Sunday, November 17, 2019

New Book Alert: Saving Grace (Fox River Romance #4) by Jess B. Moore; Be Thankful for This Moving Book About Romance and Family Secrets






New Book Alert: Saving Grace (Fox River Romance #4) by Jess B. Moore; Be Thankful for This Moving Book About Romance and Family Secrets

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: Holidays are the times that bring out the best and worst in people. Either friends and family get together and keep people up to date while reminiscing about old times and enjoying the food and fellowship of those days or they live in hotbeds of trauma, conflict, and tension with buried hostilities that explode.

Thanksgiving in particular can be a scene of conflict. Amidst the turkey eating, the family visiting, and the Black Friday shopping, that finely decorated table of good china becomes the center of plenty of arguments, rivalries, and secrets left out in the open.

Jess B. Moore’s novel Saving Grace is about that. A family reunites for Thanksgiving, but brings up old resentments and secrets that challenge their current lives and romances.
The family that has the Thanksgiving from Hell are The Grace Brothers. In their small town of Fox River, North Carolina the Grace Family had something of a reputation. Their father was an alcoholic criminal. The boys were frequently abused and went through school with reputations as bullies and juvenile delinquents.

Years have passed and two of the brothers settled into respectable lives. Asher has become the serious head of the family and has a wealthy girlfriend, Annabelle Dare. Hudson has grown into a lovable goofball and peacemaker and has a cute-as-a-button daughter, Emily.

Unfortunately, their brother Brandt has suffered the most from the family reputation and continues to bring animosity wherever he goes. In fact, Asher would prefer that Brandt not be at the Thanksgiving dinner hosted by him and Annabelle. But Hudson reassures Brandt with “F#@k it, it's Thanksgiving.” Sure enough Brandt is going.

On the way, Brandt encounters Lola Donovan, a schoolteacher who remembered the brothers from when they were kids. Lola has a reputation of being a good girl with a close family. However, Lola has her own secrets that she tries to keep from her family. Her family knows that she broke up with her long-term boyfriend, Vincent, but they don't know exactly what happened: that Lola cheated on him.

During Thanksgiving dinner, Brandt and Lola encounter each other trying to keep their obvious chemistry to themselves. However, Asher makes his point clear that he doesn't want Brandt to mess with Annabelle or Lola.

So in the vein of any romance, Lola and Brandt disobey the warning and become a couple.

Saving Grace is a sweet romance with two very damaged but likable characters. While Brandt is someone who is saddled with a bad record and reputation, he is also sincerely trying to rebuild his life. He finds his gift in tattoo art. He bonds with Emily and has some sweet moments teasing the little girl. While he is initially uncomfortable with Annabelle because of her wealth, Brandt warms up to her willing to spend time with her and Asher, enduring Asher’s derision. When he and Lola get together, he becomes a thoughtful and understanding boyfriend sympathizing with her earlier lapse in fidelity.

However, Brandt still suffers from the pain of his troubled childhood. He still remembers his father's abuse and how he helped him with his criminal activities. Brandt tries very hard to rebuild his life, but there is always someone to remind him who he used to be.

Lola too emerges as a good love interest for Brandt. She is recognizable in her town because of her prominence as a teacher, her family which play at the local bluegrass festival, and her remarkable eyes where one is brown and the other blue. Since she is well known in Fox River, she is concerned about what other people think. She never told her family the circumstances of her break up with Vince partly from shame, but also because he is still a friend of theirs.

Lola is a very warm-hearted individual. She enjoys talking about books with Emily and clearly loves teaching. When Brandt tells her that he has been evicted from his apartment, she lets him temporarily live at her home. A bit of a plot hole occurs that she does this not too long after she and Brandt meet, but the sudden offer could be attributed to the fact that she has known Brandt for years and due to her own kind nature. Plus, it helps that Brandt doesn't stay too long at her place and moves in with another friend.

Lola also tries to break through the animosity that the Grace Brothers share helping to bring them together while withdrawing from a romantic relationship with Brandt because of her own guilt of how her previous relationship ended.

Moore does a brilliant job bringing many of the supporting characters to life as well. Annabelle is kind of dizzy but is never an entitled snob. She just feels out of place when her expensive gestures make others feel uncomfortable.

While Asher could be a one-dimensional killjoy, he is instead someone who has spent his life taking care of his family and enduring his father's abuse. He has been the de facto parent for so long that, he doesn't know how to let go of his now-grown brothers.

The Fox River setting is described in a way that is recognizable for anyone who grew up in a rural community. There are some beautiful descriptions of autumn leaves and snowy landscapes. There are the town traditions that people participate in whether they want to or not with music, dancing, food, and good times.

There are also some genuinely kind folks that know each other from school, church, or the local supermarket that would do anything to help each other.

However, Moore also captures the dark side of such a community. There is judgement from the locals which motivates much of Lola's behavior. We see the lack of job opportunities that draws people away from the town in which they grew up towards a more accommodating life out of town.

There are the poor families that are derided as trailer trash and ignored even when violence occurs. Then when those kids grow up, we see the stigma never really disappeared as these former kids try to rebuild their lives that have been branded by history.

There is also the closeness between residents that can embrace but also suffocates those who want a different life elsewhere and are unsure how to pursue it without hurting anyone in the process.

Saving Grace is a sweet love story with a realistic setting. It is a book to be thankful for.

Friday, November 15, 2019

Weekly Reader: Lilac Girls by Martha Hall Kelly; Brilliant Three Person Narrative About the Ravensbruck Rabbits




Weekly Reader: Lilac Girls {Lilac Girls #1) by Martha Hall Kelly; Brilliant Three Person Narrative About the Ravensbruck Rabbits




By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: There are many dark and disturbing stories about The Holocaust. One of them is that of the Ravensbruck Rabbits. They were a group of Polish women who were sent to Ravensbruck concentration camp. There, a group of doctors performed experimental surgery on them by breaking and reshaping their legs. They were called “rabbits” because many could not walk after the surgery, so most got around by hopping and because they were used as human test subjects and treated like lab animals. Two of the doctors who spearheaded and performed the surgeries were Dr. Karl Gebhardt, Heinrich Himmler's personal physician, and Dr. Herta Oberheuser, who was the only female defendant in the Nuremberg “Doctor's Trial.”

