
Jolly Holiday by Andre Rieu
Album
Festive CD/DVD featuring a selection of the most famous and beloved Christmas and romantic tunes of...

Bloodwitch (The Witchlands #3)
Book
Fans of Susan Dennard's New York Times bestselling Witchlands series have fallen in love with the...

Due or Die
Book
Carrie Rushton has just been elected president of the Friends of the Library. Even though Lindsay...
A Summer Scandal
Book
When violet inherits a Victorian pier on Swallow Beach from her mysterious grandparents, she falls...

Die For Me (Killing Eve #3)
Book
On the run together, Eve Polastri and the psychopathic Villanelle take refuge in the underworld of...

Blazing Minds (92 KP) rated Black Widow (2021) in Movies
Oct 12, 2021 (Updated Nov 2, 2021)

Anne (15117 KP) rated Mexican Gothic in Books
Mar 4, 2022
The only thing with this book I'd caution is that toward the end what I noticed more is that there's some profanity/crude language and a bit of a shock at the end with a brief bit of gore and violence that grossed me out, but other than that I enjoyed this quite a bit.

Everything Under
Book
It's been sixteen years since Gretel last saw her mother, half a lifetime to forget her childhood on...
Magical Realism Retellings Mythology Literary Fiction

Breakaway for Love (Hockey & Love #1)
Book
Between hatred and desire. Nico was brought up to hate Daniel. The feud between their families is...
Contemporary MM Sports Romance Enemies to Lovers Gay Awakening

Hazel (1853 KP) rated A Place Called Winter in Books
May 28, 2017
Loosely based upon a true story, one of Patrick Gale’s ancestors in fact, A Place Called Winter follows the life of Harry Cane during the early 1900s. The book begins with Harry being transferred from a mental asylum to a therapeutic community called Bethel Ranch. The story then backtracks to Harry’s life as a young, nervous, motherless boy and the time he met his future wife, Winnie.
Throughout the book the reader is trying to guess the reason Harry eventually finds himself at Bethel Ranch. Gale describes Harry’s marriage, his discovery of homosexuality and his move to Canada to his final stop at a homestead in a place called Winter. Does Harry develop a mental illness or is it something to do with his scandalous desires? Or, does something else happen later in the book?
After moving to Canada, Harry does not exactly have it easy and the reader feels for him as he perseveres with his new life style. We watch him grow from a timid young man into someone with his own farm and independence. It makes it all the more upsetting to read when certain things take a turn for the worse.
In this historical novel, Patrick Gale emphasizes on the way homosexuality was regarded in society. Entire families cut people out of their lives at the slightest hint of a scandal. Gale also touches on the techniques used within mental asylums during this period as well as racial discrimination.
Occasionally, the story was difficult to read as it alternated between being really interesting and then slightly dull. Overall, regardless of how much was based on actual events, it was a good storyline, and once you have started reading you feel the need to continue to find out what happens to Harry. I have only read one other book by Patrick Gale – Notes From an Exhibition – that I struggled with a little. A Place Called Winter, however, was a lot better than I was expecting.