HOME: THE TALE OF A MOUSE by Miriam Schlein


PUBLISHER: Abelard-Schuman, 1958
GENRE: Children's Fiction
READ FREE: link
MY GRADE: A

SYNOPSIS: A little brown mouse builds his nest with great care but in spite of its perfection something seems to be missing.



MY THOUGHTS: This is a cute and very basic story. We follow a mouse as he gathers material to make a nest. One day he's out looking for nuts and encounters a female mouse sleeping. He doesn't want her to become prey so he brings her back to his nest and they live happily ever after. I really thought this would end with them having babies, but I was wrong.

The illustrations are very nice and done in shades of brown, reddish-brown, and green. The cover has richer color than the pages inside. You can see images from inside the book here.


BAD LUCK BOSWELL by Diane Dawson Hearn


PUBLISHER: Simon & Schuster, 1995
GENRE: Children's Fiction
READ FREE: link
MY GRADE: A

SYNOPSIS: Regretting the unfortunate bad luck that seems to follow him everywhere, Boswell, a black cat, is ecstatic when he is adopted by a witch, until he realizes that she wants to use him to hex innocent villagers.
















MY THOUGHTS: I love this. The illustrations are beautiful but the faces of Boswell and his mother are very ugly. It's set in possibly 17th century Europe, by the looks of it. Boswell is unwanted by everyone in town, so he leaves and makes a home under a bridge. A witch belonging to the Coven of Darkness moves into town. She sees him and takes him with her on her broom. Poor Boswell is so excited because it's the first time in his life that he's felt wanted, so he goes excitedly with her. The witch takes him to her tower and things go very, very wrong and Boswell's on his own again. He wanders into the village and has a happily-ever-after. I'm not seeing a moral to the story.

My favorite image is below and is of Boswell under the bridge. You can see more images here.



ALL THINGS BEAUTIFUL by Cathy Maxwell


PUBLISHER: Harper, 4/1994
GENRE: Historical Romance
SETTING: England, 1811
AUTHOR SITE: link
MY GRADE: B

SYNOPSIS: Lady Julia Markham's mediterranean-blue eyes and daring spirit made her the toast of the season, until she attempted to elope with a man who then betrayed her. By the strict standards of London society, Julia was ruined.

Three years later, desperate and penniless, Julia agreed to marry Brader Wolf, a self-made merchant who was unwelcome in aristocratic drawing rooms. Yet Julia was determined to make her businesslike marriage bloom-and found herself inexplicably drawn to her magnetic and dangerous husband. Breathless passion awaited her with Brader, but Julia's heart could settle for nothing less than the love of a lifetime.







MY THOUGHTS: This was pretty dark in nature in several ways with a slight gothic feel. It spans not quite a year. This is the author's first novel, which came out in 1994, the year I began reading historical romance. I learned of this novel many years ago, probably on the defunct Amazon romance forum. Something in the heroine's past made me want to read this, so I finally did, as it's very atypical for a historical romance book character.

Julia is twenty-four. Her parents and three brothers are garbage and heartless. All but one brother who's an alcoholic seems to be addicted to gambling. Her much older brother, Geoffrey, I think he's thirty-five, is truly a bad seed and villain. A few years prior something awful happened in Julia's life (after the attempted elopement) and her brother was involved. He helped Julia do something and it just makes no sense for him to be involved in that. He had nothing at all to gain by it other than to get pleasure from watching someone suffer.

Brader's in his early thirties, comes from nothing and has become wealthy. His parents weren't married to each other and his father died when he was a baby (I think). He marries Julia for her property, Kimberwood, because his mother and her first husband lived on it over thirty years ago and her first husband is buried there. He's a decent guy who treats Julia well...most of the time.

I'm not sure how I feel about Julia. I guess I don't really have an opinion of her. She's judgmental toward Brader since he's from a different 'class' than her. She literally doesn't know how babies are made, which is very annoying to read. She's got a strong personality yet she's easily led by her brother Geoffrey and we aren't made to understand why and it's frustrating. He's after money and wants her to do away with Brader.

As with many novels, a lot of action takes place right at the end and that's what happened here. It was no surprise it all involved Geoffrey and was violent. It was a little over the top but I liked it anyway.

