Tag: Paris

  • WHAT If It’s LOVE?: A Second Chance Romance, La Bohème Book 2 by Alix Nichols – Romance, New Adult, Women’s Fiction

    Lena Malakhov, twenty-three-year-old heiress to a Russian fortune, falls for a handsome waiter in Paris. But the influence of a conniving business rival might push them apart, in Alix Nichol’s romance novel, What if it’s Love?

    Lena’s father made his millions in the IT world, and he wants nothing more than for Lena to return to Russia and join the family business. However, Lena has other plans. She is finishing her master’s degree in Paris, as her thesis revolves around Marina Tsvetaeva, a Russian poet who lived and wrote in the City of Light.

    Ecstatic to be on her own after breaking up with her boyfriend of two years, Lena isn’t looking for romance. She spends her time working on her thesis, exploring the city, and drinking coffee at La Bohème, one of the best but little-known bistros in Paris. As she quickly becomes a regular at the tiny restaurant, she catches the attention of Rob Dumont, a disturbingly sexy waiter. The longer she remains in the city, the closer the two become.

    However, Rob has more on his mind than a pre-graduation romance.

    He’s been approached by a Russian business rival of Lena’s father. This rival promises a tremendous amount of much-needed money in exchange for spying on the quiet girl and reporting any intel on her father or his business. Even though Rob is desperate for money to pay his tuition, his conscience begins to plague him the more time he spends with Lena. His decision to come clean may ruin what is becoming the best relationship in his life.

    Lena embodies a key theme within the novel; she is a self-proclaimed coward.

    She literally and metaphorically runs from any conflict and allows life to happen around her, instead of taking charge and creating her own reality. Her father, Anton, constantly beseeches his daughter to join his business. He more or less tells her that she will do so after she finishes her master’s. Though she wants to work on literary translations when she finishes, she refuses to stand up for her dream, telling herself that she has time rather than confronting the issue.

    Lena’s relationship with her father is just one example of her running from conflict. When she begins to feel unhappy in her two-year relationship with Gerhard, she doesn’t have the courage to break up with him. In her typical passive-aggressive manner, she simply goes to Paris, and he doesn’t follow. Though she finds new freedom in her explorations, she knows she should have told him how she felt instead of just allowing their relationship to die quietly.

    In later incidents with Rob, Lena does the same, running from the truth he reveals and the chance at their happiness.

    She allows herself to fall into another relationship, a serious one, with a man she could never love, rather than face her fears and find true love with Rob.

    Lena’s need to run probably stems from her mother’s abandonment many years earlier, as she made a deal to stay away from Lena in exchange for a monthly payment. It isn’t until Lena learns to embrace the strength within herself, recognizing that she needs to be seen and heard, that she will ever find her prince and create her own happily ever after.

    Rob is a direct contrast to Lena. Where Lena is quiet and reserved, Rob is outgoing and beloved by his friends.

    Rob’s good looks give him a lot of female attention, so much so that Lena doubts anyone as handsome as Rob would want her. His financial situation, the very thing that leads to his betrayal, keeps a distance between them. While Lena is so pampered she never has to work or worry about money, Rob cannot graduate if he doesn’t get the money for his tuition. Though he has loving parents, they have made it clear that they want him to return home to the country and take over the family farm.

    He feels his only option is to spy for Anton’s business adversary even though it hurts him to do so. The biggest difference between the two is that Rob is willing to wholeheartedly fight for what he wants. Late in the novel, he gives up a good job to pursue his dream of creating his own business, and, as for Lena, he tries multiple times to convince her of his sincerity and love, confronting his feelings head-on.

    What if it’s Love? provides a refreshing twist on a typical contemporary romance.

    Lena and Rob draw the reader into a world that flows from page to page. The cultural differences between the characters and their commitment to their ideals make for a book we can highly recommend!

    What if it’s Love? by Alix Nichols won First Place in the 2015 CIBA Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult & New Adult Fiction.

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • The REFUSED by Ron Singerton – Historical Fiction, Action and Adventure Historical Fiction, Historical Thriller

     

    Fine artist and award-winning author Ron Singerton turns his astute attention to some little-known history, enmeshed in immortal names and enduring truth in his mystery romance novel, The Refused.

    The story boils from the first page, depicting families from the North and South in 1859 America. The brewing conflict will pull all of them into its orbit. In the South we meet Charlotte, her half-brother and slave, Jerome, who sail to France at war’s end.

    Life and love in Paris become the vibrant heartbeat in The Refused.

    Jack Volant, an aspiring painter and Union cavalry officer, wounded at Gettysburg, travels to Paris following the war to become a more accomplished artist. It is there that he begins a tumultuous relationship with Charlotte, a sculptor who sells her work to Empress Eugenie, wife of the Emperor, and a noted art patroness.

    Jack’s younger brother Steven, while still in America, becomes embroiled in an affair with a professor’s wife. When the professor, an expert shot, learns of it, he challenges the young man to a duel. Fearing for his life, Steven changes his name and flees to Paris where he engages in the eerie occupation of unwrapping mummies in the salons attended by the elite.

