Kirjailijakuva

Laura Navarre

Teoksen By Royal Command tekijä

12 teosta 67 jäsentä 6 arvostelua

Tietoja tekijästä

Includes the name: Laura Navarre

Sarjat

Tekijän teokset

Merkitty avainsanalla

Yleistieto

Sukupuoli
female

Jäseniä

Kirja-arvosteluja

Linnet Norwood, a newly-minted countess, is on a mission to recover her lost memories as well as her lost mother. Someone, however, seems to have other plans as attempts against her life become commonplace. A mysterious stranger, Zamiel, comes to her rescue, but who is he, really, and what is he hiding? And who is Linnet, really? The answer would impact the fates of multiple nations and two different worlds.

This is an interesting blend of Christian and pagan folklore with everything from fallen angels to the Holy Grail and King Arthur thrown in amidst the backdrop of Queen Elizabeth I's court. While part of the Magick Trilogy, I didn't feel that I had really missed anything by not reading the first book as the necessary parts of that story were retold in this second book so that the reader could fully understand.… (lisätietoja)
 
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arbjames | Oct 21, 2013 |
Incorporating faerie and Arthurian legend with the intrigue at the end of Queen Mary’s reign, add in biblical references to angels and vengeance for the church, the reformation versus the inquisition and a desperate quest to reach Queen Mary before Convergence and you have a hint at the elements Navarre has woven together in creating this fantasy.
As if the political intrigue, superstitions and the time-sensitive mission weren’t enough; magic and mayhem are constantly stepping into the forefront as Rhiannon’s sister Morrigan seeks to disrupt the mission and uses every power at her disposal to thwart Rhiannon: even spoiling her first taste of love and desire.

The attraction between Rhiannon the half-faerie princess and Beltran with unusual ties to Uriel and his commitment to the Pope and the inquisition to roust out heretics is denied and fought by both. While their interior voices narrate the confusion, desperation and longing, the magnetic pull of one body to another is undeniable and detailed in every encounter. Lushly phrased and drawn specifically to place the reader in the middle of the story, the author has managed to define a world and setting that feels real and tangible, and the historic details of space, clothing and speech further ground the edges in an easy to imagine reality.

Beltran is haunted by his failure to join the priesthood, and conflict arises between his oath to serve the Pope and his desire for Rhiannon. Rhiannon has always been “different” and feels even more so in England, her desire for Beltran is an unknown and confusing. The slow pace as the two work through their own questions and baggage, and take tentative steps forward and back while constantly finding themselves closer together is all the more sensual for the delays.

This is a great start to a richly detailed and crafted fantasy, with elements that manage to add some fairy to history, and ground fairy in a world that is known from school days. Navarre has managed to weave multiple elements into a story that will transport, entertain and enchant.

I received an eBook copy from the author for purpose of honest review for the Jeep Diva. I was not compensated for this review: all conclusions are my own responsibility.
… (lisätietoja)
 
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IamIndeed | Mar 30, 2013 |
This had a terrific opening. There is nothing like being dropped directly into an 11th-century standoff between an eighteen-year-old girl and a pack of starving wolves to get your attention quickly. And when her savior isn't the conventional Knight in Shining Armor™ but a figure almost as terrifying as the wolves, all the better. For the reader, that is.

I am sorely tempted to edit the book's description. "Two brothers. One woman. Three hearts at war." Um, huh? That makes very little sense, especially for the first half of the book (and not much more in the second). "Katrin of Courtenay … doesn't need a husband to hold her northern keep." Well, yes, she does – that's one of the whole points of the book, the fact that Courtenay fell when her husband died and has ever since been a massive hole in the dam holding back the raiding of the Danes. She certainly could not hold it on her own, and one of her biggest struggles throughout is that to see the fortress manned again.

"But her vengeful uncle, the King of England, has other ideas: intent on marrying her off, he's ordered his Viking-bred warrior to return her to court." That is a pretty good summing up, I will say: the man who saves Katrin from the wolves is that warrior, who is an honorable (depending on how you define that) man loyal to his king whose task is to pick Katrin up (physically if necessary) and deliver her to her new destiny. He can't understand her (to put it mildly) reluctance to comply, and decides she must be exaggerating when she tells him of her fear of being forced to marry another monster because the king's unrequited love for her mother manifests in revenge on Katrin and her father. It does sound a little far-fetched, doesn't it? But it's actually made fairly reasonable by the presentation of a very unreasonable king.

There was a good bit that I liked about this book. The writing was intelligent, and knowledgeable about the period – I learned, for example, that a vewterer looked after a lord's hunting dogs (greyhounds, to be exact, and there's a lovely movement named for them), and a sparviter after the hawks (specifically sparrow-hawks). The characters felt like their manner of thinking was of the proper time period – Katrin, for example, does not want to evade a second arranged marriage because she wants emancipation, but because she has the gut instinct that it will be used as a punishment for being the daughter of her mother. The mores and restrictions and priorities of the period are, to the best of my knowledge, well adhered to.

