Tag: Chanticleer 5 Star Book Review

  • FLY SAFE: Letters from the Gulf War and Reflections from Back Home by Vicki Cody – Operation Desert Storm Military History, Military Families, Marriage

    FLY SAFE: Letters from the Gulf War and Reflections from Back Home by Vicki Cody – Operation Desert Storm Military History, Military Families, Marriage

     

    Not many people can capture the emotions that coincide with war, but Vicki Cody joins the ranks of those who do in her wartime memoir, Fly Safe: Letters from the Gulf War and Reflections from Back Home.

    This powerful memoir shows us the behind-the-scenes lives of the women, children, and families left at home while their soldiers set off for war, bringing us close to their raw vulnerability. Fly Safe fascinates as it informs readers of what one wife experiences as her commander husband leads his battalion to the middle east.

    Cody takes us back in time to the early 1990s when the first President Bush called up troops in an operation called “Desert Shield,” which turned into Desert Storm. She captures the events that led up to our first conflict in the middle east, but far from being strictly pedantic and historical, centers on the warmth, love, and fears that most of the wives were experiencing. Her letters from her husband – and her journal entries read like daily affirmations and blend well in telling this story.

    The memoir shines as a first-person account of the ins-and-outs of a military family’s life during war.

    Cody succeeds 99% of the time in duties that correspond to her husband’s, and she knows how to help other wives and her community. But in this memoir, we are privy to the times she falters.

    We can’t be strong all the time. We can fake it – suppress, deny, and avoid our emotions – for only so long. Eventually, there is a trigger, a tipping point, and it all comes pouring out.

    The reader becomes witness to the terror and fear of war, born from the first “real-time” news reporting of such a conflict. She expertly relays her first shock at seeing the footage of skirmishes on TV before her husband’s letters have reached her. It’s difficult for the contemporary reader to imagine a time before cell phones, WiFi, and constant connections. Her experience was marked by waiting for letters to arrive through the mail. Deployment into battle meant weeks of delays in postal delivery, and the not knowing would gnaw at your confidence until your mind almost breaks.

    Through all the days and nights without her husband, the love story between them lies at the heart of the memoir.

    Difficulties arise for most returning troops: the power struggles, the reconnection after the war, the acclimation to ordinary home life after battle – and the author does not hide these issues. What she shows us most of all is a brave man’s journey to war and a brave woman’s support and love to keep the home fires burning.

    Military wives will recognize the feminine side of war shown here. The memoir is not about women going into battle in the literal sense, rather, what it is like for the wives as they navigate the real dangers of losing soulmates and the fathers of their children. Cody never loses sight of her obligations and considers them an honor to bear. In fact, her role in the war effort gives us a glimpse of how deployed troops’ wives coped.

    The father’s military tradition continues as their sons grow up to follow in his footsteps.

    The boys’ deployments to the middle east provide a glimpse into the role that a mother plays as her children are put in harm’s way to protect their homeland and our freedoms. Cody’s pride is evident in every word and line of this well-crafted memoir. We see it all through the eyes of the wife and mother, who relays her husband’s and son’s exploits with all the love, honor, respect, and pride that she holds in her heart.

    This book is a boon to military wives and mothers whose sons go to battle for our country. It is also a boost of patriotism for those readers who do not have that connection to military life. It shows readers the raw emotions that drive the women left behind, and it does so with humor, tact, and most of all, love.

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  • MIDNIGHT and MOONLIGHT: A Children’s Picture Book by Peggy Sullivan – Children’s Cat Stories, Children’s Picture Books, Children’s Books about Friendship

    MIDNIGHT and MOONLIGHT: A Children’s Picture Book by Peggy Sullivan – Children’s Cat Stories, Children’s Picture Books, Children’s Books about Friendship

     

    Little Peeps Grand Prize Badge

    Peggy Sullivan’s Midnight and Moonlight: A Children’s Picture Book is a delightful and inspiring book about a friendship that develops between two very different four-footed felines.

