May. 15th, 2011

reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
This is not the first novel I read by K.C. Warwick, an like in the other two stories (novellas if I remember well), what you can immediately notice is that she is able to make the historical fiction enjoyable even for who is not usually a fan of the genre, simply because she doesn’t pushes to much on making the setting believable, and so filling the story of sometime useless details, but more concentrating on the characters and their interaction. Of course without losing the focus on being, in any case, an historical novel.

I have to admit that, strangely enough, this is the second novel I read with Kit Marlowe as main character in less than an year (the other one being The Shakespeare’s Conspiracy by Ted Bacino), and so I’m for sure still influenced by the way that other novel presented me the Elizabethan playwriter. Plus, knowing a thing or two of that period, I also know that unfortunately Kit Marlowe didn’t have a long life. So when I started reading this story, about the tailor Hugh Seaton and his lover Kit Marlowe, I’m sincere, I was waiting for the moment when the author would have put a stop to their relationship and maybe directed Hugh to another man (my cheering was for Barnaby). I admit that I was probably facing this novel in the wrong way: sure, the author is respectful of the period and the historical details, but this is, after all, a romance (yes, yes, I know, this is also a historical mystery, but you all know me, I don’t usually focus on the mystery, preferring the romance); and being this a romance, it can take some “licenses” on the real historical events. So what? Kit Marlowe died on May 30, 1593; William Shakespeare (another character in the story) started to write his plays around 1589 (several of his plays were on the London stage by 1592), this put this story happening around 1590… our heroes will have only 3 years to enjoy their romance, if this was indeed an historical fiction. But if you instead read it like an historical romance, a romancizing of history, then those dates don’t matter and you can actually think these men had an happily ever after. I want to approach this story with this attitude, because if you do the same, you will read a wonderful love story, a love story that takes in account all the odds of being in love with another man in the XVI century; not only that, also having to decide between a good and pleasant relationship with a tender and caring man like Barnaby, or loving a rake like Kit… well, we all know who are the best lovers, aren’t we? But aside from the joke, that was not an easy choice since Barnaby is really a good man, a good lover as well, and he really cares for Hugh.

The quality of the writing is, as I said, very good, especially for me: being not an English mother tongue reader, I often found difficult to read an historical novel for the trend of some writers to try to “replicate” the old language; I think it’s not necessary (aside maybe for a word or two), the reader can dive into the “history” even without that weight, exactly with K.C. Warwick’s approach, i.e. writing a believable story, with believable character, in a believable contest; if these characters are using a “modern” language (of course she is not making huge mistakes like historical inconsistencies), then that is easier for the reader, not for the author.

http://www.bcpinepress.com/catalogDetail.php?bookCode=37

Buy Here

Amazon: Prove a Villain
Amazon Kindle: Prove a Villain
Paperback: 238 pages
Publisher: Cheyenne Publishing (October 1, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0982826737
ISBN-13: 978-0982826737

Reading List:



http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
This is not the first novel I read by K.C. Warwick, an like in the other two stories (novellas if I remember well), what you can immediately notice is that she is able to make the historical fiction enjoyable even for who is not usually a fan of the genre, simply because she doesn’t pushes to much on making the setting believable, and so filling the story of sometime useless details, but more concentrating on the characters and their interaction. Of course without losing the focus on being, in any case, an historical novel.

I have to admit that, strangely enough, this is the second novel I read with Kit Marlowe as main character in less than an year (the other one being The Shakespeare’s Conspiracy by Ted Bacino), and so I’m for sure still influenced by the way that other novel presented me the Elizabethan playwriter. Plus, knowing a thing or two of that period, I also know that unfortunately Kit Marlowe didn’t have a long life. So when I started reading this story, about the tailor Hugh Seaton and his lover Kit Marlowe, I’m sincere, I was waiting for the moment when the author would have put a stop to their relationship and maybe directed Hugh to another man (my cheering was for Barnaby). I admit that I was probably facing this novel in the wrong way: sure, the author is respectful of the period and the historical details, but this is, after all, a romance (yes, yes, I know, this is also a historical mystery, but you all know me, I don’t usually focus on the mystery, preferring the romance); and being this a romance, it can take some “licenses” on the real historical events. So what? Kit Marlowe died on May 30, 1593; William Shakespeare (another character in the story) started to write his plays around 1589 (several of his plays were on the London stage by 1592), this put this story happening around 1590… our heroes will have only 3 years to enjoy their romance, if this was indeed an historical fiction. But if you instead read it like an historical romance, a romancizing of history, then those dates don’t matter and you can actually think these men had an happily ever after. I want to approach this story with this attitude, because if you do the same, you will read a wonderful love story, a love story that takes in account all the odds of being in love with another man in the XVI century; not only that, also having to decide between a good and pleasant relationship with a tender and caring man like Barnaby, or loving a rake like Kit… well, we all know who are the best lovers, aren’t we? But aside from the joke, that was not an easy choice since Barnaby is really a good man, a good lover as well, and he really cares for Hugh.

