Friday, November 26, 2010

When Harry Met Molly by Kieran Kramer - A Review

When Harry Met Sally is a light romance, a fun and fluffy romp through Regency England.  I really enjoyed it, although I haven't been "into" romances for a year or so. 

Harry is the younger son of a duke, sent from home in disgrace and forced to join the army at the age of 18 after Molly, the second daughter of an earl whose estate neighbors the duke's, tattles on him for kissing her older sister who happens to be the fiance of Harry's older brother. Molly, who was 13 at the time, is also sent away in disgrace to a school in the north of England for her bad behavior. Harry and Molly meet again when she is around 20 and on the verge of spinsterhood, which is the reason she is at an inn on the way to Gretna Green with a vacuous but oh-so-handsome friend of her father's. Harry, named one of the Impossible Bachelors by the Prince Regent, is at the same inn with his mistress, an equally vacuous but oh-so-beautiful woman, on the way to his hunting box for a week's debauchery. Molly's reluctant suitor and Harry's petulant mistress elope together, leaving Molly stranded alone far from home and Harry in a lot of trouble. The Impossible Bachelors have been ordered by Prinny to engage in a competition, and if Harry doesn't show up at the hunting box with the Most Delectible Mistress in tow, he will be forced to marry a woman chosen by the other Impossible Bachelors.

You can see where this is going.

There was a problem or two, mostly with believability, and many of the scenes at the hunting box with the bachelors and the mistresses were plain silly, but overall it was funny, touching (it even brought tears to my eyes in one place), and multi-dimensional. Even the villain had a redeeming quality. At first I disliked Molly ~ she started out acting like a real twit ~ and Harry wasn't all that appealing either. But during the course of the adventure, as layers of guilt and wrong-headedness were peeled from them, they became completely loveable, and by the end I liked both a lot and was rooting for them.

The ending? Well, it was one of the improbable scenes I mentioned above, and a bit too facile in my opinion, but, once I managed to turn the "suspension of my disbelief" up a notch, it didn't detract from my enjoyment of how things worked out.

There was, as you can imagine, quite a bit of sex, but I found I wasn't skimming those scenes as I usually do; they actually had substance to them, as well as humor. And some of the scenes with Molly and the mistresses were as amusing as they were touching.

Recommended for fans of Regency romances.

DISCLAIMER: I got the paperback copy free from Pump Up Your Book in exchange for a review.  Neither my opinion nor my review were influenced thereby.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Winners' Circle

And the names of the lucky winners of the autographed copies of the Aristide Ravel historical mysteries, courtesy of the author Susanne Alleyn, are:

1. Book Bird Dog
2. pennyt
3. Aik
4. Kari Wainwright
5. k-sunshine1977

Congratulations! I've contacted all the winners by email and have all their mailing addresses and I plan to get the books out in the mail by Monday morning 11/22. Thanks to all who entered!

Friday, November 19, 2010

Palace of Justice - A Review

I absolutely loved Palace of Justice, the latest in the Aristide Ravel historical mystery series by Susanne Alleyn. The action takes place in Paris during The Terror, a few years after the events in Cavalier of the Apocalypse, the novel in which Ravel reluctantly begins his career as a police agent. Though I loved loved loved Cavalier, and very much enjoyed Game of Patience and Treasury of Regrets, Palace of Justice is my hands-down favorite! Clearly, Ms. Alleyn's really hit her stride with this one!

Someone is leaving headless corpses from one end of Paris to the other, macabre reminders of the bloody work being done by Madame La Guillotine, and there seems to be no rhyme or reason for the killer's choice of victims, which range across the entire social spectrum. Ravel is brought into the case when the headless corpse of an unknown woman is found in an alley in Commissaire Brasseur's patch. When Ravel discovers that their victim is actually the fifth such corpse and that the Revolutionary Council is involved, things start to get dicey for the morose detective. Is it a true madman responsible, or could it be a royalist fanatic out to discredit the fledgling Republic by whatever means possible, even if it means murder?

The mystery is clever and twisty and seems to me to be a police procedural / judicial drama, coupled with a study of what fanaticism and madness does to a society as a whole and to individuals in particular, as much as a whodunnit. As usual, though, it is Ravel's story and the fascinating historical period details that sucked me in and kept me up late at night reading "just one more page...or two."  While immersed in the novel, I was there with Ravel in the gritty heart of Paris during The Terror, with all of its paranoia, hysteria, poverty, fear and bloody death. Even as he races about trying to solve the murders, resulting in some nail-biting moments for me, Ravel is personally touched by tragedy when Mathieu, his best friend from childhood, is brought up on charges of treason in front of the Revolutionary Tribunal, resulting in some of the most heartbreaking scenes in any novel I've ever read. I cried, which isn't something that usually happens when I read a mystery.