Fortunately, this story has a happy ending. In the 1950’s, American actress and socialite, Caroline Ferriday heard about these women. She brought the story of their plight to the American public. She managed to receive enough donations to bring 35 of the women to the United States where most of them received reconstructive surgery. Ferriday also took the women on a sightseeing tour of the states. The women bonded and they referred to Ferriday as “godmother.” Some are still alive to this day.

Martha Hall Kelly wrote of this harrowing but ultimately heartwarming story in her novel, Lilac Girls. Lilac Girls is a brilliant, graphic, and emotional novel that tells of the various sides to this story. Kelly cleverly separates the novel into a three person narrative structure to get the different sides: Ferriday, Oberheuser, and Kasia Kuzmerick, a fictional Polish woman who is meant to represent the Rabbits.

Like all great historical fiction that tells multiple perspectives, Kelly does a great job in personalizing each woman making her not only as a representative of the people involved during this time, but as an individual in her own right.

Caroline is written as a woman who is well aware of her inherited wealth and connections, but is also the right kind of rich person: one who uses that position to help others. She is a quarter French on her late father's side and her mother has homes in France, so she has a deep emotional connection to the country.

Caroline works to aid the French refugees in the war efforts. While the U.S. maintains neutrality in the 1930’s and many of her rich peers mock her for getting involved in something that is “worlds away,” Caroline continues to do her work. She connects escapees to lost family members, creates care packages to be mailed abroad, and hosts benefit performances to provide the war victims with financial aid. This aid reveals Caroline as someone who is always willing to aid others despite the opposition and lack of interest around her. In fact, by the time the United States gets involved with the war, Caroline comes across as a dedicated forward thinker while those around her look like Johnny-and-Jenny-Come-Latelies.

Kelly puts Caroline into a romance with Paul Rodierre, a fictional character. He is very charming and helps her out quite frequently. One of the best passages shows Caroline at a benefit suffering from a lackluster attendance and in strolls Paul with several of his co-stars from his latest Broadway show and their famous and well-connected friends and acquaintances. While Paul is something of a show off and ladies’ man, he has a good heart and is just as committed to helping others as Caroline.

Caroline's story kind of drags when Paul goes missing in Europe and Caroline spends much of the time worrying and trying to get in touch with him. However, she is revealed as someone who puts others needs before her own, even at the expense of sacrificing her own happiness. This is particularly felt when she helps Paul reunite with his family. Her self-sacrificing nature and determination in helping others despite adversity become essential in her ability to help the Ravensbruck survivors.

While Caroline presents the altruistic side that helps others and provides the Ravensbruck Rabbits the assistance they needed, Herta represents the side of the Nazis, those that oppressed women and made the deplorable experiments possible. Kelly does this in a way that humanizes her.
Herta begins the book as someone who is understandable and almost admirable as she works as a dermatologist but wants to be a surgeon. She fights for a position as a woman in a man’s world of medicine. At first, the Reader understands her willingness to find any medical position to help support her dying father and disapproving mother and to be recognized for her medical expertise.


In some ways, Kelly writes Herta as similar to Michael Moriarty's character, Erik Dorff in the 1978 miniseries, Holocaust, someone who is brilliant but desperate and uses their talents to aid the Nazis, leaving their consciences at the door while trying to justify these horrible deeds.

When Herta begins at Ravensbruck, she still retains some humanity by becoming nauseous at the treatment. She starts to feel sympathetic towards one of the victims who is a painter and a medical aid during the surgeries. However, her humanity slams down as she willingly operates on these women.

Herta sees them as less than human, making it easier for her to justify cutting them up and using medical experiments that she knows could permanently injure and possibly kill them. She uses all of the Fallacies like “I was following orders,” “They are our enemies, or “Others have done worse,” refusing to accept her responsibility in the matter. It is telling that the more monstrous she gets, the more she disappears in the narrative to the point that she doesn't narrate the book at all after the war is over. She has run out of excuses and fallacies, so the book is done with her. Once Herta becomes inhuman, it becomes impossible to identify with her. We can only understand who she was before and how she got into Ravensbruck, and not her justifications for remaining or having no conscience afterwards.

By far the strongest character and the one that receives the most attention is Kasia. Unlike Caroline and Herta, she is fictional but she is based on several of the women imprisoned in Ravensbruck. Her trajectory is the most meaningful and transforms her from a naive girl to a mature woman.

At the beginning of her story, Kasia is a young schoolgirl, a member of the Girl's Guide, and is only concerned about obtaining the attention of her crush, Pietrick, a boy at her school. When the Nazis invade the city of Lublin, she takes action as a courier by passing notes between spies.
When she is sent to Ravensbruck, Kasia is filled with rage and hatred at the people who did this to her. She contrasts with her sister, Zusanna who is very passive and quiet and looks for a spiritual connection to her captivity and her mother who uses her half-German background as leverage to find favor with her captors. Instead, Kasia is angry and mentally wants to fight against her surroundings even if her body no longer can.

Kasia is the one who benefits the most from the post-war section. While Caroline sympathizes with the Rabbits and uses her wealth and connections to aid them and Herta disappears locked away in her terrible deeds and weak fallacies, Kasia suffers both physically and mentally. Her legs still give her tremendous pain as she limps. Most of all, she has PTSD.

Kasia is still angry and filled with hatred for what happened. She constantly has to snap a band to her wrist to keep her temper in check and has a hard time bonding with her husband and daughter. The Soviet occupation of Poland doesn't help either as Kasia realizes that her country traded one tyrant for another.

She has trouble trusting Caroline when she offers her help and while they are in America, Kasia feels separation anxiety when Zusanna falls in love with Caroline's chef, Serge.

