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Showing posts with label Ciji Ware. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ciji Ware. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Book Review: A Light on the Veranda by Ciji Ware

A Light on the Veranda by Ciji Ware
Book 2 in the Time Travel Duo
ARC, Paperback, 480 pages
Sourcebooks Landmark
March 1, 2012
★★★★☆
goodreads button

Genre: Contemporary Fiction, Romance, Historical Fiction

Source: Received for review from the Publisher
“A ‘stand-alone’ sequel to Midnight on Julia Street, this novel tells the story of Daphne Duvallon, a wayward southern belle and Juilliard-trained harpist, who returns to Natchez, Mississippi from New York’s cut-throat classical music world, weary from professional battles and personal despair. Still wounded from the uproar that ricocheted through her family when she ditched Jack Ebert, her philandering groom, literally at the altar, she has an unexpected rendezvous with her future when she meets Simon Hopkins, a nationally-renown nature photographer with a dark secret of his own. Reinventing her life as a jazz musician while sorting through a series of bizarre collisions with her nineteenth century ancestors—and Simon’s as well—Daphne begins to get the feeling that she might well be better off making her way as a second-rate musician at society weddings than as a wildly successful woman band leader whose past is deeply rooted in the ‘Land that Time Forgot.’”

I can’t say that I have read a novel set in the Deep South, but the “Land that Time Forgot” was a wonderful setting for A Light on the Veranda! Ciji Ware creates the entire experience for you from the food, to the gorgeous old mansions, to the music – and oh what wonderful music! I love music and the jazz that Ware features in this novel makes you just want to run out and attend a jazz concert – certainly one like the Aphrodites! She really makes you feel like you have been there yourself.

This was also my first experience with a “time slip” novel. While most of the story takes place in a contemporary setting, fragments of the novel are set in the 1800’s. With these segments we learn about the life of some of the family members of Daphne, and Sim, Jack, and others from around the Natchez area. These time slips fit perfectly into the story and helped move the plot along and provide Daphne with some interesting references regarding experiences she was going through at the time. They never felt jarring or out of place – I just wanted more of them! Through these time slips we get a sense of 19th century plantation life.

For the most part I enjoyed the characters. Jack is quite is evil villain – I would really not want to get on his bad side, let me tell you! Sim is a sweet guy with a lot of baggage but someone you can really get behind and root for. Daphne got on my nerves from time to time with her constant flip flopping and relationship woes – but based on some of her experiences it does make sense.

I didn’t realize that this was a sequel of any kind to Midnight on Julia Street, having not yet read that novel. I do believe the blurb that says this works as a standalone because I did not feel the least confused about the plot points or backstory.

I also have to give kudos to Ware on her inclusion of safe sex. Reading primarily historical novels I don’t usually encounter this issue, however contemporary novels don’t typically address the issue either. It almost felt a little shocking to me to actually see the issue raised in the book, but then I felt “way to go!”.

If you would like to preview the story before reading it, why not try out this excerpt of the book?

Reviews of this book by other bloggers:

Buy the Book: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | RJ Julia |

Also by Ciji Ware:

a cottage by the sea
A Cottage by the Sea

island of the swans
Island of the Swans

a race to splendor
A Race to Splendor
[My Review]

midnight on julia street
Midnight on Julia Street (Time Travel Duo #1)

that summer in cornwall
That Summer in Cornwall (The Four Seasons #1)

that autumn in edinburg
That Autumn in Edinburgh (The Four Seasons #2)

that winter in venice
That Winter in Venice (The Four Seasons #3)

that spring in paris
That Spring in Paris (The Four Seasons #4)


Find Ciji Ware: Website | Facebook | Twitter






Copyright © 2012 by The Maiden’s Court

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Book Review: A Race to Splendor by Ciji Ware

A Race to Splendor by Ciji Ware
Paperback, 544 pages
Sourcebooks Landmark
April 1, 2011
★★★★★
goodreads button

Genre: Historical Fiction

Source: Borrowed from my local library
“Set in the tumultuous aftermath of San Francisco’s devastating 1906 earthquake and fire, and based on the lives of several women apprenticed to famed Julia Morgan, California’s first licensed woman architect, this historical novel tells of the fiercely-fought competition between Nob Hill hotels to re-open their doors by the first anniversary of the disaster – proving to the country and the world that the city would rise from the ashes. Amelia Hunter Bradshaw, fresh from earning her certificate in architecture at the prestigious L’Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, finds herself, through a series of flukes and mishaps, in the employ of the one man determined to best Miss Morgan, Amelia’s mentoress and friend. Intrigue, political corruption, and an undeniable attraction to the mysterious James Diaz Thayer threaten not only to jeopardize her personal life, but also prove fatal to all she holds dear.”
While the previous book I read about the 1906 earthquake took place in the days prior to and during the trembler, A Race to Splendor takes place during the quake and the next year afterward as the city starts rebuilding. You get a unique perspective of what it was like to be a refugee after this disaster – in the Presidio make-shift hospital as well as trying to find somewhere to live amongst all the crumbled buildings. Most of the plot focuses on the competition between the Fairmont and the Bay View hotels to be the first hotel to open after the extensive damage from the quake. You learn a lot about architecture and all of the problems that go along with trying to rebuild in a city knee deep in graft – pay-offs, deals, shanghaied workers, the outrage over a Chinese workforce, and other types of corruption.

Ware’s characters are phenomenally written and solidly constructed. They all grow as the story continues – not necessarily changing who they are but blossoming into a different version of themselves. The author has created full back stories for the main cast and we learn why they are how they are now and understand the decisions that they make. We see characters that are flawed, admirable, and real. For me, the writing of the characters was the strongest part of the novel.

I also loved how the story and events developed and unfolded. You didn’t really know what was going to happen next – but the decisions made sense to the plot and to the pace of the story. There were also romance threads throughout the novel – it certainly kept things interesting. It was also most interesting to see the interplay between the two characters and how the romance affected the rest of the plot of the book.

Overall I absolutely loved this book and cannot wait to read others by this author.

If you would like to preview the story before reading it, why not try out this excerpt of the book?



 

Reviews of this book by other bloggers: 

Buy the Book: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | RJ Julia


Also by Ciji Ware

a cottage by the sea
A Cottage by the Sea

island of the swans
Island of the Swans

midnight on julia street
Midnight on Julia Street

that autumn in edinburgh
That Autumn in Edinburgh

a light on the veranda
A Light on the Veranda
[My Review\

that summer in cornwall
The Summer in Cornwall

wicked company
Wicked Company

that winter in venice
That Winter in Venice

that spring in paris
That Spring in Paris


Find Ciji Ware: Website | Facebook | Twitter 






 
Copyright © 2011 by The Maiden’s Court