Showing posts with label georgette heyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label georgette heyer. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2011

Austen News and around the blogosphere

I’m a busy lady in-between writing my first Austenesque novel and working a 9-5 job. I wanted to let you know some news and what is coming up on this blog.

In August I am participating in two blog events.

August 2 I will be participating in Austenesque Extravaganza hosted by Austenesque Reviews. Still debating what my fun post should be. Should I debut a short story or some other fun post? I guess you will have to wait and see what I decide.

I will also be participating in the Georgette Heyer blog event hosted by Stiletto Storytime. August 14th I will be giving a book review of Heyer’s The Convenient Marriage and on August 20th I will be comparing and contrasting the work of Austen and Heyer.

In progress right now is a reading of Why Jane Austen? by Rachel M Brownstein. I will be posting a review soon. Also, Laura (@opheliacat) will be a guest reviewer on the blog. She will also be reviewing Why Jane Austen? I am excited about this as there will be two different perspectives.

I will also be reading a reviewing The Companion of Lady Holmeshire by Debra Brown.




Lots of great things happening. There will also be some giveaways coming up.

Lastly, the launch of Indie Jane is today. My friends Jessica and Nancy have taken a lot of time and Austen love into creating and launching this fabulous community. A community for self-published authors of Austenesque novels. Go check it out. I’m listed at the Reference Desk. Yippie!



Don’t forget to enter to win a copy of Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte.




Monday, May 23, 2011

Hot Regency Find: These Old Shades by Georgette Heyer

I have recently become acquainted with the author Georgette Heyer, who wrote over fifty novels in her life time. Impressive. She is often placed into the same vein as Jane Austen, but I find that Austen and Heyer both offer distinctly differently elements in their books. Perhaps the only comparison that holds true is that they both wrote works set in the Regency. But that is a blog post for another day.


I just finished Heyer’s These Old Shades. I must admit to first being ill disposed toward the heroine, Léonie, but she soon grew on me. I really did not warm to this book until chapter 10 and then I found that I could not put it down. Perhaps, I had to slowly taste what was being offered before I realized I like it.



These Old Shades by Georgette Heyer


 



Paperback: 384 pages (Also avaliable on Kindle)

Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca; Reprint edition (October 1, 2009)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9781402219474

ISBN-13: 978-1402219474





The gentleman in question is Justin Alastair, the Duke of Avon, known by friends and enemies alike as Satanas--the devil. On this particular evening, the dangerous rake crosses paths with Léon, a red-headed youth of low birth who is fleeing a certain beating at his brutal brother's hands. On a whim, Avon buys the boy and makes him his page. It soon becomes clear, however, that Léon is not what he seems, and that Avon has an ulterior motive for bringing him into his household. Set in pre-Revolutionary France, These Old Shades follows a twisting course as young Léon (or is it Léonie?) is swept up in a dangerous mystery: how to account for the page's amazing resemblance to the sinister Compte de Saint Vire, for example; and why will this man go to any lengths to get the youth in his power?