    Midnight and Moonlight are two well-named cats on opposite sides of the spectrum. Like night and day, Midnight is small, sleek, and black, while Moonlight is big, white, and fluffy. They first meet at a pet store, then they are taken to the same home where they quickly become friends, even though their differences are many.

    Moonlight appears the quieter and more passive one; Midnight is a more active and curious type with a sweet tooth and penchant for doughnuts. When the furry pair and their human owners move to a new house, the cats settle in quite nicely, still maintaining their individuality. Midnight does make friends on the outside with an orange Tabby, but Moonlight remains his best friend.

    Sullivan’s clear and concise text and whimsical illustrations work in perfect harmony to attract early readers.

    While the solid and direct narrative of Midnight and Moonlight flows easily, the charming visual accents like a shared yellow food dish, a bright blue moving van, and a lime green tuna can, add a colorful and complementary touch.

    With the story’s relatable message about friendships beyond differences and personal likes and dislikes, the book lends itself well for an ideal read between a parent and child, or perhaps a teacher and young students in a classroom setting. Here a fun and entertaining animal tale offers an opportunity for further discussion about unlikely friendships that can form in all walks of life, whether in the human or animal realm.

    The book’s final words prove a true testament to the story’s heartfelt sentiment about friendships.

    Ultimately, Sullivan’s well-crafted picture book delivers a positive, thought-provoking, and enlightening message for all ages.  A message perfect for today. Midnight and Moonlight: A Children’s Picture Book by Peggy Sullivan won the CIBA Little Peeps Grand Prize for Children’s Literature – and comes highly recommended!

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  • OPHELIA’S ROOM by Michael Scott Garvin – Literature & Thriller, LGBTQ+ Books, Suspense Thrillers

    OPHELIA’S ROOM by Michael Scott Garvin – Literature & Thriller, LGBTQ+ Books, Suspense Thrillers

    M&M 2021 Grand Prize Badge for Michael Scott Garvin's Ophelia's RoomOphelia’s Room by Michael Scott Garvin begins with a bang – and a child’s whimper.

    A frantic, distraught father pounds on a bolted chapel door in a small country hospital…. A tiny, two-day-old infant cries in peril….  A deranged grandfather sees demons in every shadowy corner.

    The opening scene read like something out of a young parent’s nightmare. Will their child be healthy? Will they grow up to be successful? Will the child be safe in their grandparents’ arms?  Questions that any new mother and father ask themselves. In Garvin’s Ophelia’s Room, the answers are terrifying.

    An ominous heaviness looms over this atmospheric psychological thriller, pulling readers along until the novel’s storm-wracked climax.

    Welcome to 1969, Parsons, Kansas – a conservative backwater middle-American town skeptically views the changes in the outside world – an ongoing Vietnam conflict, a battle for civil rights, and women’s liberation – as the deviant workings of the devil infecting America.

    The Mulls’ family tragedy expands well beyond the child’s monstrous murder when the townsfolk come to blame the baby’s death on her young mother, Delia. Rumors spread that the devil is living among them – and the suffering mother invited the evil entity into their town.

    Ophelia’s Room burns throughout with suspense and trepidation. Michael Scott Garvin’s psychological thriller depicts the foreboding sense that a similar fate could happen to anyone – in any town, on any day. This in-depth character study slowly peels back the brittle surfaces of the novel’s cast of Parsons locals.

    From one perspective, Ophelia’s Room reads like a recital of small-town life with its sense of camaraderie and community and, occasionally, petty, gossiping meanness as people move through the mundane motions of everyday living. Only in Garvin’s Parsons, Kansas, dread creeps through every turn of the page like some suspenseful Hitchcock film.

    Two characters dwell in the heart of the story: the infant’s mother, Delia – and her troubled father, Lloyd Hudson – a convicted murderer imprisoned down the highway at the Kansas State Penitentiary.

    As the story begins, Delia emerges from a deep trough of grief to discover that her friends and neighbors align with fear and religiosity instead of compassion. She struggles with the knowledge that her life will never be the same.