Kasia and the other's arrivals in America gives them and Caroline a strong finish. Caroline gets a sense of purpose in her role as a philanthropist when she finally she sees for herself the improvements that she made in the survivor's lives.
Kasia feels a sense of freedom denied to her in Poland and feels her hatred dissipate knowing that there are people who care about her and want to help her.

The book makes it clear that Kasia is learning to let go of her past but still has a long way to go. She isn't quite ready to forgive her enemies, but will confront them if need be.
Kasia recognizes Herta, who unfortunately continues her medical career. She speaks to her in a way that quietly acknowledges the cruel injustice that Herta inflicted, but also conceals the vengeful hatred that Kasia feels.
This is a moment that is reflective of Kasia’s maturity in putting the past behind her as she holds the doctor accountable for the damage that she did.

Lilac Girls humanizes the story of the Ravensbruck Rabbits and turns them and their rescuer, Caroline Ferriday into memorable individuals. It is a great WWII historical novel, one of the best.

New Book Alert: Elizabeth Craven: Writer, Feminist, European by Julia Gasper; Wonderful Feminist Biography of a Great Independent Woman Forgotten By History

                                                     
Portrait of Lady Elizabeth Baroness Craven, Later Princess Berkeley, Magravine of Brandenburg-Anspach by Ozias Humphrey




New Book Alert: Elizabeth Craven: Writer, Feminist, European by Julia Gasper; Wonderful Feminist Biography of a Great Independent Woman Forgotten By History




By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: One of the things that I have enjoyed the most about being an Editor/Book Reviewer is learning about different historical people and events, many of which I was previously unfamiliar. I recently reviewed L’Agent Double, Kit Sergeant's novel which featured the infamous Mata Hari and two other female spies of WWI that were just as important but have been overlooked by much of history: Marthe Cnockeart and Alouette Richer.

I just reviewed Lilac Girls, Martha Hall Kelly’s brilliant novel about Caroline Ferriday and the Ravensbruck Rabbits, a group of Polish women who had received dangerous experimental surgeries during the Holocaust.

For another website, I am reviewing a book about William Cooper, an activist who fought for the rights of Australia's First Nations People also known as the Aborigines.

Another interesting colorful figure I just learned about was Elizabeth Baroness Craven, Princess Berkeley Margravine of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1750-1828). Craven was an English noblewoman who had a scandalous and unhappy marriage that ended in divorce. However, she was also an accomplished poet, playwright, translator, travel writer and a forward thinking independent woman who championed women’s causes like education both at home and abroad.

Julia Gasper tells of Craven's fascinating life in her biography, Elizabeth Craven: Writer, Feminist, European. Gasper gives us a full picture of a woman who challenged society's restrictions by living according to her own terms and standards.

Gasper makes it clear from the first chapter that Craven was someone who had to be independent and willing to challenge the standards that she was under. She was born Elizabeth Berkeley, the sixth child and second only surviving daughter of Augustus, 4th Earl of Berkeley and his wife, Lady Berkeley. They were hoping for a second son, the “spare” to add to the “heir,” and could barely contain their disappointment. (A second son, George was born three years later.) In fact, when she was born, Elizabeth was so small and underweight that her mother considered suffocating her, except her great-aunt interfered.

Craven’s mother had no interest in her children particularly her younger daughter. She often neglected and ignored them. Because of this, Craven found maternal warmth in her godmother, great-aunt, and a governess, the warmth that she lacked from her mother. The lack of maternal feeling gave Craven the independence that she needed to survive on her own and challenge the standards held by the women of her mother's day.

Craven had a passionate nature that she inherited from her parents. Before he married, her father had an affair with a married woman that ended when her husband confronted her in public.
Craven's father died when she was five and her mother remarried a man who many thought was an opportunist. Lady Berkeley subsequently gave birth to two more daughters, but her second husband doubted that he fathered the younger of the two. Craven's sister and brothers also had relationships that were the causes of much gossip. These scandalous affairs foreshadowed into Craven's later life and unhappy marriage.


Elizabeth had a sound mind and body that came from strict learning and practice.
She was educated in French, Italian, dancing, drawing and playing the harp. She was educated by the standards of a young girl of her class, but she had a determination to learn more than what she had been given. She was a voracious reader with a passion for history and philosophy and a strong mind for business and finances which helped her aid her first and second husband in their expenditures. This education helped her learn and understand a world beyond her limited role as an English noblewoman.
She was also given cold baths and health food to toughen her up and keep her figure. When she grew, she participated in physical activity such as horseback and eating health foods. This strenuous physical regimen also played a large part of her adulthood when she observed other women's flaccid often weary nature and reasoned that it may have developed from increased dependence in their relationships.


Craven's marriage to William Craven already seemed like an attraction of opposites. She was from a wealthy noble family; he was a clergyman's son but the heir to a distant noble relative. She was educated and learned in many fields; he was described as “a plain and dull fellow whose education at Rugby and Oxford taught him very little.” She liked reading books, art, and music; he liked horse and dog racing, hunting, and reading newspapers. She was well-mannered, polite, and observant; he was uncouth, abrasive, and bad tempered. Their marriage was not going to last and it didn't.

The marriage resulted in the birth of 7 children but there were several incidents of physical and emotional abuse largely from William to Craven. There were also repeated accusations of infidelity from both sides. Finally after 13 years of marriage, she and William divorced. While the divorce gave her freedom and independence, it also cost Craven dearly. She gave up most of her homes and custody of all but one of her children.

She was bandied about and made the subject of gossip and rumor mongering such as that she had married another man or that she was really pregnant. Ironically, most of their closest friends and acquaintances preferred her because of her friendly outgoing nature, over William's brutish often intoxicated attitude.
Of course, once Craven did something about her unhappiness she was then derided. Her situation reflected the double standards many had at the time where they sympathized with a woman who was unhappily married but vilified her once she got out of the marriage.


Craven was a strong intellectual woman and like many intellectual women of her day, she hosted salons where she invited the best authors, philosophers, scientists and players during the Enlightenment Age. However, unlike many other women, Gasper revealed that Craven was not content to just invite them and be the hostess. She wanted to be one of the intellectuals. This idea of producing her own work and many of her views such as abolishing slavery and creating stronger women's rights put her at odds with her peers, particularly the bluestockings, the older educated sophisticated women of Craven's class.