The quality of the writing is, as I said, very good, especially for me: being not an English mother tongue reader, I often found difficult to read an historical novel for the trend of some writers to try to “replicate” the old language; I think it’s not necessary (aside maybe for a word or two), the reader can dive into the “history” even without that weight, exactly with K.C. Warwick’s approach, i.e. writing a believable story, with believable character, in a believable contest; if these characters are using a “modern” language (of course she is not making huge mistakes like historical inconsistencies), then that is easier for the reader, not for the author.

http://www.bcpinepress.com/catalogDetail.php?bookCode=37

Buy Here

Amazon: Prove a Villain
Amazon Kindle: Prove a Villain
Paperback: 238 pages
Publisher: Cheyenne Publishing (October 1, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0982826737
ISBN-13: 978-0982826737

Reading List:



http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
This is the second story I read by D.B. Story on the female ‘bot universe. In a near future nothing much has changed of today world if not the introduction of the ‘bots, the new trend for people with too much money and too little to do with them. As the author himself said, in the beginning sentences “We—meaning robots like myself who find our awareness in strip clubs—are often lesbians. This is attributable to the coercive control measures used on us during our performances to keep us legal in the eyes of the authorities and to maintain tight control over large numbers of us at once.”

I found interesting these sentences, but I also think that these ‘bot universe is lesbian since these female ‘bot are strong women, and I find difficult that a man would accept such strong women as companionship. The other thing I like of these stories is that, even if they could easily lead to a D/s relationship, with the human owner using the ‘bot as nothing more than a gadget, that is not the case, on the contrary, the ‘bot is usually stronger than the human, and as such, she almost assumes the role of caretaker, arriving to “teach” to the human woman how to be a good owner. Humans indeed have the weaker role, and that is a slightly worrying point, because it implies that ‘bot are gaining momentum, they are becoming more and more independent, and being them also stronger and less incline to emotion, this could lead to a quite unsettling future.

But the author doesn’t arrive to such extremes, maintaining the story more on a personal level. He is more interested in writing about the awakening of consciousness in these female ‘bot, maybe with a parallelism on a different type of awakening; with the control of their mind and their mechanical body, the ‘bots gain also control over their sexual desires, and they are free not only to express them, but to reciprocate.

The men are not making a good impression in these stories, but truth be told I have read only two, so I cannot really have a strong opinion on this point; from what I read, it seems the female ‘bot can find truly happiness only with another woman, being her another ‘bot or a human. Better if the other woman is an human, since the female ‘bot have some “needs” that only another human can fulfil, making clear that, even if with a consciousness, they are, after all, robots.

http://excessica.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?manufacturers_id=26&products_id=506&osCsid=8231fcc410768f6edb2cfdd40c309de8

Buy Here

Amazon Kindle: Strip Club Tales: Diary of a Club Bot
Publisher: Excessica Publishing (January 20, 2011)

Reading List:



http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
This is the second story I read by D.B. Story on the female ‘bot universe. In a near future nothing much has changed of today world if not the introduction of the ‘bots, the new trend for people with too much money and too little to do with them. As the author himself said, in the beginning sentences “We—meaning robots like myself who find our awareness in strip clubs—are often lesbians. This is attributable to the coercive control measures used on us during our performances to keep us legal in the eyes of the authorities and to maintain tight control over large numbers of us at once.”

I found interesting these sentences, but I also think that these ‘bot universe is lesbian since these female ‘bot are strong women, and I find difficult that a man would accept such strong women as companionship. The other thing I like of these stories is that, even if they could easily lead to a D/s relationship, with the human owner using the ‘bot as nothing more than a gadget, that is not the case, on the contrary, the ‘bot is usually stronger than the human, and as such, she almost assumes the role of caretaker, arriving to “teach” to the human woman how to be a good owner. Humans indeed have the weaker role, and that is a slightly worrying point, because it implies that ‘bot are gaining momentum, they are becoming more and more independent, and being them also stronger and less incline to emotion, this could lead to a quite unsettling future.

But the author doesn’t arrive to such extremes, maintaining the story more on a personal level. He is more interested in writing about the awakening of consciousness in these female ‘bot, maybe with a parallelism on a different type of awakening; with the control of their mind and their mechanical body, the ‘bots gain also control over their sexual desires, and they are free not only to express them, but to reciprocate.

The men are not making a good impression in these stories, but truth be told I have read only two, so I cannot really have a strong opinion on this point; from what I read, it seems the female ‘bot can find truly happiness only with another woman, being her another ‘bot or a human. Better if the other woman is an human, since the female ‘bot have some “needs” that only another human can fulfil, making clear that, even if with a consciousness, they are, after all, robots.

http://excessica.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?manufacturers_id=26&products_id=506&osCsid=8231fcc410768f6edb2cfdd40c309de8

Buy Here

Amazon Kindle: Strip Club Tales: Diary of a Club Bot
Publisher: Excessica Publishing (January 20, 2011)

Reading List:



http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle

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