Showing posts with label Berar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Berar. Show all posts

Friday, August 26, 2022

Book Review - Lauren Willig's The Lure of the Moonflower

Lure of the Moonflower by Lauren Willig
ARC Provided by the Publisher
Published by: NAL
Publication Date: August 4th, 2015
Format: Paperback, 528 Pages
Rating: ★★★★★
To Buy

Jane doesn't know if it's wise to be working with Jack Reid, alias the Moonflower. But her mission is in Portugal, she doesn't speak the language, and he's the agent on the ground. Seeing as her old compatriot and chaperone Miss Gwen is married to Jack's father, Jane has heard all there is to know about Jack and his ever shifting allegiances. What she hasn't heard about Jack is that perhaps the legend doesn't match the man. And that man has sure heard of the legend of the Pink Carnation, who is now supposedly leading this new mission that he isn't allowed any input on. Jane is not suited to the search for the Portuguese Queen across the rough and tumble countryside, yet that is just what she plans to do. She is being dictatorial and living down to his expectations. But that is the problem. They have both prejudged each other and found the other lacking. It doesn't help that Jack unknowingly is the reason Jane had to go rogue because she was unmasked when he sent the Jewels of Berar to his sister Lizzy. If they could just start over then perhaps they could find more than just a serviceable working arrangement. That new start happens when the deadliest of French spies, the Gardener, appears on their trek. They both have a history with him, and neither one is pleased to see him. They scrap all their plans and go off the grid, trying to beat the Gardener to the Queen and trying to trust each other. But trekking across rough terrain while ensconced with the French army, albeit in disguise, was far easier than what they now face. The cold, the blisters, the unnamed donkey. As Christmas draws near can they achieve their goal? What's more, can Jane achieve her second, secret mission? Reuniting Jack with the family that loves and misses him. While in the future Eloise and Colin are facing something just as daunting; their wedding day. Which should go off without a hitch, that is until Colin's beloved Aunt Arabella is kidnapped the night before the ceremony and Colin reveals she was spy in her day! So they just have to deal with the kidnapper's demands and THEN they can get married.

Parting is such sweet sorrow. And the parting of ways here is occasionally as rocky as the terrain. I've never been the biggest fan of Jane. She's always been an enigma, and rightfully so, she is illusive after all. Always in the background setting the world to rights. Lauren previously needed her to be infallible and maddeningly omniscient and capable. These traits don't lend themselves to a character of flesh and blood, but an analytical ice maiden. A perfectly coolly composed heroine does not make the most interesting read. The Lure of the Moonflower gets off to a rocky start because, like Jack, we only see what Jane wants us to see. This capable perfect agent. When the truth starts to seep out, her self doubt, her sacrifices, how much she and Jack feel the weight of the mantle of spy, do you finally start to relate and to understand Jane. The loneliness, the long nights, the seclusion, the isolation from everything and everyone else as you have to be self sufficient and self reliant. That is where Lauren succeeds and the book comes together, she believably gives us insight into Jane. Slowly the layers are peeled away and the person who was once inconceivable is now all too human and relatable. And two can handle what one can't alone. It's Jane's opening up to Jack that not only makes Jane relatable, but that made me connect to her. Finding the right people, the right person, who is there to lift you up when you're down, to help you over the rough patches, that is the most precious gift we can get in life. And Jane realizes that Jack is just such a person. Someone who takes the weight of the mantle "The Pink Carnation" off her shoulders. Neither of them have any reason to trust the other, but their experiences together and their similar backgrounds makes them compliment each other. To have Jane find someone to compliment her is a wonderfully happy place to end this series, but more than that, to find someone to share her burdens, to rely on, someone with whom you can let down your defenses and admit you need help, that is the true happily ever after.