Craven wrote many works and like many creative and talented people found inspiration in the world around her. Many of her works reflected her philosophical and political views and also provided commentary on her unhappy marriage.
She was the subject of various poems which recounted her witty and learned nature in contrast to William’s boorish dullness. Her first published works particularly the poem, “Lines Addressed to the Rev. Charles Jenner” were love letters to the lovers that she had during her marriage. One in particular was Rev. Charles Jenner, a minister and academic who wrote plays and comic verse. Their affair ended long before Craven's divorce happened but it was Jenner who encouraged Craven to publish her writing.

Craven also translated and wrote a number of plays, many of which questioned the role of women in society. One play, The Miniature Picture, seems like a typical mistaken identity romantic romp similar to Shakespeare's comedies like The Merchant of Venice or As You Like It. But buried inside is a conversation between a man and a woman disguised as a man who discuss marriage and divorce. The protagonist, played by Craven herself in the original performance, asks if the man prefers “marriage based on fear” and inquires if the man would prefer to hurt his wife to the point that she fears him rather than see the marriage end amicably. This was a subject important to Craven because of her own troubled marriage to William.
Another play that reflected her views was her translation of the Moliere play, The Statue Feast, about the notorious rake, Don Juan. Besides retelling the play, Craven added a prologue that discussed war in France. More importantly, she added an epilogue which invited the audience to imagine England being governed by a Parliamentary of women. While the suggestion was clearly made in a tongue-in-cheek manner (there would be “a tax on gossip and slander.”), this epilogue revealed that Craven wanted to break free from the constraints held by male-dominated restrictions and law.


By far Craven's most important feminist work occurred after her divorce. This was Letters from a Peeress of England to Her Eldest Son. Written as a series of letters to her son, William, Craven described her unhappy marriage and protested the legal status of wives under English law. It blatantly attacked the view that women should be under complete control of her husband. Craven warned her son to look at his wife as an equal and not as property. This was a strong and bold statement for that day.
It is a shame that Lady Elizabeth Craven is not as well known as other early feminists such as Mary Wollstonecraft or Sojourner Truth. Letters from a Peeress of England, could be considered a landmark feminist work along the lines of Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Women, Abigail Adam’s “Remember the Ladies” letter, or Truth's “And Arn't I a Woman?” speech.


After her divorce, Craven traveled and acquired a reputation as a travel writer. Most of the book is spent describing Craven's travels and are brilliantly recaptured with all of the sites, experiences, and friendships and romances Craven made. When Craven and her son, Keppel visited Genoa, Italy they saw first-hand the cruelty of slavery. While Craven protested the practice in theory, her time in Genoa allowed her to be up close to the people suffering under the rule of heartless masters. She became more vocal in her hatred for the practice.

Many of Craven's travels allowed her to observe the treatment of women in other countries and they did not always leave a favorable impression on her. She was impressed by Catherine the Great 's leadership in Russia, particularly how she opened doors to education for all women. She also found the Empress to be a gracious and welcoming host.
However, Craven's writing also engaged in some English snobbery. She originally thought that the Russian feudal system was no better than slavery.
But she thought that the peasants were better cared for and healthier than slaves so she reasoned that they must have been treated well. Knowing that the Russian monarchy ended over one hundred years later and much of it caused by the cruel treatment that landowners held over the peasants, Craven's words would make many Readers cringe. However, it also served to remind us that even though Craven was a woman who was ahead of her time in many ways, she was also a woman of her time. Many of her opinions often were colored by her own life and experiences and observations of what she saw in front of her.

Another moment that illustrated this was Craven's visit to a Turkish bath house in Greece. Craven engaged in body shaming by describing the women as fat and said that the sight “would have put (her) in an ill-humor with (her) sex in a bath for ages.”
Her opinion was incredibly vain and modern Readers would consider it insensitive and abusive. However, Craven was not ashamed strictly because of their appearance. What upset her was the treatment of women that caused their appearance. She realized that these women lived a passive, captive existence under their husbands, lovers, fathers and so on. This existence did not allow the women much of a chance to go outside and engage in physical activity.


Craven moved to Germany where she eventually married the Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach. However, she still remained outspoken about issues that were important to her. She tried to start a school for girls but backed down over objections from the public. She fostered and eventually adopted two girls who were distant relatives.
She also composed her travel experiences into a book, A Journey Through the Crimea to Constantinople and wrote more plays,one of which Nourjad, had a Turkish setting inspired by her visit. Another play, La Philosophe Moderne was a satire of the French Revolution.

After her marriage to the Margrave, Craven and the Margrave returned to England where she hosted and performed in plays.
Craven also got involved in the unhappy marriage between Prince George of Wales, the future King George IV, and his wife, Princess Caroline who he was accused of treating horribly. George married Caroline under protest only so his debts could be paid and continued to abuse, shun, and flaunt other lovers in front of her.
Craven recognized the pattern of her own troubled first marriage and defended Caroline in public. Craven even wrote a play called The Princess of Georgia: An Opera in Two Acts which has the theme of marriage for duty vs. love and took a stance in defending the real-life princess on whom the story was based.


Later in life, Craven traveled again and wrote her memoirs, which of course were considered scandalous because they frankly discussed her extramarital affairs. She spent her remaining days in declining health and being cared for by her youngest son, Keppel.
Lady Elizabeth Craven managed to survive the gossip about her pastand even gained a second life in the process.

Lady Elizabeth Craven, Writer, Feminist, European is a wonderful book about an amazing woman. Hopefully, this book will bring Craven's story out to the public and she will be looked at as one of the most prominent Feminists of her day.