The eight page epilogue took place twenty-five years later and consisted of nothing but them hanging out with most of their six living children.


HANSEL AND GRETEL/THE WITCH'S STORY (UPSIDE DOWN TALES) by Sheila Black



PUBLISHER: Citadel Press,1991
GENRE: Children's fiction
PURCHASE: link
MY GRADE: A

SYNOPSIS: After reading the classic tale of Hansel and Gretel, the reader is invited to turn the book upside down and read an updated version in which Hansel and Gretel are naughty children who take advantage of a good witch.


MY THOUGHTS/SPOILERS: Sheila Black's version of Hansel and Gretel is basically the same as the original, so I liked it a lot, as well as the full color illustrations. I really liked The Witch's Story, where the witch, Agatha, paints herself as a victim of Hansel and Gretel when they showed up on her property and started eating her house.

Agatha lives with her gray cat, Selina, and claims the two children tied her up to put her in the oven to bake her after she let them in the house with an offer of baking them an apple cake. Her sister Tabitha shows up and works some magic with her wand and rescues her sister. Hansel tells Gretel he knows the witch plans to eat them because he read it in a book. What a clever thing to add to the story. They get along in the end. The witch waves her magic wand and their pockets are filled with jewels. That reminds me of the Charles Perrault story The Fairies, where a fairy makes jewels come out of a girl's mouth.

Here are three images from the book.


THE ELUSIVE FLAME by Kathleen E. Woodiwiss


PUBLISHER: Avon, 10/1998
GENRE: Historical Romance
SETTING: England & USA, 1825
PURCHASE: link
MY GRADE: D

SYNOPSIS: Cerynise Kendall has been left destitute and in dire need following the death of her doting patron and protectress. A brilliant young artist tossed from her home with only the clothes on her back, Cerynise must now turn to a childhood companion for assistance - the dashing sea captain Beauregard Birmingham and beg him to provide her with passage to the Carolinas. She seeks a new home and a new life across the waters, but all depends upon the kindness of a charming adventurer who was once the object of her youthful infatuation.

Beneath Birmingham′s rugged exterior beats a heart as large and wild as the Atlantic, and Beau readily agrees to aid Cerynise - even offering her his name in marriage, albeit temporarily, to protect his long time friend from scandal. But perilous secrets, determined enemies and tempests of the sea and soul threaten their future and safe passage even as bonds of camaraderie are miraculously reforged as bonds of desire ... and affection becomes passion and love.


MY THOUGHTS: Most of this was just awful. I liked the beginning and the last 50 pages or so. And it was 100 pages too long. This takes place in 1825 and spans about fourteen months. Cerynise is almost eighteen years old. She's American but has been living in England since both parents died five years earlier. Her guardian, Lydia, died and her nephew, Alistair, kicked Cerynise out of the house. He's a terrible person who's out to get money that doesn't belong to him and will travel to the ends of the earth to get it. He's a true villain and I like him.

Cerynise finds her way to where ships are docked and Beau takes her in. He's twenty-six and has known her all her life. This is where the story gets extremely boring. They travel back to South Carolina on his ship, 'Audacious.' They marry to keep Alistair from being her guardian, since she's underage, and for no reason really they don't get along during most of the three month voyage home. Nothing at all goes on except her sketching the crew members since she's a great artist. There's a bit of chemistry between Beau and Cerynise at this point and it does intensify as the story progresses.

Once they're home, they go their separate ways for a short time then come together when Beau learns about something important involving Cerynise that happened on the ship while he was delirious from a fever. There's a section of about thirty-one pages where she meets Beau's entire family- mom, dad, brother, sisters, ect. and it just dragged on and on. The author clearly wanted to include characters from the two previous books in this series and I didn't appreciate it. It was pure filler material. During this time and toward the end of the story, bad things start happening to Cerynise and they have to find who's doing it. That part was very interesting but got to be too much at the very end, with too much happening all at once. There's a character named Germaine Hollingsworth, a woman who went to school with Cerynise who wants to marry Beau, and she's not happy to learn he married while in England. I like her character.

One thing that bothered me is that this book is too similar to the first in its series, The Flame and the Flower. Both heroines are the same age, down on their luck, end up at a dock, travel to America via ship, and once they're in America, someone's out to get the heroine, but this story was much more boring that the previous one.