Palace of Justice is, quite simply, sublime, and I highly recommend it (and the entire series) to those who love good historical mysteries. For a taste of what Palace has to offer, you can read the first two chapters on Ms. Alleyn's website: www.susannealleyn.webs.com/palaceofjustice.htm. She is also having a giveaway of two copies of Palace ~ the link to the contest is in the right-hand column of this blog. So, do yourself a favor: check out the excerpt and then enter the giveaway. You'll be so glad you did!

In bookstores November 23, 2010 (just in time for the long Thanksgiving holiday in the U.S.)!

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

An Exciting Giveaway, courtesy of Susanne Alleyn

In anticipation of her latest Aristide Ravel mystery Palace of Justice going on sale later this month, and because she's just an all-around great gal, Susanne Alleyn has generously provided me with five autographed copies of her first three Ravel mysteries to give away to five lucky readers.  I've got two copies of Game of Patience, two of Treasury of Regrets, and one of Cavalier of the Apocalypse up for grabs!

How to Enter:

1 Entry: Leave a comment below.

1 Entry: Leave a comment on the Interview with Susanne Alleyn post.

3 Entries:  Go to Susanne's website and read the excerpt from Palace.  Then come back here and leave a comment, telling me your thoughts about it.  You can also let me know which of the novels you'd prefer if you win, and I'll do my best to accommodate your request.  Please be sure to leave me your email address. 

1 Entry:  Tweet about this giveaway.

1 Entry:  Mention this giveaway on Facebook.

1 Entry: Mention this giveaway on GoodReads.

1 Entry:  Mention this giveaway on your blog.

1 Entry:  If you are a follower of this blog (or become one).

Please remember to leave a link to your blog, social site mention, and/or your Twitter handle, and let me know if you are a follower of this blog. 

The drawing will be held on the 16th of November, so please be sure to leave your enter by midnight on November 15.  Good luck!

(So sorry, but this giveaway is open only to residents of the U.S. and Canada, and you must have a street address; no post office boxes.)

Monday, November 1, 2010

Interview With Historical Mystery Author Susanne Alleyn

Susanne Alleyn, acclaimed author of four historical mysteries set in Paris during the French Revolutionary period, as well as a non-mystery historical novel, apparently comes by her love of writing historical fiction naturally, being the granddaughter of Lillie V. Albrecht, who wrote a number of children's historical novels beginning back in the 1950s.  As it notes on Susanne's website, though, Susanne "definitely doesn’t write for children, unless, like her, they have found guillotines, high drama, and the French Revolution fascinating since the age of ten or so."

I feel so lucky to have "discovered" Susanne's Aristide Ravel mystery novels a few years ago, first gobbling up Game of Patience and Treasury of Regrets, and then getting to know her a bit while nagging her to hurry up and finish the next one (The Cavalier of the Apocalypse) and after that to hurry up and write the next one (Palace of Justice, which, I am thrilled to be able to say, will be in bookstores November 23, 2010, just in time for the long Thanksgiving Day weekend in the U.S.). 

Not long ago, while discussing with her when Palace would be published so I could get my next Ravel fix, we had a little chat, which went something like this:

Me:  So your grandmother was a famous writer of children's books!  Is that where your love of historical fiction came from?

Susanne:  I don't know about "famous," but she definitely influence my love for historical fiction!  She lived in a town called Westfield, Massachusetts, which has about 400 years of history. It was settled by the Puritans in the mid-17th century. She was just fascinated by the local history, so after doing quite a lot of local research and such (she was librarian there), she decided to write children’s books, set in the area. And she ended up writing five, and had them published, and became a local celebrity.

Me:  Your Ravel mysteries are certainly not children's books, though I guess A Far Better Rest, which is a reimagining of Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities from Sydney Carton’s viewpoint, could be appreciated by young teens. Where did you get the idea for writing it?

Susanne:  Oh, dear, dear. Doesn’t every romantic, literary-minded teenaged girl fall in love with Sydney Carton at one time or another?  Call me a case of arrested development, but apparently I never outgrew my teenaged infatuation with him (a progression, from the Classic Comics Tale at 8 or 9, to a somewhat abridged version of the novel at 13, to seeing the 1935 film with Ronald Colman ~ best Carton ever! ~ at 16, to reading the whole, unabridged novel for the first time soon afterward).  A Tale of Two Cities, in turn, led to my fascination with the French Revolution.