Sunday, November 10, 2019

New Book Alert: L’Agent Double: Spies and Martyrs in the Great War (Women Spies Book 3) by Kit Sergeant; Suspenseful Character Driven Historical Novel About Real-Life WWI Female Spies By Julie Sara Porter Bookworm Reviews



New Book Alert: L’Agent Double: Spies and Martyrs in the Great War (Women Spies Book 3) by Kit Sergeant; Suspenseful Character Driven Historical Novel About Real-Life WWI Female Spies
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Spies are some of the most interesting colorful figures in history, literature, and popular culture. They have to be on the inside of one place, giving information to another, . By definition, they have to be charismatic and charming, so they can be trusted with secrets. They always have to carry on a duplicitous nature that is capable of deceit and subterfuge, even more so when they are a double agent and work both sides. They also have to be resourceful, sharp, and always have to watch their backs because they could be caught and their lives could end at any time.

Kit Sergeant has written a series of novels about spies in different points in history. 355: The Women of Washington's Spy Ring was about female spies in the Revolutionary War and Underground: Traitors and Spies During Lincoln's War covers the Civil War. Her latest, L’Agent Double tells an intense brilliant story about three real-life women thrust into the WWI spy game.

The three women are: Alouette Richer, a French aviator who is recruited after her husband's death, Marthe Cnockeart, a Belgian nurse who is also a courier against the occupying Germans, and Margaretha Zelle-MacLeod known by her famous stage name, Mata Hari, a Dutch dancer who uses her noted charms to seduce secrets out of her lovers.

These women are brilliantly characterized as individuals who have different stories about their recruitments, their spy processes, and their personalities. They are all three memorable protagonist who are caught up in tense situations and use everything at their disposal from wit, to charm, to loyal connections to find their way out. The stories don't intersect much except for a few scattered incidents abs hearing about the occasional news report. This approach gives the three women chances to stand out on their own as key players on the larger stage of World War I.

Mata Hari, called M’greet throughout the book, is certainly the most famous of the trio if not the most famous female spy of all time. In Sergeant's book, she is a vain cunning woman who is well aware of her um talents and attributes and uses them to get material possessions. She spies not out of any patriotism or loyalty to the countries but for the financial gain that she receives from her handlers.
 M’greet passes information from her various lovers to the governments using the code name, H-21. Since it's pointless to use a pseudonym because of her fame, she cleverly uses it as passage into the homes of various lovers. She is invited to swank parties where she observes plans and notes, or listens to gossip and conversations
and reports to superiors. Sometimes, she passes useless information to confuse them. 
However, Seargent doesn't write M’greet as a completely hard hearted woman or a stereotypical femme fatale. She is still hurting from a messy divorce and separation from her beloved daughter. Late in the book, she has a genuine romance with a younger soldier and considers renouncing her fame, notoriety, and lavish lifestyle for love. Unfortunately, the relationship ends and she is left alone once again. 

Alouette Richer is a different person from M’greet. She was happily married, while M’greet was miserably married and divorced. 
She was also brasher and feistier than the at times showy and materialistic M’greet. She becomes a spy, partly out of revenge for her husband's death but there are hints that she wants to live a life of excitement and significance. It is implied that she settled into a comfortable wealthy marriage to escape her former life as a courtesan.
 During her marriage, she flies airplanes something, rarely done by women in her day. She loves her husband, but wants to do something for herself. After his death, she actually writes a letter to the French government for her services in any way possible.
It is almost a series of errors and missteps in Alouette’s first spying assignment in Switzerland. She uses the cover story that she is looking for her fiance and drops the name of a former acquaintance without checking to see if he had married. She makes a friend with a German tourist but then learns, oops, that she is a spy and imprisons her. Luckily, Alouette's feistiness and impetuous nature which gets her in trouble also allows her to escape from her anatgonists. (Ironically, Gerda the spy, who almost captured Alouette, becomes M’greet’s spy trainer later.)
Alouette has better luck in Spain where she becomes more patient and self-assured than in her last assignment. Unlike M’greet who hopped from lover to lover, Alouette finds one specific German official to find information from, Baron Hans Von Krohn. She uses her former training as a courtesan to become Von Krohn's lover and to pass information using codes and invisible ink.
Alouette becomes an expert at concealing her real feelings. She whispers all the right romantic phrases while fully aware that she is in the home of an enemy. She plays the Spy Game so well that it's almost refreshing when she reveals her real emotions. While spying on Von Krohn, Alouette has a playful flirtation with Zozo, a fellow aviator and spy that develops into a potential real romance. When her assignment comes to an end, she calls out Von Krohn in a great moment of self-awareness. She also calls out her former handler when she learns that he was involved in betraying both her and M’greet.

Marthe Cnockeart doesn't have the seductive nature of M’greet or the forceful determination of Alouette, but she is no less dedicated to her work. She starts out as a nurse and a sweet naive girl with a family that loves but shelters her. When the German Army occupies her Belgian village, Marthe is filled with rage and despair and wants to do something. Her aunt provides her with a key to help the Belgians.
While she is treating patients, Marthe works as a courier. She listens to information from medical supervisors and wounded soldiers about upcoming battles and air raids and passes it along in notes to fellow spies. She is also monitored and advised by a secret group called “The Safety-Pin Men” (so-called because they were diagnal pins on their lapels) who tell her of important information that could affect her spying.
Of the three stories, Marthe's is probably the most emotional. She has to reconcile her spying with her medical career and the guilt she feels sending young men that she once healed to their deaths. She also has a sweet romance with a wounded soldier that does not end well.

There are plenty of suspenseful moments in this novel. Characters who the women trust prove to be traitors. Both M’greet and Alouette receive offers to become double agents further muddying their already tangled allegiances. One of Marthe's contacts is shot right in front of her and another is in a building when a bomb hits. All three women are at the point of near death, having their covers blown, and face possible arrest or execution several times. When M’greet is finally arrested and eventually executed, the shock waves of her fate are felt by Alouette and Marthe, causing both to question their loyalties and careers. 

Mata Hari 's maxim (said to be her final words) was “Life is an illusion,” meaning life is what you tell people and what you make them believe. All three women lived their lives in that way by carrying on subterfuge and revealing important information in war. They had to play specific roles in front of their enemies so others can go about their business. It was a tense and dangerous life, but never boring. It was always exciting and so is the book about them.

