domingo, 20 de febrero de 2011

Mailbox Monday

Mailbox Monday was created by Marcia at The Printed Page. MM is currently on tour and this month it is being hosted by Library of Clean Reads.

Hello everyone! Hope you are having a wonderful President's Day. I had a pretty full mailbox this week- a lot of books I am very excited about. Without further ado....

For Review:
  • The Raven Queen by Jules Watson (check out my review on March 8th!)
  • Elizabeth I by Margaret George (check out my review on May 10th!)



Finds at the UBS:
  • A Vision of Light by Judith Merkle Riley
  • Wheel of Fortune Vol 1 by Susan Howatch
  • The Palace Circle by Rebecca Dean
  • King and Goddess by Judith Tarr
  • House of Illusions by Pauline Gedge
  • Enemy Women by Paulette Jiles
  • The Bristling Wood by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
  • City of Light by Lauren Belfer


From Barnes & Noble:
  • Major Pettigrew's Last Stand by Helen Simonson
  • Heresy by S.J Parris
  • Bloodroot by Amy Greene


From PBS:
  • In Pursuit of the Green Lion by Judith Merkle Riley
  • A Blunt Instrument by Georgette Heyer


Just wanted to mention today is my birthday and to celebrate I'm giving away my copy of Exit the Actress by Priya Parmar. Details and review HERE.

That's it for this week. Hope everyone else had a fabulous mailbox!

lunes, 14 de febrero de 2011

REVIEW: The Secret History of the Pink Carnation by Lauren Willig



American graduate student Eloise Kelly travels to England to research the topic of her dissertation: the identity of the elusive 1800's spy the Pink Carnation. After encountering many dead ends and resistance at first, she decides to contact the descendants of the famous unmasked spies the Scarlet Pimpernel and the Purple Gentian in the hopes she can uncover a link to the Pink Carnation. She finally gets a break in the form of Mrs. Selwick Arabella Selwick-Alderly who is in position of letters written by a Ms. Amy Balcourt, letters which may finally lead Eloise to discover the identity of the Pink Carnation.

Through the letters we meet the spunky and adventurous Amy Balcourt who dreams of leaving her home in Shropshire and joining the league of the Purple Gentian. She and her cousin Jane finally get the opportunity when Amy receives an invitation from her brother residing in Paris. He wishes her to serve as hostess for his household to further his ambitions at the court of Napoleon Bonaparte. Chaperoned by the no-nonsense Miss Gwen, the girls set off for Paris and encounter the dashing Lord Richard Selwick on board their ship. Attracted to each other one moment and at odds the next, Richard and Amy constantly cross paths in her quest to find the Purple Gentian, an endeavor that proves extremely dangerous when the run afoul of head of the French Policy Ministry, Gaston Delaroche.

I must say I was pleasantly surprised by this book. It was not at all what I expected it to be (actually I don't know what I was expecting). It was part romance, part mystery, part comedy, part historical fiction and all fun. I liked the spirited (if slightly clueless) Amy who was balanced perfectly by the sensible Jane. I LOVED Miss Gwen! Scenes such as the one where she pokes at Napoleon with her parasol and takes him to task for his rude shouting, standing about with his hand in his jacket, and the reprehensible way he invaded other countries had me laughing out loud. The bumbling way in which Amy goes about trying to discover the identity of the Purple Gentian was cute and I liked the build up of the romance between Amy and Richard until....

the book lurched into bodice ripper territory without much warning. I did not really enjoy this at all and think the book would have been just fine if it had remained "tame" throughout. These scenes were sparse though so it wasn't too distracting. Readers will not be surprised by the identity of the Purple Gentian although I am willing to bet their first guess for the identity of the Pink Carnation will not be correct. Secret History of the Pink Carnation is a bit predictable at times, but this part is not.

The only aspect I really did not enjoy was the storyline in present times involving Eloise and Colin Selwick. I am hoping this has more interesting developments in future installments but I constantly found myself wishing the chapters involving these two would be over so I could get back to the story of Amy and Richard. Also the transition between the happenings in the past and the present tense was almost nonexistent. Willig did do a nice job of setting the reader up for the next book with the ending though.

The Pink Carnation books are perfect for when you've been reading nothing but serious books and are looking to take a break with a fun fast paced read. I will definitely be continuing on with the series.


This book is from my own personal library

viernes, 11 de febrero de 2011

Book Blogger Hop

Book Blogger Hop, the way to discover great new blogs you may be missing out on is hosted by Jennifer at Crazy for Books.

This week's question:

"Tell us about one of your posts from this week and give us a link so we can read it (review or otherwise)!"


This week I would like to share my review of City of Dreams by Beverly Swerling. This is the story of six generations of immigrants in the medical profession who settle in Neiuw Amsterdam-what is later to become New York City. This is actually on Royal Reviews, the other blog I review for. Over there I am my alter ego-Baroness of the Bygone. I include all reviews done on Royal Reviews on my Review Master List page here at Bippity Boppity Book.

Posts coming up this week: My reviews of The Secret History of the Pink Carnation by Lauren Willig, The Love Knot by Elizabeth Chadwick, and my random musings on posting reviews on Amazon.
Hope everyone has a great weekend!