    All the while, her father remains imprisoned. A compliant, God-fearing man, Lloyd preaches the gospel to his fellow inmates. But underneath his calm exterior, demons haunt him. To survive, Lloyd must take murderous steps to exorcise them. The struggle between the man’s better angels and his haunting demons lays the battle lines of this horrific tale. Pity the poor souls caught in his path.

    Beware – Read with care and keep the lights on. You’ll need them!

    Ophelia’s Room by Michael Scott Garvin is in the running for the Short List in the CIBA 2021 Mystery & Mayhem Book Awards.

  • BLOOD on a BLUE MOON: A Sheaffer Blue Mystery by Jessica H. Stone – Amatuer Sleuth, Female Sleuth, Pacific Northwest Mystery

    BLOOD on a BLUE MOON: A Sheaffer Blue Mystery by Jessica H. Stone – Amatuer Sleuth, Female Sleuth, Pacific Northwest Mystery

     

    M&M Blue and Gold 1st Place Badge ImageJessica H. Stone delivers a killer first book in her new murder mystery series, Blood on a Blue Moon: A Sheaffer Blue Mystery.

    Somewhere on the line between Kinsey Milhone and Stephanie Plum, sails insurance investigator Sheaffer Blue on her sailboat Ink Spot. Probably sailing a bit closer to Plum’s chaos magnetic style than Milhone’s more professional demeanor as a fellow insurance investigator. But then, it’s the madcap nature of Plum’s investigations that makes her series so much fun – and the same is certainly true for Blue.

    Blue’s job as an insurance investigator starts out as temporary as every other job she’s ever held. She’s just there to save up enough money to get her beloved Ink Spot’s back dock fees paid off. Once that happens, she will sail away to Mexico, live on part-time work, and sail as much as she wants. 

    Can you live on a dime in Seattle?

    Even living aboard a boat in a low-rent dock slip, as Blue does, nearly breaks the bank. She needs funds to live her dream, and that’s where her current job comes in – and it very nearly takes her out.

    The case starts out small. A fire on a houseboat where an elderly woman dies of smoke inhalation. Open and shut, right? Not so fast. There’s a big fish who’s pressuring Blue’s boss to solve the case pronto. He’s been eyeing the lakeshore property with plans to develop it into a playground for the wealthy. All he needs is a swift settlement and the rest of the houseboat owners gone. 

    Everyone wants the case solved.

    Blue wants to do her job and get the boss off her back. She’s one step closer to sailing away, but the cops – or at least one cop, Detective David Chen, doesn’t believe the case is as straightforward as it appears – or as someone wants it to appear. And there are plenty of clues to make the reader’s detective hackles rise along with the cops, even if it takes Blue a bit to get there.

    That’s what makes the story so fascinating, and the mystery so compelling. The more that both Blue and Detective David Chen poke into the life of the victim, and the more that the wealthy developer pokes into Blue’s boss, the more tentacles of the case begin to slither and the more the coincidences pile up.

    And the more the reader is on the edge of their seat.

    While the police detective brings his professional knowledge and detachment to this investigation, Blue’s style owes a lot to Stephanie Plum’s more chaotic process, or mostly lack thereof. In fact, her amateur detective status gets her into trouble – a lot of trouble. And this is what makes the novel work spectacularly.

    Blue’s style of controlled chaos allows her to see things that the detective misses. Through her slapdash methods, readers understand why Shirley, the original victim, was the kind of person who fought great battles, inspired great friendships, and put herself in the crosshairs of a long-ago tragedy that resulted in her murder.

    Award-winning author, Jessica H. Stone builds her characters with plenty of spark and mayhem – enough to carry an entire series. Readers looking for a female detective to follow now that Kinsey Milhone has left her alphabet unfinished, or who love the madcap and sometimes maddening methods used by Stephanie Plum and just can’t wait for her next number, will find a lot to bite their nails over in Sheaffer Blue’s first – but hopefully not last – case.

    Blood on a Blue Moon: A Sheaffer Blue Mystery by Jessica H. Stone won 1st Place in the CIBA 2018 Mystery & Mayhem Book Awards.