    All these dynamic characters, many involved in intrigue and murder, will interact in the decadent City of Light. They enjoy its ambience for only a short time, however, before war finds them once again. In 1870, the influence of the Empress, Prussian militarism and national rivalry will lead to disaster for France in the Franco Prussian war, the siege of Paris. In the chaos, Charlotte, deeply in love with Jack, waits anxiously as he attempts to save his brother and Jerome from the Prussian onslaught.

    The Refused is more than the title of a novel.

    Jack will find himself accepted by and creating new works alongside the Impressionist painters. Their adopted sobriquet, the Refused, stems from their rejection by the mainstream critics of the day. Their band includes Manet, Monet, Pissarro, Degas, Cezanne, and Renoir. They all resolve to paint what they want and hope for success, even if it be posthumous.

    This novel explores far more than artistic expression.

    Even after Prussian victories in the field, Paris holds out and becomes a hotbed of the Parisian underclass, the Communards. Jerome, with his sympathy for the desperately poor, joins the movement, putting his life in danger. As turmoil explodes around them, Jack, Charlotte, Steven, and Jerome attempt to survive as the reign of Emperor Louis Napoleon III and the Second Republic implode around them.

    Singerton writes with verve and intelligence. He fashions several interwoven plots in numerous historical settings, while making all his players come to life as credible people, some with high aspirations and others with low scruples.

    The author provides useful background in his “Author’s Notes.” He cites the real people and fact-based events that he selected for this engaging tale. The narrative encompasses formal dueling, womanly wiles, shadowy views of a typical morgue, costuming, cafés, conditions in Paris in wartime, and many other fine touches that powerfully immerse the reader in the times and places.

    Singerton served in Asia with the US military, was a Civil War cavalry reenactor, an art and history teacher, and enjoys saber fencing and horsemanship. He has penned notable works of historical fiction. And significantly, he is also, like several of the book’s protagonists, a professional artist. All these interests weld neatly together into this enthralling novel, sure to please his current audience and garner new readership.

    Read our reviews of Ron Singerton’s other books by clicking on their titles, A Cherry Blossom in WinterThe Silk and the Sword: Gaius Centurion, Book 2, and Villa of Deceit: A Novel of Ancient Rome.

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

     

  • SAVORING the OLDE WAYS SERIES: Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table, Book One by Carole Bumpus – French Cooking with Food and Wine, Culinary Memoir and Biographies, Culinary Travel

    SAVORING the OLDE WAYS SERIES: Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table, Book One by Carole Bumpus – French Cooking with Food and Wine, Culinary Memoir and Biographies, Culinary Travel

     

    Instruction & Instight Blue and Gold 1st Place Badge

     

    The retired family therapist turned travel writer and culinary memoirist, Carole Bumpus shares the delicious first book in her new series, Savoring the Olde Ways: Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table.

    In this first book, Carole takes readers on an intimate food tour of the Champagne, Alsace, Lorraine, and Paris regions of France. After being introduced by a mutual friend, Carole builds a special friendship with Josiane and her mother. Wanting to understand what brings and keeps European families glued together through generations of happiness and hardship, Bumpus begins by interviewing Josiane’s mother. Hearing about traditions passed down and the challenges of cooking during the war, the plan for a culinary tour of France is born among the women. Unfortunately, after travel delays out of their control, Josiane’s mother passes away before they can make the trip. Determined to make a dream trip a reality, Carole and Josiane set off to start a journey of a lifetime in honor of the woman who inspired it all.

    Savoring the Olde Ways: Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table, takes readers along on an intimate view into the culinary lives of the people in Northeastern France.

    Mouth-watering descriptions of food and heartwarming traditions tempt readers through every chapter, where history has had a powerful impact on both. Culture does not stop at borders. Bumpus encounters recipes from Italy and French recipes influenced by German cuisine. Following World War II, people from surrounding countries came to France in search of work and brought their traditional recipes with them. The Alsace and Lorraine regions of France went back and forth as being part of France and Germany. Carole and Josiane spend an evening with three generations of a family that experienced this flux of their nationality over the course of a century. Family and tradition helped to keep families strong during troublesome times in history.

    The French have a reputation for being rude, but Carole finds everyone she meets to be nothing but warm and inviting.

    Residents eagerly share their recipes, memories, and traditions with the visitors. Josiane brings Carole to the regions she and her family grew up in, and they take part in the long tradition of Sunday family dinner. Traditions like this may seem less common in modern culture, but still, very important to the families who keep it alive. The importance and similarity of the family traditions that Bumpus encounters show that we all aren’t that different.

    Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table won 1st Place in the 2019 CIBAs – Instruction & Insight Awards. 

    Full of the warmth of family, mouthwatering food, and the importance of history, readers will relish this tome of culinary arts and a good home-cooked meal. The journey continues in Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table: Book Two and Bumpus’s Italian adventure in September to Remember: Searching for Culinary Pleasures at the Italian Table. 

     

     

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