Wednesday, July 6, 2022

Book Review - Lauren Willig's The Passion of the Purple Plumeria

The Passion of the Purple Plumeria by Lauren Willig
Published by: NAL Trade
Publication Date: August 6th, 2013
Format: Paperback, 480 Pages
Rating: ★★★★★
To Buy

Colonel William Reid is retiring to England to live out his life in leisure with his two daughters, Kat and Lizzy, leaving behind three very different, one very difficult, sons in India. Little does he know that the school in Bath that Lizzy has been attending, Miss Climpson's Select Seminary for Young Ladies, seems to be the epicenter of spies in the battle between the French and the English. For two years Miss Gwendolyn Meadows has been at the center of that fight, or slightly next to the center, wielding a dangerous parasol as the second in command to Britain's chief operative, The Pink Carnation, aka, Jane Wooliston. She has ostensibly been the dragonish chaperone of Jane while they lived in France under the roof of Jane's cousin, who has his own secrets to keep. Jane has received a missive from her family that finds Jane and Gwen on the steps of Miss Climpson's just as Colonel Reid arrives. As fate would have it these three must unite because Jane's sister, Agnes, has gone missing along with Colonel Reid's daughter Lizzy. William doesn't grasp the seriousness of this, thinking it's just girls being girls. Jane knows that this is probably not the case. Somehow Agnes and therefore Lizzy's disappearance has to do with Jane's subversive activities, she just knows it. When William and Gwen are attacked while inquiring after Lizzy at Kat's home in Bristol, he comes to see that his littlest girl is truly in danger. He might not have been the best parent so far, but he was going to fix that. The attack also shows that the reason for the girls disappearance might not be Jane's fault and might actually be tangled up with William's most dubious of children, Jack, and not Jane at all... Or at least not directly. Rumors are that besides switching sides from the French to the English Jack has made off with the famous jewels of Berar... Jewels which are rumored to have been sent to Lizzy. This means that Jane, Gwen and William aren't the only ones looking for the girls. That most dangerous of French spies, The Gardener, is also on their trail.

Lauren Willig's Pink Carnation series is like the ultimate comfort read, like watching The Princess Bride mixed with Bridget Jones's Diary. There's "fencing, fighting, torture, revenge, giants, monsters, chases, escapes, true love, miracles"... Well, maybe not giants, monsters, or fencing per se, but there is Miss Gwen with a rapier parasol, and Lizzy Reid with a bow and arrow, and Lizzy alone is just as dangerous as those three things together. In this tenth installment we have a character we have loved since day one and who demanded her own book, seriously, ask Lauren. Miss Gwen has always been a pillar of strength and fortitude. Ready to take down the French with an arch look or a well placed parasol to shin or other vulnerable body part. We have seen this hilarious yet adept spy trailing behind The Pink Carnation, almost as an accessory to Jane. It is as if Gwen herself was Jane's multifunctional parasol weapon. In The Passion of the Purple Plumeria we see that the reserve that Jane has always exhibited doesn't exclude Gwen. Gwen is just as in the dark as other agents, just hoping that in lying to herself that she has found a place where she belongs, working beside Jane. Holding on to the dream that her life has purpose and that this work will continue. Lauren brings such depth to Gwen, showing that while she is strong and kicks ass at her job, there's a vulnerability. Gwen could lose Amy and therefore lose her calling. Beneath the gruff exterior Gwen really does have a gooey center. She is a mature heroine that has lived and loved and is therefore all the more relatable as I get closer and closer to Gwen's age. Yet in revealing Gwen's weaknesses, in showing us her painful history, Lauren doesn't take away anything, Gwen can be both vulnerable and strong. Like a parasol, something light and frilly, but with a hidden sword in the shaft. Gwen is just simply remarkable, "beneath that stern exterior was a lifetime's worth of adventure for the man brave enough to win her."

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Lauren Willig Q & A Part 1

Well, today's the day you've been waiting for! That's right, my Lauren Willig Q & A! Ok, so it's really the release of The Betrayal of the Blood Lily you've all been waiting for... but a girl can hope right? But I'm sure while you're waiting for work to end so that you can run to the bookstore to get your copy, that's if you didn't cleverly phone in sick, you'll need a Lauren Willig fix to hold you over till quitting time. So here's your fix! Lots of lovely questions answered by Lauren that you can read while pretending to do real work, or even while mourning how fast you read the newest book and how there's now many bleak months ahead without another new book... but you can always re-read the series again!