Kit Sergeant is writing a book about female spies in the Second World War. If it is anything like its predecessors it should be suspenseful, filled with strong leads, and completely unforgettable.







New Book Alert: For The Love of Wolves by D.J. Swykert; Powerful Novel About Undying Love of Nature


New Book Alert: For The Love of Wolves by D.J. Swykert; Powerful Novel About Undying Love of Nature

By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: There are certain people who feel more comfortable in nature than with their fellow human beings. They develop a deep connection with animals that transcends typical human-animal contact. They prefer living inside a cabin in the woods or on a farm living off the land rather than in a duplex or apartment surrounded by people.

They may even feel a spiritual connection within their surroundings and a deep reverence that is almost religious.

Maggie Harrington is like that. The protagonist of D.J. Skwykert’s novel For The Love of Wolves has been surrounded by nature, specifically wolves, her whole life and she is sworn to protect her wolves at any cost. Maggie is the protagonist in a series of books and stories that explore her love of nature specifically the wolves around her northern Michigan town.

In fact she feels closer to wolves these days than humans. She lives alone in Central Mine in the mid-1940’s, a small town that has ceased to be since the closure of the local mine. Her husband, closest friend, and daughter are dead or gone and she lives alone in a ramshackle shack outside of what's left of the town.

Her most frequent visitor is Joseph Marquand, the young son of a local hunter who delivers meat her father prepares and shares her love of nature.
Since she lives alone, her case worker, Alice Hoffman, insists that she should live in public housing. One look at the dreary urban buildings with way too many inert medicated people tells Maggie that she has no interest in leaving the small community that she calls home.

Maggie feels a stronger closeness to animals to people, particularly wolves. She had a bond with wolves ever since she was 13, and she tried to defend them from being hunted. She had many wolf friends over the years. Her closest one is a majestic white wolf called Wolf that was given to her by her husband. Maggie then released Wolf to the wild but he was a frequent visitor to the kindly human. Now long after Wolf's passing, Maggie sees white tufts and hears the sound of paws and howling in the distance. Could she be receiving a visit from her lupine friend from Beyond?

Many of these books that herald closeness to nature have beautiful description in their setting. This book is no exception. The descriptions reveal Maggie's closeness to Central Mine and the wildlife that surrounds her. Maggie defends the wolves because she sees how similar they are to humans. She says about the rock piles around her house. “. It's as if the Earth has never been different, they have always been here, these huge stone monuments in honor of the miners who had torn them from the womb of the peninsula.” Like many who revere nature, Maggie feels that closeness to the natural world and wonder how much humanity has defaced it.

Maggie feels the strongest bond with wolves. She recognizes the humanity within them and wonders why humans don't see that. “Like good men, wolves defend their turf, protect that which allows their kin to survive, and love is essential, good husbands and wolves mate for life and protect their young. There is nothing as fierce as a she wolf or mother in defense of her children. What is there not to like about good wolves and good men? Yet for centuries, men have hunted these fine creatures, slaughtered them for a bounty into near extinction.”

Wolf is Maggie's closest friend. She considers him a kindred spirit and guide. She contemplated the reasons why he might be coming back now that she is alone. “I need (Wolf) at this moment to calm me. I need his quiet strength. I need to feel that there are things in life that remain unchanged.” In a world where town populations grow smaller, friends move away, loved ones die, and the world around her becomes less personal and more modernized, the wolves are the only creatures that are reliable. They are what they are: wild, free, calm, and independent. They are what Maggie wants to become.

Maggie's protectiveness for her wolves is understandable as it catapults her to extreme measures. She still grieves for wolves that were destroyed when she was younger and seeks vengeance on a hunter who killed them. Even if we don't necessarily agree with the extreme nature of her actions, we understand why Maggie does them. Her wolves are her siblings, her children, her best friends and she will defend them by any means.

Most writers would make her unreliable even delusional, but Swykert let's us know that she is a woman driven by her love of nature and her own laws in protecting it.
She comes across as an avenging angel or grief stricken mother striking on behalf of her children.


For the Love of Wolves Is a beautiful vivid meditation on a love of nature, animals, and the lengths people will go to protect it at any cost.


Friday, November 1, 2019

Classics Corner: The Great and Secret Show (The Art Trilogy Vol. 1) by Clive Barker; Another Great Dark Fantasy Epic from Barker



Classics Corner: The Great and Secret Show (The Art Trilogy Vol. 1) by Clive Barker; Another Great Dark Fantasy Epic from Barker

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: I have become quite the Clive Barker fan of late. Last year one of my favorite books was Imajica, a creepy and imaginative story about an artist, his ex-girlfriend, and a shape shifting assassin that travel through five alternate earths with the goal to unite the worlds or sever them further.

Barker's novel The Great and Secret Show is not as good as Imajica but it retains much of the originality, imagination, and deep questions such as if you had unlimited power and potential what would you do with it.

Randolph “The Jaffe” Jaffe is a quiet unassuming man who works in the dead letter office in Nebraska in the late 1960’s. He is saved from this soul crushingly boring job by reading the letters, some of which describe the study of magic, called The Art. Jaffe becomes fascinated with the study and wants to learn The Art. He resigns from his job in an explosive manner and takes to the road.

In Trinity, New Mexico, Jaffe encounters Kissoon who is part of an ancient group called The Shoal. Kissoon informs Jaffe about a place called Quiddity, which is a mystical dream sea that surrounds a series of islands called the Ephemeris. Kissoon informs Jaffe that people can only visit Quiddity three times in their lives: when they are born, when they are lying next to the one they love for the first time, and when they die. Jaffe becomes obsessed with controlling Quiddity. After a violent encounter, Jaffe abandons Kissoon and goes to the next stop on the Road to Quiddity.

Jaffe 's next step leads him to encounter the man who would become his greatest enemy: Randall Fletcher, a scientist/magic user who has Nuncio, a liquid that would alter someone's state enough so they can physically reach Quiddity. After a struggle over the Nuncio alters the two, Jaffe and Fletcher begin a decades long rivalry in which the two attack each other using the Art and energy, destroying the environment around them.

