Jane Austen's England
Book
Jane Austen wrote about the English gentry class in the late Georgian and Regency periods...
The House on Cold Hill
Book
The House on Cold Hill is a chilling and suspenseful ghost story from the multi-million copy...
Christine A. (965 KP) rated How To Bury Your Brother in Books
Oct 3, 2020
How To Bury Your Brother is the debut novel of Lindsey Rogers Cook. The title drew my eye, and I thought it would have been a humorous novel. Reading the description, you quickly realize it is not. After selecting the book, because of personal reasons, it was not easy to start reading this book. However, once I started, I could not put it down.
Alice thought she would see Rob, her estranged brother, again. His funeral happened first. Years passed, and while cleaning out her parents' house, she discovers a box of letters her brother wrote to other people. Devastated he did not write a letter to her, Alice is determined to learn about the brother she lost and discover why he left by delivering the letters and meeting people who knew Rob.
Doing so forces Alice to look at the dysfunctionality of her seemingly normal family, how Rob and his abandonment shaped her life, newly discovered family secrets, and secrets she has kept from her family and friends.
The well-written story is a fast read. Cook pulls from her Georgian background to accurately portray southern families, their interactions with each other, with the community, and the stories they tell.
This 200-word review was published on Philomathinphila.com on 10/2/20.
Zoe Nock (13 KP) rated The Confessions of Frannie Langton in Books
Jun 26, 2019
Sometimes a book just grabs you from the beginning, something tells you that treasure lies here. I felt that within a few paragraphs of The Confessions of Frannie Langton. Sara Collins prefaced the novel with an explanation of her enjoyment of stories from Georgian/Victorian era but also her disappoint that she didn’t feel represented in the literature from that time. Her love of literature and that lack of inclusion drove her to write a novel that filled a gap, filled a need for women like Frances Langton to have a voice.
And what a voice! The author embodies Frannie so well. The first thing that struck me was that Frannie’s voice shone through immediately. She sounds so authentic, within a few lines you are engaged and intrigued. So much of the prose is beautiful and evocative, truly poetic. Sara Collins describes the people and places so deftly, you sense the weight of a sultry Jamaican plantation and the drabness of a grey London suburb. You can almost taste the boiling sugar cane and fall under the sway of the delicious, devilish ‘Black Drop’. It’s difficult to read this book without imagining a BBC period drama, it really would make a good screen adaptation. There is no doubt that Collins is a gifted and accomplished writer, a weaver of words both seductive and threatening. I really enjoyed this novel and would like to read anything new from Sara Collins.
Defiance: The Life and Choices of Lady Anne Barnard
Book
The first major biography of eighteenth-century writer and socialite Lady Anne Barnard. Born in...
Biography history
Active Voice HD : Speech-To-Text
Social Networking and Productivity
App
Active Voice HD is the power of your voice in the palm of your hands! - Use your voice to send...
Consumption and the Country House
Book
This study explores the consumption practices of the landed aristocracy of Georgian England....
Classic Recipes of Russia: Traditional Food and Cooking in 25 Authentic Dishes
Book
This title explores the rich and varied delights of Russian cuisine from Georgian meat soup to the...
iPronunciation HD for Google VS. Bing
Productivity and Reference
App
---------------------- *In February 2010, The free Version for iphone has been ranked the TopFree 1...
The House of Fiction: From Pemberley to Brideshead, Great British Houses in Literature and Life
Book
Houses in literature have captured readers' imaginations for centuries, from Gothic castles to...