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  • ELFABET: An A to Z of Woodland Folk by Sylva Fae – Children’s Literature, Children’s School Issues, Early Readers Books

    ELFABET: An A to Z of Woodland Folk by Sylva Fae – Children’s Literature, Children’s School Issues, Early Readers Books

     

    Little Peeps 1st Place Best in Category Blue and Gold Badge ImageSylva Fae helps early readers learn their alphabet with another delightful children’s book, Elfabet: An A to Z of Woodland Folk. 

    Little Eric, king of Ladybirds, also known as ladybugs, needs a way to learn his letters to spell many dazzling words. Little Eric uses the world of the forest folk around him as inspiration for his elfabet. Get ready to meet a whole trove of fantastical creatures from dragons to pixies, to fairies and goblins, and many more for every letter of the elfabet!

    Fae’s Elfabet charms readers and fills us with love on every page. Just like in Rainbow Monsterswhere readers got to learn about colors by getting to know a rainbow of monsters, Fae makes learning the alphabet fun and engaging. Everyone knows that “A” is for apple and “D” is for dog, but now readers will get to explore a whole new and fantastical world. A world where “A” still stands for apple but is collected by elves, and “D” is for fire-breathing dragons!

    Both Sylva Fae and illustrator Katie Weaver dedicate this book to their children, who inspire their work.

    In her illustrations, Weaver uses an array of bright colors and draws various subjects to encourage creativity in children. On each page, the drawings are within each corresponding letter, and readers will wonder and daydream about what magic lies beyond the edges of each letter. By the time children reach the end of Elfabet, they will be inspired to write and draw their own stories of the woodland folk.

    Make the road to reading get off to a fun and creative start with Little Eric, the king of Ladybirds in Sylva Fae’s Elfabet: An A to Z of Woodland Folk. This title won 1st Place in the CIBAs 2019 LITTLE PEEPS Awards for Children’s Literature. 

     

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  • The COLOR of RAIN: A Kansas Courtship in Letters by John W. Feist – Family Saga 19th Century, Love Story in Letters, Family History

    The COLOR of RAIN: A Kansas Courtship in Letters by John W. Feist – Family Saga 19th Century, Love Story in Letters, Family History

     

    Author John W. Feist unfolds a true-love story, old-fashioned letter style, in his historical romance novel, The Color of Rain: A Kansas Courtship in Letters.

    Three and a half years pass before Irene Webb, a college-educated schoolteacher, hears about the beloved Wilson family she stayed with as a boarder, caring for Harold and Wallis, their two sons. But the news sent to her in August of 1896 is not good; Allie, Frank’s wife, unexpectedly dies. “I realize this is no time for letters,” Irene writes to him before expressing her most profound condolences. Formalities aside, the letter sparks renewed friendship, and the two Kansas friends begin exchanging letters regularly.

    A handsome, well-respected local banker and now eligible bachelor, Frank Wilson, is nothing less than a hot ticket item with “the path to [his] home … a pilgrimage for unmarried women bearing casseroles.”

    While the attention is encouraging, he’s not interested in finding a replacement for Allie right away. Except for Irene. Three months after Allie’s death, Frank makes the day trip via two trains from Horton to visit her at her parents’ farm in Nortonville—a mere half-hour drive with today’s modern conveniences. Thus, a long-distance courtship commences.

    Frank and Irene remain busy people – his with banking, and Irene (the oldest of seven children) cares for her ailing father and holds down the fort of the large Webb household. The two lovers keep to weekly letter-writing since they barely have the chance to see each other, especially when trials and tribulations convolute their individual lives. Irene cannot imagine the issues she must confront, including an enticing school principal offer, as she contemplates marriage.

    Rising author, John W. Feist, utilized his storytelling skills to bring a love journey to life.

    The benefactor of his grandparents’ courtship correspondence, Feist saw an opportunity to go back in time and recreate what “dating” looked like near the turn of the twentieth century. It’s difficult to imagine the formalities behind courtship, let alone women succumbing to patriarchal ties. But that was not necessarily the case with Feist’s grandparents.