Meanwhile in Palomo Grove, California circa 1971, four girls go swimming in a newly formed lake and come out completely altered. Three find themselves pregnant while one, Arleen is barren but has a high sex drive and is slowly driven insane. The other three members of the so-called League of Virgins give birth to terrifying results. One Carolyn kills her infant daughter and herself. Another, Trudi is so traumatized by the experience that she moves to Chicago with her infant son, Howie. The fourth, Joyce remains in Palomo Grove with her twins, Tommy-Ray and Jo-Beth but goes from a free spirited romantic teen to a nervous religious woman always looking out for the Devil. 18 years later, strange creepy things start happening and Jaffe and Fletcher come a-calling once again.

The Great and Secret Show isn't as imaginative as Imajica. Mostly because Barker doesn't invest near as much in world building as he did in his other book. Each of the five worlds of Imajica’s Dominion were unique in their setting and characters like a green sky that turns purple at night, a giant living city, or creatures with hands for heads. Even the chapters that take place on our Earth are filled with bizarre moments with characters like Pie’oh’pah, an assassin who can change genders depending on who is observing it.

Most of The Great and Secret Show’s setting is in Palomo Grove. Bizarre things happen there which I will get to.But after the creativity behind Imajica's worlds, it's a distinct let down.

The only new world that Barker features in this book is Quiddity and luckily, it more than makes up for the lack of unique settings.

Quiddity is characterized as an endless sea where people are changed for good or evil. It feels like a constant source of energy, movement, magic. The Reader feels a deep spiritual connection with the place and understands why the characters would want to become a part of it.

While Palomo Grove is the primary setting for most of the book, there are enough interesting, bizarre, scary things that happen that make The Great and Secret Show a worthwhile read. Buddy Vance, an old school comedian falls through an endless abyss and his loss heralds some pretty weird stuff.

Jaffe and Fletcher's arrivals coincide with some odd events like weird creatures like bugs feasting on humans or a woman's favorite TV characters coming to life to help her.

Some of the creepiest moments involve Jaffe’s hold on people. He brings Tommy-Ray over to his side, manipulating the young man's desire for power and longing for a father figure. He is almost able to do the same to Jo-Beth but he is stopped by her developing romance with Howie Katz, Trudi’s son.

One of the scariest passages occurs after Vance's death and funeral. His funeral is attended by various members of Hollywood's elite: actors, musicians, comedians, producers, directors etc. (This Reader had fun picturing the various cameos in her head.) There is also an extra special guest: Jaffe who is upstairs.

Jaffe manipulates an old friend of Vance's to bring up the guests one by one as Jaffe feeds on and drains them of their energy. The results are a building full of once beautiful fashionable people who have turned ill, paranoid, insane, and are waiting for death.

Besides the horror in the setting, Barker gives us some great characterization. As with Imajica, he subverts the idea of heroes and villains so we don't necessarily who to root for or against.

Jaffe is a fascinating character because he begins the book so relatable to many Readers. He is obsessed with finding significance in his life and obtaining that spiritual connection to Quiddity. He is understandable in his pursuit. We all want to mean something and to find peace in our lives.

Jaffe begins to be no different than us with our drives and ambitions. However, he takes his ambitions to disturbing frightening levels and this dehumanizes him. When he takes these darker turns, he becomes less understandable and more monstrous. He is so single-minded in his pursuit of Quiddity and the Art that he will destroy anyone and anything, even the world to reach it. His ambitions become so monstrous that Fletcher has no choice but to stop him.

Even Jaffe's appearance changes so we no longer see ourselves in him. We see the monster that he has become.

Fletcher is also an interesting character as well. Like Jaffe he is also driven by a need and that is for knowledge. When he is first introduced, Fletcher is like the scientist or doctor who researches one thing and enjoys the pursuit more than the result. When he discovers Nuncio, he keeps it to himself to study it further rather than sharing it with the rest of the world much to Jaffe's ire.

This pursuit of knowledge puts Fletcher at arm’s length from those around him and he can act very cold and domineering towards them. For example, when Jaffe recruits Tommy-Ray to his side, he appeals to his emotions. He knows what the boy wants to hear and uses that against him.

When Fletcher does the same to Howie, it does not work as well. Fletcher gives the young man the big picture of what Jaffe is doing and what Howie's role is in stopping him, but he is cold and clinical in his approach. Fletcher leaves out the human element, that he is leading a young man with whom he has a close connection, to save the world around him from a wizard drunk with power possibly leading to the boy's death. It is only later when Fletcher opens his heart to the possibility of emotion, that he is able to emerge as a stronger character that can stop Jaffe.

Significantly, many of the magical characters have no loyalty to either Jaffe or Fletcher. One character called them both to task for causing the destruction around them.

That is where Barker's true writing talent lies. When he writes about a frightening world that is filled with intense power and is on the brink of destruction, what you expect is not always what you receive.

Characters who start out wise and good end up being the true evil behind the situation. Side characters who appear out of nowhere become an important part of the goings-on. A line once said in jest has great significance in a later chapter. The Great and Secret Show is the type of book that demands that you pay attention and be surprised by what happens along the way.

The Great and Secret Show isn't as immersive as Imajica, but it is a truly spell binding fantastic journey. One that definitely lives up to its name.

Weekly Reader: Everything's Eventual: 14 Dark Tales by Stephen King; King's Short Stories are Just as Well Written as His Long Ones







Weekly Reader: Everything's Eventual: 14 Dark Tales by Stephen King; King's Short Stories are Just as Well Written as His Long Ones


By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: Stephen King's doorstopper novels are well known but he is just as noted for his shorter works. They can be just as scary and filled with terror and suspense as the longer works. Even though King describes himself as “more of a putter inner than a taker outer” never discount the shorter works as his anthology Everything's Eventual proves.

Everything's Eventual is filled with 14 short stories that are memorably creepy in how they explore various fears and how they affect the characters. The six best are:

1, “The Man in the Black Suit”- This story is a descriptive version of the whole “Stranger Danger” fear. Gary, an elderly man recalls an incident that occurred when he was a boy and encounters a sinister character that he believes is the Devil.