Question: The character of Penelope is so vastly different then past characters... more worldly, less nubile virgin. How was it writing for such a different heroine?

Answer: It was surprisingly fun! Penelope has such a strong voice that she was very easy to write for, right from the start, even though she couldn’t be more different from the heroine of the previous book. Where Charlotte was sweet and idealistic, Penelope is cynical, worldly (at least, she likes to think she is) and unabashedly physical. Since she’s already been both ruined and married by the time the book starts, the usual rules no longer apply to her, which gave me a great deal more latitude than one usually has with one’s heroines.

The other thing I found fascinating about writing for Penelope was getting to delve into the distinction between what’s coming out of her mouth and what’s going on in her head. Unlike the previous characters, she’s a deeply wounded creature. At the same time, she’s absolutely committed to showing no weakness. That made for a great contrast and very interesting writing.

Question: How do you go about conducting your research and how do you decide where to take historical liberties?

Answer: I always start with an immersion period. A couple of months before I begin writing a book, I read everything I can get my hands on about a given time period, a process that includes everything from scholarly studies to contemporary documents. While I’m reading, the details in the documents invariably suggest new plot ideas. For example, the original plan was to set Blood Lily partly in Calcutta, partly in the north-east, where fighting was taking place in the fall of 1804, but reading Dalrymple’s White Mughuls convinced me that the book had to be moved to Hyderabad and the whole plot rejiggered accordingly. Likewise, the idea of using the lost treasure of Berar came from a footnote in Jac Weller’s Wellington in India, while the nautch dance came from the memoirs of Maria Graham, an Englishwoman who traveled through India, keeping meticulous accounts of her experiences, in 1809. Once I’ve started writing, I do what I call “spot research”, tracking down additional details as I find I need them.

Since all the books are—at least in theory—filtered through the imagination of the modern framing heroine, I’ve felt more free to take historical liberties in the Pink series than I would have if these were a different sort of book. Some of the liberties are for humor value, like my hero in the second book having a rather anachronistic “Follow that sedan chair!” moment. Others necessarily occur when you graft fictional characters onto real events. For example, George III really did go mad in the winter of 1804, as he does in The Temptation of the Night Jasmine, but, in real life, French spies had nothing to do with it. Well, at least as far as we know….

Question: Recently you went to Paris to research an upcoming book in the Pink Carnation series, did you get a chance to visit India to see more buildings that are no longer there in preparation for Blood Lily?

Answer: I very much wanted to! But, due to the vagaries of book deadlines and monsoon season, it didn’t happen. Blood Lily is the only book I’ve written so far where I haven’t personally visited the sites involved. I worked mostly from historical pictures and maps, although I did also grill various friends who had lived in India. They were subjected to such hard-hitting queries as “What does a monsoon actually feel like? No, really!” Thanks, guys. Your knowledge and your patience were both appreciated.

Question: Any plans to continue to take the series to far off shores where spies might be lurking? Perhaps Miss Gwen in Egypt setting the parasol trend pre-Amelia Peabody Emerson?

Answer:I love Amelia Peabody! What I wouldn’t give for a meeting between her and Miss Gwen….

Too bad the timeline doesn’t quite work out. Egypt came up a good deal while I was doing my research for Blood Lily, since Napoleon’s invasion in Egypt in 1797 was perceived as a direct threat to British influence in India. Most of the Egypt attention tends to be concentrated slightly earlier than my books, in that 1797-1798 period (and as we know from Pink Carnation, the Purple Gentian was over there at the time, doing his thing!), but I wouldn’t rule out an Egypt book. One of the incredible things about the Napoleonic Wars is how truly international they were. Looking way in the future, I’ve always intended Jane’s ultimate book to take place in Portugal. Other prospective locations for future Pink books include Latin America (yup, there was a Latin American angle to the war!), Constantinople, Venice, and—most exotic of all, right?—New York.


