient Rome, Selene and Alexander must perform a tightrope act to avoid personal harm among the insidious plots and schemes of the imperial court--even as they dream of returning to Egypt.

Cleopatra's Heir by Gillian Bradshaw
The son of the title is Caesarion, the son Cleopatra had with Julius Caesar--maybe. The boy is kidnapped when Caesar's Roman son, Octavian, conquers Egypt, but he escapes, ending up in the caravan of a merchant. The man's daughter falls in love with Caesarion, and it takes a lot of time and incident before he is able to transcend his privileged trappings and relate to a commoner. In the end, the author creates a meeting between Caesarion and Octavian that never took place, but that provides a rip-roaring finale.




Visit Brandy Purdy's web site for more about her book maven service and her own novels!