    If Irene wasn’t the intellectual she was, she might have balked at Frank’s direction toward marital preparation. Instead of following through with the usual romantic proposal, Frank gave her Orson Squire Fowler’s groundbreaking Creative and Sexual Science to read and for them to discuss. To his delight, she took up the challenge. Although the hefty read might have carried an undercurrent of male domination, what made it revolutionary was Fowler’s eye-opening stance that husbands and wives should be considered equals, an ideal Frank had with Allie and hoped he’d have Irene.

    Of course, there is so much more to Frank and Irene’s relationship.

    The Color of Rain: A Kansas Courtship in Letters goes beyond recording a family legacy; it is a human-interest story. Feist’s rich writing style stitches historical details, providing a seamless flow from letters-writing to narrative sections that capture everyday life’s realities amid unsettling times. Concerns over Indian Territory and Negro Freeman allotments (which Frank was involved in as a banker) and contracting diseases like malaria and typhoid (both Irene’s mother had, eventually dying from the latter) are two prime examples.

    The Color of Rain: A Kansas Courtship in Letters is a must-read for all, especially history aficionados.

     

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  • PULSE and PREJUDICE: The Confessions of Mr. Darcy, Vampire by Colette L. Saucier – Mashup Fiction, Historical Romance, Classic Adaptation

    PULSE and PREJUDICE: The Confessions of Mr. Darcy, Vampire by Colette L. Saucier – Mashup Fiction, Historical Romance, Classic Adaptation

     

    Chatelaine 1st Place Best in Category Blue and Gold BadgeAs a wealthy member of the landed gentry, Fitzwilliam Darcy has obligations in Colette Saucier’s mashup, Pulse and Prejudice: The Confessions of Mr. Darcy, Vampire.

    Darcy must secure a suitable match for his younger sister, maintain his cool facade of indifference, and live as quietly as possible. He refuses to consider marriage for himself due to his unusual “affliction.” Forced to live a shell of his former existence for the past six years, Darcy relies on his valet, Rivens, for his every need. He shuns most company because Darcy is a vampire. So, when his close friend, Charles Bingley, insists that Darcy accompany him to a country ball, Darcy is loath to accept. When Bingley meets and is immediately captivated with Jane Bennet, Darcy suspects the Bennets are fortune seekers, interested only in finding wealthy matches for the five Bennet daughters, including the fiery Elizabeth, Jane’s sister.

    As Bingley spends more time with Jane, Darcy is thrown together with Elizabeth and begins to see something extraordinary in the headstrong girl, so much so that he fears his growing hunger goes beyond mere admiration. When Darcy feels his control beginning to slip, he knows he must distance himself from Elizabeth, but he soon learns nothing, not even distance, can diminish the strength of his need.

    Based on Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, this novel is a fantastic adaptation which most Austen fans will love.

    It has the cozy familiarity of the classic with an unexpected twist, creating something that feels as comfy as your favorite jeans but is sexy as a little black dress. In this retelling, the author explores the same time-tested love story as the original but from Darcy’s perspective, which in and of itself is truly interesting; however, add the fact that he is a vampire, and the story explodes in a fresh, new way while seamlessly aligning with the original. Even the vocabulary and sentence structure of the novel matches that of Austen, making the story seem like the perfect companion.

    Darcy’s tortured psyche is the star of this novel.

    Ironically, this dynamic character experiences a dramatic change that makes him much more human – although he is not – than in Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. As the plot follows that of the original, the reader can see and feel his growth from a man of extreme pretension, a man spoiled by his parents into believing himself above most of society. Though he must maintain this belief for decorum and the safety of others, he is also a lonely man who misses that human part of himself that he has suppressed.

    In the beginning, Darcy doesn’t realize how miserable he is nor how much he hates himself, but the more time spent with Elizabeth, the more he sees the “pinnacle of [his] self-loathing.” Having pretended indifference for so long, Darcy now feels unworthy of Elizabeth’s love or forgiveness for the many slights he gives her and her family. Darcy also wonders which part of him, the vampire, or the bit of humanity to which he clings, that Elizabeth excites. His yearning for her goes beyond anything he experienced as a man and drives his vampire nature insane. He cannot stay away from her, nor does he desire it. He wants her body and blood, but he mostly wants to be worthy of her love. In short, she brings him back to life and makes him feel, maybe for the first time. He is the perfect tortured, dark hero, and romance lovers will not be disappointed.

