Icon Tag: historical fiction

Book Review: The Kitchen Boy

June 10, 2011 Whitney Review 4 Comments
Book Review: The Kitchen Boy

From the beginning I knew there was a secret even deeper repressed than just the fall of the Romanovs.  His dear May had a vast collection of Fabergé  eggs an item Alexandra Fyodorovna, Tsarina collected.  The couple’s only child, a son had hemophilia, a disorder that the Tsarevich  Alexei Nikolaevich had.  And what happened to […]

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Review: The Moorland Cottage

February 22, 2011 Whitney Review 4 Comments
Review: The Moorland Cottage

The Moorland Cottage is the chronicle of brother and sister Edward and Maggie Browne.  Edward is a bit of an ass, but yet Maggie still follows him around like a lost puppy filling his every request.  This is until she meets Frank Buxton and her attentions begin to drift elsewhere. The story plays out like […]

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Review: Exit The Actress

January 29, 2011 Whitney Review 6 Comments
Review: Exit The Actress

Words can not describe  Priya Parmar’s novel Exit The Actress, it is so rich and vibrant that I felt like I was actually in the audience watching Nell perform and wanted to reach out for one of her oranges.  While reading Nell’s journal entries I wanted to be her friend, with her tell it like […]

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Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin

August 26, 2010 Whitney Review 9 Comments
Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin

“Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank, and having nothing to do…” Alice Liddell’s story does not begin on this “golden afternoon” but this particular day defines her as “Alice”. Melanie Benjamin has brought The real Alice’s life to light beautifully. Mr. Liddell is the Dean of […]

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Review: To Kill A Mockingbird

August 1, 2010 Whitney Review 4 Comments
Review: To Kill A Mockingbird

To Kill A Mockingbird is a coming of age story, but the focus is not on raging hormones.  Harper Lee’s novel deals with prejudice of race and financial standing, rape and the battle of good against evil, showcasing that life is not always fair or as black and white as it appears to be. The […]

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Review: The Book Thief

July 14, 2010 Whitney Review 7 Comments
Review: The Book Thief

Featuring: Death, A Young Girl,  Hiding,  A Love Of Books Death serves as our narrator in this chilling novel.  He quickly explains that he does not in any way look like the grim ripper that pop culture has perceived him to be, such as wearing a black cloak and carrying a scythe, but instead is […]

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Review: Cranford

June 24, 2010 Whitney Review 12 Comments
Review: Cranford

Cranford is a small town which is high in the population of female.  In the first section of the book, every male who enters the town drops like flies making it feel jinxed or like an old-fashioned sorority. Elizabeth Gaskell’s novel is a sequence of short stories that all intertwine.  I’m typically not a short […]

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Book Review: A Long Fatal Love Chase

June 3, 2010 Whitney Review 10 Comments
Book Review: A Long Fatal Love Chase

Until one night when an unannounced stranger comes to Rosamond Vivian’s island, stealing her heart and whisking her away from her home. Rosamond and her now husband Philip Tempest, live a peaceful and happy first year until a mysterious lady appears at their doorstep divulging some unknown information about Phillip which turns Rosamond’s heart cold […]

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Gone with the Wind

April 17, 2010 Whitney Review 18 Comments
Gone with the Wind

Review The title or “catch phrase” really says it all, “A Civilization Gone with the Wind”.  Or, Scarlett O’Hara is the epitome of a young southern girl, pretty, vivacious and naive to the world around her.  All that changes when the civil war begins throwing away all that she once held dear. Katie Scarlett O’Hara, […]

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No Angel by Penny Vincenzi

February 14, 2010 Whitney Review 1 Comment
No Angel by Penny Vincenzi

Impressions While Reading No Angel by Penny Vincenzi is a a page turner and what I felt to be an accurate account of that time of history.  Penny Vincenzi references the woman’s suffrage movement,  medicine, social affairs and the after effects of war.  There are very few cliff-hanger at the end of No Angel as most […]

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