Question: Now that your books have an ever expanding cast of characters that your readers are attached to, what do you say to the people who ask when is Jane going to be back in the forefront, when is Tommy going to get the girl?

Answer: First I hug them. Then I consult my Magic 8 ball. I love that my readers have become as invested in my characters as I am, and that the series has become an ever-expanding world, encompassing whole groups of interwoven people and plots. As far as I’m concerned, all of these stories are continuously going on in tandem—it’s just a question of how and when I’ll have the time to turn the spotlight on any given character or plot-line. Sometimes, characters I meant to write about get dropped as the overall arc of the series continues on in other directions. Other times, they come back in unexpected ways. I wasn’t sure where or how I was going to fit in a Turnip Fitzhugh book, but, voila!, my publisher suggested doing an extra side book, I got to use my Turnip idea, and it’s coming out in October. So one never knows….


Question: The author M.C. Beaton has commented that, due to the popularity of Hamish Macbeth and Agatha Raisin, she has no time, nor are her publishers willing to see her do other work. Seeing as how popular your Pink Carnation series has become do you ever feel that you can only write the next Pink book versus trying something radically different? Because, in the abstract, the books could go on ad infinitum, but there must be a point where you'll call it quits.

Answer: One of the nice things about the Pink series is that its form has allowed me a lot of room for experimentation and variety. I’ve gotten to play with India and Ireland and modern London, with Hellfire clubs and idealistic ingénues and adulterous wives. Not to mention Jane Austen and exploding Christmas puddings. That being said, I’ve always wanted to write in a variety of genres. Much as I adore the Pink books, and as much latitude as they allow me, there will come a time when either the series has to end or I have to start varying it with other writing, just to make sure things stay fresh. My greatest nightmare would be for the books to start sounding stale or repetitive.


Question: You were able to balance going to Harvard with writing and later with being a working lawyer with writing, now you have two books coming out this year and are also teaching at Yale. How are you able to juggle so much? Is this wonderful balancing act possible due to the mystical qualities of caffeine?

Answer: Mmm, coffee. The truth of the matter is that I’m one of those ridiculous people who is only productive if I’m absurdly over-committed. Give me just one thing to do and I’ll dither and whine and procrastinate; give me three things to do, and at least two out of the three will get done (I make no promises as to dithering and whining; there’s always time for dithering and whining).

Question: You'll be teaching at your Alma Mater this year, how did that come about and do you feel that it kind of legitimizes* what you're doing and the genre you write in?

Answer: It started, as so many good things do, with a few glasses of wine. I was at Lady Jane’s Salon with fellow Yalie romance writer Cara Elliott, chatting about the romance scholarship movement, in which I’d gotten very involved the previous year. (If anyone wants to know more about the romance scholarship movement, check out Teach Me Tonight, the romance scholarship mothership). We began discussing how we would frame our own romance novel class, and as the wine level went down in the glass, we moved from “Wouldn’t this be a great idea?” to “Hey, we should do this!”

The class looks specifically at the Regency romance novel, partly because that’s what we’re both most familiar with, but also because it provides a self-contained field through which we can track the development of a genre in a comprehensive way. Our class starts with Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey and moves through Heyer, Woodiwiss, McNaught, Lindsey, and so on, looking at changing attitudes towards sexuality and heroism in a variety of authors over a thirty year time span, going right up through Regency paranormals and chick lit.

On the legitimacy question…. To be honest, I never felt illegitimate. I grew up reading romance novels and I’ve always been a little baffled by the idea that they were something to hide, or that their consumption and/or authorship was somehow a negative reflection on one’s abilities or intellect. That being said, old stereotypes of romance novels and romance novel readers do seem to linger on, largely among people who haven’t bothered to read them. If teaching a class at Yale does anything to help dispel those misconceptions, then I’m proud to be able to do my part in doing so.

*Note, not my view, just a misconception by the masses that I hope will one day be dispelled.

Make sure to stop by tomorrow, where we hear a bit about Eloise and Colin, other great books that Lauren recommends and what English Estate she'd choose to set up house in.

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