    Pride and Prejudice: The Confessions of Mr. Darcy, Vampire won 1st Place in the CIBA – Chatelaine Book Awards for Romance.

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  • The CORPSE WORE STILETTOS by MJ O’Neill – Cozy Mystery, Women Sleuths, Amateur Sleuths

    The CORPSE WORE STILETTOS by MJ O’Neill – Cozy Mystery, Women Sleuths, Amateur Sleuths

     

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    The Corpse Wore Stilettos by MJ O’Neill brings down the house in a most delightful way.

    Four months ago, Kat Water’s life fell apart. Her father, a prominent insurance broker, was arrested on racketeering charges, accused of laundering money for the mob. A successful museum curator in Boston, Kat immediately dropped everything to return to St. Louis, leaving her fiance and career behind. With all of their possessions seized and their bank accounts frozen, Kat’s mother, Lauren, and her grandmother, Theodora, are left poverty-stricken. Kat, with her family name now dragged through the mud by the media, can only find a job in the county morgue. With her minor in biology and her detail-oriented personality, she finds her work most rewarding.

    When tasked with processing the body of a believed prostitute, it’s all business as usual.

    But the deceased girl doesn’t bear the typical signs of her profession. Then a gun-toting bad guy steals the body before Kat begins her task. Oops. Now, once again, Kat’s family steps in as fodder for the rumor mill, and everyone believes the body must be connected to her father, his crimes, and the mob. Kat determines to find the body, solve the mystery of the girl’s identity, and clear her family name. She grudgingly teams up with the distractingly attractive ex-military special forces turned security firm owner, Burns McPhee. As they chase the mystery and the body all over St. Louis, the two realize the girl’s death is part of a much larger, much more dangerous plot.

    This novel’s character line-up shines!

    With one misfit eccentric after another, they all seem to work seamlessly to create a memorably fun read. From shoe-obsessed drag queens to heroic strippers, this novel definitely delivers on character development. Grand, Kat’s grandmother Theodora, sparkles. The borderline “geriatric Nancy Drew” is a hoot! Often the feisty troublemaker, Grand cannot help but instigate or fan the flames in any bad situation. If she isn’t “shopping” in their police-patrolled, off-limits former home, she’s running around in kitschy visors (one for all occasions) and making revenge scrapbooks on ways she’ll get even with her long-time nemesis.

    Another example of character craftsmanship is DC, Kat’s best friend and co-worker. He is, perhaps, the most interesting of all the supporting characters. With his fashion savvy and his cat therapist, DC has a flair for the dramatic.  As Kat’s figurative and literal sidekick, he is in the middle of all the action. When he turns superhero complete with costume Kat engineers a complicated rescue scheme to get him away from what he believes are Russian mobsters. Kat’s other co-workers won’t disappoint either with super-timid Henry, gothic Meg, Marshall the perv, and Sam the tattooed, motorcycle-riding, aspiring chef.

    Armed with outstanding fashion sense, a minor in biology from Harvard, and uncanny random facts that she spouts whenever nervous, Kat Waters is an absolutely unique and memorable character herself.

    Her entire life, Kat’s been pampered and made to feel special. Her life was exactly on the expected trajectory: great job, correct fiancé, and numerous pairs of expensive shoes. She never dreamed she’d be literally penniless and working in a morgue to keep Grand and her mother off the streets, and though her mother doesn’t really respect Kat’s work with the dead, Kat learns the importance of her job in a way she never expected. She discovers that she is much more than a two-time Miss Missouri winner in the best makeup category, and certainly not the mob princess the media like to portray her as.