During many re-readings, I had always wondered why Carton just dropped out of A Tale of Two Cities for such a large chunk of the narrative, while Dickens concentrated on the married life and then the revolutionary travails of Charles and Lucie, and how and why Carton then popped up again in Paris just when he was most needed. Dickens never, ever explains this (Did Mr. Lorry write, from Paris, to Carton or to Stryver, telling them of the Darnays’ plight? If so, why not say so?). No doubt it’s simply one of his famous coincidences, beloved of Victorian novelists; but I really wanted to know.

In 1995, I had the opportunity to spend a week in London before going on to Paris for two more weeks. And toward the end of my trip, one evening in the very bare room of a Parisian youth hostel (having no money to go out for evening activities), I idly began to ponder the fact that I had been in London and was now in Paris . . . the “two cities” of the novel. Once again I began to wonder why Carton had disappeared from the middle of A Tale of Two Cities and turned up in Paris many chapters and years later. And suddenly, perhaps thanks to the influence of Paris, I realized the solution was . . . obviously! . . . that he had been in Paris all the time (doing what? Hmm . . .).

I immediately knew that I had to write that story, from Carton’s perspective, and (being a history geek) with a fuller and more balanced look at the French Revolution.  Dickens does provide a very sketchy timeline in the course of his narrative, but from a quick read, you would think that all the events of the Revolution, from the fall of the Bastille to the Terror, happen within about six months ~ film versions are even guiltier of this ~ and it was all blood and massacres and guillotines; nothing is ever mentioned of the first two “happy” years of the Revolution or of its many positive achievements.

Me:  I can see how Tale could be such an influence.  It was one of my favorite novels of childhood too.  So romantic!  By the way, I've heard there are plans afoot to reissue it in paperback.

Susanne:  Yes, I'm so excited that it's being reprinted!  It's just become available at Amazon in paperback and eBook, to coincide with the release of Palace of Justice.

Me:  What then inspired you to write your first Aristide Ravel mystery, Game of Patience?

Susanne:  Game was loosely inspired by a real-life female multiple murderer, Manette Bouhourt, whose killer career in early 1800s Paris was briefly outlined in a book about the Parisian executioners and crime in the 18th and 19th centuries. I knew I wanted to learn more about her, and I knew I wanted to write a story, play, or novel about her. Unfortunately I could find very, very little about the historical Manette, so I took the few facts I had and created a fictional character, first in the beginnings of a play, which didn’t work, and then in the beginnings of a novel with the young woman as the main character, which also didn’t work. Then it suddenly occurred to me that the story I had in mind would work as a mystery, with a new central character/sleuth (at which point Aristide Ravel appeared, almost fully formed); and finally the story worked!

Me:  I know from reading your novels that you do meticulous research and then weave the historical details seamlessly into the stories. What was the most fascinating detail you learned while doing research?

Susanne:  There are probably way too many fascinating details to count. It was interesting (and rather disturbing) to learn how the prerevolutionary French police and justice system worked; study a bit of this, and you understand why our own framers of our constitution wrote it as they did, because they knew about the horrific abuses and injustices that could sometimes happen under Europe’s absolute monarchies, where the whole system was designed to keep the subjects in line. The idea that it didn’t really matter who was punished (publicly and usually harshly) for a crime, because, it was theorized, the example would frighten other potential wrongdoers into not committing crimes, was typical and, to our modern American ears, simply appalling.

The most fascinating footnote character of the French Revolutionary period that I discovered has to be Fragonard, the mad scientist featured in The Cavalier of the Apocalypse. I’d known a little about him long before I even began writing the Ravel novels; but after visiting the museum containing his works, I knew I just had to include him in a future novel. (This was while I was just finishing Game of Patience; perceptive readers will notice a sneaky reference to him in Game, although I didn’t write Cavalier for another five years.)

Me:   I’ve read that you can see Adrien Brody in the role of Aristide Ravel if Game of Patience were made into a movie (and wouldn't it make a wonderful film).  Does your choice still hold? Who would you like to see play Inspector Brasseur and Rosalie Clement?

Susanne:  Oh, yes, Adrien Brody is still my first choice for playing Ravel. He’s just so right for the character in both appearance and style. For Rosalie, I’ve thought of French actress Charlotte Gainsbourg, or someone like her. Very French-looking and intense, though not conventionally pretty. Brasseur is definitely a character actor’s role and I keep thinking of Robbie Coltrane (Hagrid in the Harry Potter movies), although he’s too old for the part. I don’t see enough movies to be really aware of a lot of the current talent out there.