Also, the sex scenes did not follow the usual pattern of "panting and flailing and roosters and kitty cats" (my goodness, I do love that and will use it forever). They seemed to try to adhere to the time period as well in their language; in fact, there were lines in the scenes of passion that I actually liked. If nothing else, "the curving shell of secrets" beats all heck out of almost every other epithet I've seen.

It just doesn't do to think too much about those passionate scenes, because the whole thing begins to fray with the first one. A scene which includes a man spanking a woman is usually the end of the line for me … although, in this case - not that any woman ever deserves to be struck, ever, at all – Katrin definitely did have some kind of reprimand coming for a plan she hatched without ever taking all the consequences into account.

I liked that Katrin's original plan on the trip was to seduce the big lunk of a warrior, Eomund, as much as necessary to either sway him to her point of view or to lull him into complacency so she can take off on her own. The only problem with that, from a reader's point of view, is that the plans were fuzzy-headed and – like the afore-mentioned plan which culminated in her physical punishment – never really thought through. Then, of course, the two of them fall in love, and that puts a crimp in whatever the plans were; I liked that Eomund wasn't going to swerve from his duty, however personally painful it suddenly was. That was all well done. I liked Eomund altogether; the men as a group were rather well done, except that the two Bad Guys were almost unrelievedly and inexplicably Bad.

Aside from that spanking (it hurts to even type that), the beginning section is rather good, but it all falls apart a little more when Katrin reaches court. At that point she begins behaving in various erratic ways that didn't seem to fit the period or what we'd been shown of her character. This is the second, interim section of the book, and – for me – the least successful; the king's erratic and irrational behavior makes Katrin look like a very model of reason. Nobody acquits him or herself very well here. While it's fairly acceptable that a monarch, with absolute power, might also be squirrelly, it just seems like too easy a tack to take.

Also, unfortunately, here the story resorts to the old gosh-she's-sick-every-morning-must-be-coming-down-with-something-OH! routine. If I had a nickel for every time that old shtick has been used in books, movies, and television – actually, where do I apply to get those thousands of nickels? That would be lovely.

The final third of the book follows Katrin to her new marriage, and things pick up again, in an entirely new direction. Rafael, Katrin's new assigned husband, is mysterious and mercurial, and much better looking than she expected. He is also rather more worldly than she has been led to believe from his history as a candidate for the bishopric. (I wonder about this a little, since generally, I thought, one had to be a priest before they could ever be a bishop, and there is no indication Rafael was ever ordained (or defrocked); however, it seems like he was going straight from (slightly) cloistered layman to bishop, do not pass Go, do not collect 200 ducats.) He is not the monkish timid fellow she thought she was being yoked to - far from it, as their first meeting (which was quite a bit of fun) shows. The rest of the story involves the tangled threads of half-brothers and inheritances and redirected lives. It's somewhat far-fetched except in the realm of romance, but very readable.

The three parts of the book made me think of three beads on a string, touching but not really connected. The events of the first third do certainly carry over into the other two, and the second into the third, but apart from the ongoing relationship with Eomund in the middle the effects are muted as circumstances – and emotions – change for Katrin. The short version being: they could have been three almost independent stories.

Some of the good (the quality of the writing, the sparks of life from some of the characters, the fun of the final third) counterbalanced most of the not-so-good (the clichés that were succumbed to, the occasional incoherency of the heroine)(and the spanking), and it was all wrapped up in a (mostly) satisfying ending. Though one character who shall remain nameless was shooed offstage and dismissed a bit coolly, by both the former love interest and the story; that was perhaps life-like, but not slightly disappointing storytelling. It was better than expected – though I do wish it had better lived up to that opening.
… (lisätietoja)
 
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Stewartry | Jul 26, 2012 |
…turbulent and torrid times.

Romance and intrigue set in the time of king making and wars and against the background of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine’s courts and Eleanor’s rules of honor and love--The Courtly Code--made much of by our heroine.

Adding romantic intrigue we have Raven, a tall, dark and, much maligned hero fresh from the Crusades albeit tainted with Saracen blood and favored by Henry II. To match him we have the gorgeous, honorable, ice-maiden heroine, Alienore. Unfortunately she does become somewhat tiring with her proclamations about courtly conduct.

Trapped in the middle of royal intrigue and whim, the machinations of claiming thrones and kingdoms by Henry II, Eleanor and Eleanor’s son, Henry—not to mention Richard and John, Alienore is never sure which side she should take, which is the more honorable.

Of course the pages sizzle with sexual frission as Ailenore and Raven fight their attraction, caught between their particular loyalties and duties and their barely damped down desire.
They both do their best to repudiate and stamp down this attraction but the fires of passion consume them and ignite the pages in either anger or lust--yet honor must have its way.

Not great literature but The Devil’s Temptress is a good medieval romance set against the turbulent history of the times.

ARC netgalley
… (lisätietoja)
½
 
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eyes.2c | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Nov 3, 2011 |

Tilastot

Teokset
12
Jäseniä
67
Suosituimmuussija
#256,179
Arvio (tähdet)
½ 3.3
Kirja-arvosteluja
6
ISBN:t
17
Kielet
1

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