    Kat’s a woman who refuses to abandon those she loves and one who willingly gives up her own dreams to keep together the family she has remaining. After the girl’s body disappears on her watch, she transitions that attitude into her need to find Jane Doe. While initially her amateur investigation stems from her suspension and punishment at work, her search evolves into a quest for justice for a string of prostitutes similarly murdered by a serial killer six months prior. Kat refuses to let these women remain victims of a faceless killer; their stories must be told regardless of the risk. She won’t let flirty reporters, sinfully handsome ex-army guys, or psycho stalkers get in her way, and she’ll do it while looking fabulous!

    From the county morgue to a dominatrix kink house posing as a barbershop turned therapist’s office, this novel is one crazy adventure after another! Mystery lovers will not be disappointed. The Corpse Wore Stilettos won 1st Place in the CIBA 2019 M&M Awards for Cozy and Not So Cozy Mystery novels.

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  • The Adventure of the Murdered Midwife: The Origins of Sherlock Holmes, World’s Greatest Consulting Detective (The Early Case Files of Sherlock Holmes, Case One) by Liese Sherwood-Fabre – International Mystery & Crime, Mothers & Children Fiction, Private Investigator Mysteries

    The Adventure of the Murdered Midwife: The Origins of Sherlock Holmes, World’s Greatest Consulting Detective (The Early Case Files of Sherlock Holmes, Case One) by Liese Sherwood-Fabre – International Mystery & Crime, Mothers & Children Fiction, Private Investigator Mysteries

    M&M Blue and Gold 1st Place Badge ImageThe game is afoot! It’s years before Sherlock Holmes’ ponderings from 221B Baker Street. Sherlock is a teenager when challenged to solve his first case, The Adventure of the Murdered Midwife by Liese Sherwood-Fabre.

    The stakes are among the highest. Sherlock’s beloved mother is the accused killer when he and his infamous brother Mycroft are summoned home from their boarding schools. The family reunites to a single purpose. They must prove Violette Holmes’s innocence. They soon discover that proving her innocence will not be enough to restore her standing in the court of public opinion. They can only clear her name by also finding the actual killer. That investigation involves a dangerous pursuit that requires detailed observation, logic, and action. Young Sherlock Holmes will also need to watch his back.

    The adventure begins with a brief glimpse into Sherlock’s school days.

    It’s an illuminating peek into his growing personality. As the men of the family come together, nerves fray with their mother and wife jailed. Sherlock’s Uncle Ernest is also anxious to help free his sister. Ernest and Sherlock visit Violette in jail, and together the three of them create a plan they hope will bring her home. If successful, they may catch the killer, an endeavor that may be an even more significant threat to them all. The determined Holmes family will need all the help they can get along the way. The killer is watching their every move.

    During his analysis of the case, Sherlock encounters a most intriguing teenage girl who has perfected the execution of the enviable skill of sleight of hand.

    Her name is Constance, and she is the most talented pickpocket he’s ever met. A handy tool to have on your team if you can, but there’s more about this girl that attracts Sherlock. He wants to strike up a friendship. Is this the start of young love, a first crush? Of course, there are complications. If Sherlock can save his mother from conviction and the gallows, then someone very close to Constance risks becoming the main suspect in the murder of the unfortunate midwife.

    Author Liese Sherwood-Fabre paints a lively, historical setting that draws the reader immediately into a curiosity about the social conventions and people of the story.

    Crafted to perfection, the Sherwood-Fabre offers several suspects and a crime scene clever enough to engage the reader at every step of the investigation. The investigation takes unexpected twists and turns that will keep a reader guessing until the end. The most outstanding achievement is the author’s skill in creating her characters, including one of the most famous mystery characters of all time. She paints the most credible portrait of him in his youth. The characters’ motivations and family dynamics are revealed in due time, throughout the adventure, with some surprises. Situational and character humor delights as they race to solve the mystery. And so, the adventure begins.

    The Adventure of the Murdered Midwife by Liese Sherwood-Fabre won 1st Place in the CIBA 2019 M&M Awards for Cozy and Not so Cozy Mystery novels.