While the story isn't long on plot what really makes it is the description. Not many Readers will forget the sinister figure with his pale features, long black suit, long fingers,curled nails, and screechy voice using nursery room taunts to disturb the young boy.

The setting is also unforgettable as it starts off as a safe and secure space where Gary goes to fish and be alone with his thoughts but the Stranger's arrival fills him with such fear that he can never feel secure at that place ever again.

It isn't entirely clear whether the man really is Satan or a human child abductor/molester but either way this incident changes Gary forever. He managed to escape from the Stranger but never forgot him. Even as a dying old man, when he forgets the faces and names of friends and family members, Gary remembers every detail of that incident. As he lays dying, he is panic stricken that The Stranger will return for him when he's old, dying, and unable to defend himself.


2. “Everything's Eventual”-

This story is more science fiction than horror, but the fear is no less real. It plays on the paranoia of who is watching us and why.

Dinky Earnshaw is a young man with a smart mouth and an unusual talent. Whatever he draws comes true. When he was younger, a dog attacked him so he drew an image of the dog dying which it did.

After a disastrous encounter with his former boss, Dinky meets Mr. Sharpton, a mysterious man in a fancy suit. Sharpton wants to hire Dinky to write certain names and draw symbols and it will be done.

It is entertaining at first when Dinky uses his new found opportunity to receive sport cars and CD’s that have not yet been released. He receives so much money, that Dinky just tosses coins in a gutter. But things become tense when Dinky is ordered to write names down of “evil people” he is told. After doing some research, he learns that the people he wrote about mysteriously died and were not evil just rebels, activists, and political dissenters.

Much of the fear lies in the unknown that is never resolved. Who is Sharpton? Who is he really working for? Dinky's paranoia increases as he fears that he is being monitored and watched. He is able to turn his captivity around by his own unique way.


3. “The Little Sisters of Eluria”-

King's most ambitious world building project is his Dark Tower series. This story is an early adventure in the series (Thankfully for me, who hasn't read any of the books in the series.)

In this one cynical gunslinger, Roland is attacked by humanoid mutants in an abandoned village. He is awakened and nursed by a group of mysterious nuns. It doesn't take long for him to learn that the Sisters are really vampires and they feed on the humans that they heal.

This story is one half Gothic story one-half horror story. The Gothic elements come in the setting of a dark creepy abbey with the hidden passageways and the secrets shared by the people. There is also the innocent trapped inside who decides to aid the protagonist. In this case, the innocent is Sister Jenna, a novitiate who doesn't want to be one of them anymore.

The horror elements come from the plot of the human protagonist alone with an approaching horde of undead creatures. Roland has to rely on his strength, wit, and know how to survive his captivity. This time he also has help from a medallion which holds some unique powers.


4. “1408”-

As he did with The Shining, King visits the haunted hotel concept. This story is more tightly constrained but no less terrifying than its predecessor.

Mike Enslin, a horror writer is known for such works as Ten Scariest Haunted Houses, Ten Scariest Haunted Roads, etc. However, the skeptical writer has never actually seen a real haunting. While researching his latest book, Ten Scariest Haunted Hotels, he spends the night in a creepy hotel and insists that he sleep in the haunted room, 1408.

This story plays on superstitions by revealing that 1408 is listed on the 14th floor but is in reality the 13th. This is in reference to the common superstition that many buildings don't have a listed 13th floor. Also the room number 1,4,0,8 adds 13.

If the triskaidekaphobia doesn't get you, what's inside the room certainly will. Mike hears voices and footsteps. He sees faces in the walls and shadows. Also his tape recorder records messages that he never recorded saying that his friends and loved ones will die. The fear leads to intense violence as Mike is desperate to do anything to make the terror go away.

Mike survives his encounter but the true mark of any horror is how it affects the protagonist. Mike is left forever changed by the encounter. He can't sleep without a night light, still hears the voices in his mind, and never turns on the tape recorder for fear of what he might hear.


5. “The Road Virus Heads North”-

Remember the old story about the woman who loves jigsaw puzzles sees that the puzzle that she is solving reveals a picture of herself being killed by a mad man? This story is an update of that one.

Richard Kinnell, a horror writer (Maybe King is trying to tell us something.), is a collector of bizarre macabre artwork. At a yard sale, he buys a portrait of a tattooed punk-like man with long fangs and a hungry cannibalistic expression riding in a fancy sports car. Despite the warning from friends and his sweet aunt, Richard purchases the painting and mounts it on the wall. He watches in confusion as the expression on the man’s face changes and the background resembles the highway just outside of town.

Tension mounts when the picture shifts to the yard sale and the bloody corpses of the woman that Richard bought the portrait from. He learns on the radio that the woman was graphically murdered. The picture then changes to his aunt's house then his. Richard stares in fear as a car pulls up right outside his house.

Anyone who has sworn they have seen portraits staring at them or pictures change will relate to this frightening tale. It did a number on me. My Mom has a tapestry that is swirls of color around a black center. I swore the oval small center was larger and more circular. After reading this story, I thought that I saw faces in the tapestry. Luckily, it was only my imagination. Or was it?


6. “Riding the Bullet”-

This story is not only well written but is ground breaking for another reason. It was one of the first works that King released first online. When he released the story, over 400,000 copies were downloaded crashing the server. Since then, many of King's other works have been released online revealing that King knows how to adapt and reinvent himself to the modern Reader.

Luckily, this story is worth the publicity. Alan Parker, a university student, learns that his single mother is dying. He decided to hitch a ride to see her.

He accepts a ride from George Straub, a seemingly amiable but creepy man. Straub starts asking Alan weird questions and knows about his personal life.

Alan begins to think that he is riding with the Grim Reaper when Straub asks him who should die, him or his mother. Terrified, Alan makes his decision.

The story doesn't end the way Alan or the Reader expect. But what is truly haunting is neither the experience nor the aftermath. It is how we answered and the emotional repercussions that resonated from our answer.