Me:  Oh, my, yes, I agree ~ Adrien Brody would  make a brilliant Ravel.  In fact, I always picture Brody as Ravel when I'm reading one of the Ravel mysteries.  Such a brooding yet sensitive character. *drool*


What?  Oh, right, back to the books.  The fourth Ravel mystery, Palace of Justice, will be hitting bookstores toward the end of November 2010. I read the first chapter (at your website) and wow! What a hook! Tell us what you can ~ without giving anything away, of course ~ about the plot and where it fits time-wise with respect to the first three.

Susanne:  Palace of Justice takes place in October 1793, when the Terror was just beginning to heat up.  Revolutionary politics and events will interfere with Ravel’s pursuit of a multiple murderer who seems bent on leaving as many headless corpses around Paris as the guillotine does.  If you read the novels in the order of when the stories take place, it’s second in the series (between the The Cavalier of the Apocalypse and Game of Patience). (Blame the publishers for the crazy sequence! They asked for two particular books based on some very brief ideas I sent them, without paying any attention to the historical timeline.)

Me:  Besides Ravel, which one of your fictional characters did you find most interesting to write?

Susanne:  Am I cheating if I say the Sansons, father and son executioners?  They were real people, so are not strictly “fictional”. (I am obsessed with the Sansons, a family trapped by social mores and customs in an intolerable position, and will be writing much more about them someday.)

Me:  Not cheating at all!  I find them fascinating too.  And the way you've written them, so three-dimensional and sympathetic, for all they are engaged in a terrible and macabre job!  It's hard to imagine how it must have been for them, trapped as you say by the social customs of the time.

Susanne:  For totally fictional characters, the most interesting to write was probably Rosalie ClĂ©ment in Game of Patience. A close second was the Marquis de BeauprĂ©au in The Cavalier of the Apocalypse; he’ll be back in at least one future Ravel novel. He was vaguely inspired by a real revolutionary figure, Jean-Marie HĂ©rault de SĂ©chelles, a wealthy and influential aristocrat with liberal views, who became an extremely left-wing revolutionist and member of the Committee of Public Safety (while continuing to live like a wealthy and influential aristocrat). I see BeauprĂ©au as being sort of a combination of Lafayette and Robespierre.

Me:  Okay, so, as an aspiring writer, I've got to ask: What is an average writing day like for you?

Susanne:  I have to confess I’m horribly lazy and undisciplined! But on a good day, I get up as early as possible, fortify myself with coffee, get to work, and produce a few pages’ worth of rough draft before lunchtime. I rarely can get much writing done in the afternoon or evening, although I can reread and do a bit of editing. When the rough draft is complete (hallelujah!) I can usually spend whole days rereading and rewriting. So much easier than writing the draft.

Me:  Lazy?  Undisciplined?  I don't think so. Not with five published books under your belt.  And, may I say, five excellently written published books.  So, do you have any special writing rituals or totems to wake up your Muse?

Susanne:  One word: Coffee. (Ravel and I share this trait.) Two of the most productive writers in history, Voltaire and Balzac, were also among the greatest coffee addicts in history. So far, caffeine hasn’t made me nearly that productive, but I can hope.

When I’m stuck in the middle of a paragraph or scene (“Where does this conversation go from here?” “What the heck happens next?”), I usually run the solitaire program and play a round or two of Freecell. Usually that little break allows the subconscious to figure out what comes next. Yep, that’s where Ravel’s solitaire habit comes from; I thought it would work well for him, too.

Me:  Heh.  You, Ravel, Voltaire, Balzac ~ and me!  I can't live without my daily dose of coffee, the stronger the better, but my game of choice is Mah Jong.  Although I just love it when Ravel pulls out his old deck of cards and starts laying them out.  You just know something's going to percolate up out of the depths of his intellect.  Anyway, one last question: I know you like to read. What are some of your favorite books?

Susanne:  My tastes are pretty conventional. I’ve always liked mysteries, and read mostly the Golden Age authors ~ Christie, Sayers, Tey, and so on.  I continually reread books, for pleasure and to half-consciously examine the writing style. I also like fantasy and science fiction, from time to time, and have read some of the classics, like The Lord of the Rings, many times.  A Tale of Two Cities, of course.  Historical fiction ~ depending on the period; aside from the French Revolutionary period, I like ancient Egypt and Rome.  I’ve amassed quite a collection of fiction set in the French Revolution but a lot of it is pointless costume schlock (bodice-ripper romances, dull male-oriented “adventure” novels from the 1950s, and, ugh, the truly witless, historically ludicrous, and Francophobic Pimpernels). The best by far, both in historical fidelity and literary quality, is A Place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel. She wrote the book I wanted to write (and she wrote it much better than I could have), but that sent me off in other directions which seem, so far, to have worked for me.

So, there you have it!  I'd like to extend a big thank you to Susanne for sharing her thoughts with me so I could share them with you!