     

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  • ANTONIUS: Son of Rome (The Antonius Trilogy Book 1) by Brook Allen – Ancient Roman Historical Fiction, Historical Fiction, Biographical Historical Fiction

    ANTONIUS: Son of Rome (The Antonius Trilogy Book 1) by Brook Allen – Ancient Roman Historical Fiction, Historical Fiction, Biographical Historical Fiction

     

     

    Blue and Gold Chaucer 1st Place BadgeAntonius: Son of Rome by Brook Allen focuses on one of history’s most vexing and perplexing figures, Marc Antony. It is also inevitably a prism on modern American politics, with its characters behaving duplicitously, greedily, and ignobly while spinning up service to the greater good.

    Historians often cite Antony as a controversial figure whose accomplishments and flaws have been noted by his enemies. Yet, he is as compelling as Richard III or Richard Nixon, with gaps in the accounts of his life that create grounds for curiosity and speculation as to how he became the pivotal figure in western history that he is. Allen weaves a wonderfully realistic and organic story of how a boy grows up desperate and bitter in a disgraced patrician family yet desperately transmutes mistake and tragedy into military achievement.

    Marcus Antonius was the eldest of three male children of his namesake father, Marcus Antonius, and Julia Antonia. Of noble birth in Republican Rome, the novel begins as eleven-year-old Marcus learns of his father’s fatal illness, a man who had failed in his duty to govern overseas provinces. His actions as provincial governor – extorting gold from those he should protect, then failing to commit suicide as a Roman general should when such disgrace is discovered – angered the Senate and left his widow and orphans to bear his dishonor.

    Young Antonius vows to restore honor to the family name.

    He commits to instruction in military practices and interacts with a cast of relatives and characters who aid him and provide additional problems with their political intrigues. His distant cousin, Gaius Julius Caesar, gifts him with a slave who becomes trainer and friend. But young Antonius also acquiesces to baser pursuits, becoming involved, with two other young Roman men of noble birth, in a brothel and gaming club where he indulges copiously. He begins to accrue gambling debts, which lead him to desperation as his moneylender demands repayment that the family’s modest wealth cannot meet. Roman proprieties and political savagery come together as his mother remarries. A plot to rebel against the Republican order includes his new stepfather, whom Antonius has come to esteem, and one of his brothel compatriots. The plot’s failure leads to his stepfather’s death and additional contempt for his family. Even his own joy sows horror; he frees and marries a family slave, only for her to be murdered by his usurious moneylender. Despondent and concerned for the others in his family, he is convinced by his cousin, Caesar, to study abroad in Greece, where his fortunes change.

    Allen makes historical Rome real.

    She brings to life areas readers might be familiar with, but she also takes us into the homes and less-pleasant places in mid-first-century BC Rome. From murder dungeons to strolls along the Palatine, receiving guests at a family Domus, and the daily interactions of Roman nobles and plebians and slaves, the perspective of young Antonius provides insight to a time two millennia distant and yet of human behavior not much different. As familiar names like Cicero and Caesar and Ptolemy plot and scheme and inveigle for personal glory with the lives of people they disregard in the balance, it’s difficult not to transfer young Antonius’s learning experience into our own era where the covetousness remains pervasive. The backstabbing is only slightly less literal.

    Indeed, the novel’s strength lies not in the admirable accuracy of its descriptions and accounts but in Allen’s ability to place the reader directly in the head of her hero. Perhaps it’s difficult to think of a man who drinks, fornicates, and wagers excessively as a hero but Marcus Antonius relies on honor in most instances, including when it may be to his detriment. As readers share his journey from the Domus Antonii to Alexandria, many will come to understand his philosophy and may be swayed.

    Steeped in history, but more than fiction, Antonius: Son of Rome ultimately invites readers to visit another place and time.

    Allen presents a flawed but sympathetic character to an enigmatic two-dimensional historical figure that will appeal equally to those already inclined to Roman history and those who might be just as inclined to the modern singer. Antonius: Son of Rome took home 1st Place in the CIBA 2020 Chaucer Awards for Early Historical Fiction.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews 5 Star Best Book silver foil sticker