Showing posts with label Sandra Byrd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sandra Byrd. Show all posts

Monday, February 16, 2015

Sandra Byrd's "Mist of Midnight"--a Gothic Victorian treat

I've become a slightly more impatient reader in recent years.  If a book doesn't grab me fairly soon after I open it, I have trouble making myself keep reading.

Mist of Midnight, by Sandra Byrd, offered no such problem. As soon as the reader meets Rebecca Ravenshaw, then finds out her extraordinary quandary, you're in.

This from Amazon.com:

"In the first of a brand-new series set in Victorian England, a young woman returns home from India after the death of her family to discover her identity and inheritance are challenged by the man who holds her future in his hands.

"Rebecca Ravenshaw, daughter of missionaries, spent most of her life in India. Following the death of her family in the Indian Mutiny, Rebecca returns to claim her family estate in Hampshire, England. Upon her return, people are surprised to see her...and highly suspicious. Less than a year earlier, an imposter had arrived with an Indian servant and assumed not only Rebecca's name, but her home and incomes."
Rebecca is a likable heroine, and I kept turning pages to find out how she would deal with her plight and her growing attraction to Captain Luke Whitfield, who has taken over her family's estate. In true Gothic novel fashion, we have to question whether the handsome captain is friend or foe. (We're hoping it's friend, because we're a little in love with him ourselves.)

In fact, the entire story has that Gothic atmosphere that I used to enjoy in writers like Victoria Holt.

About Sandra Byrd


Sandra Byrd


Sandra Byrd first drew me in with her contemporary French Twist  series about a young woman who becomes a pastry chef in France,  Then I loved her Tudor series, Ladies in Waiting.  I'm not surprised that her Victorian series, Daughters of Hampshire, should be any different.

I've read dozens, if not hundreds, of Christian fiction books.  Sandra Byrd has that something extra that makes a writer stand out in the genre.  Faith is naturally infused into her books in, as she once told me in an interview, an "organic" way.

Most of all, her books have the quality I ask for of any writer:  Make me care about the story and characters.  Give me the sheer enjoyment of reading that makes me keep turning the pages.  Sandra Byrd does that, in spades.

Disclosure: I was provided an Advanced Reader Copy of this book.  This is my honest review.

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

Semi-Wordless Wednesday: Tudor/Elizabethan Fashions



I just finished To Die For, by Sandra Byrd, a fresh look at Anne Boleyn through the eyes of her lifelong friend, Meg Wyatt (read my review here).

I loved being immersed in Tudor England for a few days, and I think the book's cover is one of the loveliest I've seen. The dresses they wore in those days truly were to die for!

So for my Semi-Wordless Wednesday, I thought I'd have some fun looking at Tudor/Elizabethan fashions. Enjoy!


Cate Blanchett as Elizabeth I


Genevieve Bujold as Anne Boleyn in Anne of a Thousand Days


Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Natalie Dormer as Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn in The Tudors


Natalie Portman as Anne Boleyn in The Other Boleyn Girl


The Armada Portrait of Elizabeth I, attributed to George Gower


Cate Blanchett as Elizabeth I in Elizabeth: The Golden Age

Elizabeth I at around age 13--portrait usually attributed to William Scrots

Natalie Dormer as Anne Boleyn in The Tudors

Richard Burton as Henry VIII and Genevieve Bujold as Anne Boleyn in Anne of a Thousand Days

Scarlett Johannson as Mary Boleyn and Natalie Portman as Anne Boleyn in The Other Boleyn Girl

Genevieve Bujold as Anne Boleyn with child actress playing Elizabeth in Anne of a Thousand Days


Photo credits: all images from Tumblr or Google Images


I'm participating today in Semi-Wordless Wednesday--click on the link to find out more!


Photobucket
Related Posts with Thumbnails