Books On Sale

Nonfiction from Paris, The Black Count, Kearsley and Dragons!

  • Paris Letters

    Paris Letters by Janice MacLeod

    Paris Letters by Janice MacLeod is $2.99 at most vendors, and $2.24 at Amazon because they’re weird. This is a nonfiction account of MacLeod’s question to herself after a bad day: “How much does it take to quit your job?” She downsized her life, and found her way to Europe for 2 years. Then she met a gentleman in Paris.

    It’s part practicality and part travelogue, and, as I wrote the last time it was on sale, it’s exact sort of memoir I love when I’m mentally exhausted, because it gives me a peek inside someone else’s travels when I’m too busy and/or to travel anywhere but my couch. And, the reviews are very positive – it has a 3.9 star average on GR.

    “How much money does it take to change your life?”

    Unfulfilled at her job and unsuccessful in the dating department, Janice MacLeod doodled this question at her desk. Then she decided to make it a challenge.

    Over the next few months, with a little math and a lot of determination, she saved up enough to buy two years of freedom in Europe.

    But she had only been in Paris for a few days when she met a handsome butcher (with a striking resemblance to Daniel Craig)—and never went home again.

    A love story in the vein of Almost French and Lunch in Paris, Paris Letters (February 4) is a joyful romp through the City of Light, and an inspiring look at what can happen when we dare to create the life we want.

    Realizing that her Parisian love affair would be forever, MacLeod began her own business on Etsy, creating beautifully-illustrated letters from Paris inspired by artists like Percy Kelly and Beatrix Potter. She now paints and writes full-time, bringing beautiful things to subscribers around the world and reviving the lost art of letter-writing.

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  • The Black Count

    The Black Count by Tom Reiss

    The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo by Tom Reiss is $1.99. This book won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography, and is the true story of the real Count of Monte Cristo, who was the son of a black slave from what is now Haiti. Many of you have been eager to grab this book on sale – and $1.99 is terrific.

    By the author of the internationally bestselling biography The Orientalist, The Black Count brings to life one of history’s great forgotten heroes: a man almost unknown today yet with a personal story that is strikingly familiar. His swashbuckling exploits appear in The Three Musketeers, and his triumphs and ultimate tragic fate inspired The Count of Monte Cristo. His name is Alex Dumas. Father of the novelist Alexandre Dumas, Alex has become, through his son’s books, the model for a captivating modern protagonist: the wronged man in search of justice.

    Born to a black slave mother and a fugitive white French nobleman in Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti), Alex Dumas was briefly sold into bondage but then made his way to Paris where he was schooled as a sword-fighting member of the French aristocracy.

    He was only 32 when he was given command of 53,000 men, the reward for series of triumphs that many regarded as impossible, and then topped his previous feats by leading a raid up a frozen cliff face that secured the Alps for France. It was after his subsequent heroic service as Napoleon’s cavalry commander that Dumas was captured and cast into a dungeon—and a harrowing ordeal commenced that inspired one of the world’s classic works of fiction.

    The Black Count is simultaneously a riveting adventure story, a lushly textured evocation of 18th-century France, and a window into the modern world’s first multi-racial society. But it is also a heartbreaking story of the enduring bonds of love between a father and son. Drawing on hitherto unknown documents, letters, battlefield reports and Dumas’ handwritten prison diary, The Black Count is a groundbreaking masterpiece of narrative nonfiction.

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  • A Natural History of Dragons

    A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan

    A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan is $2.99. This is a historical fantasy and the first in the Memoirs of Lady Trent series. Readers who have liked it really enjoyed the detail and the style of memoir written by a brilliant woman obsessed with dragons.

    You, dear reader, continue at your own risk. It is not for the faint of heart—no more so than the study of dragons itself. But such study offers rewards beyond compare: to stand in a dragon’s presence, even for the briefest of moments—even at the risk of one’s life—is a delight that, once experienced, can never be forgotten. . . .

    All the world, from Scirland to the farthest reaches of Eriga, know Isabella, Lady Trent, to be the world’s preeminent dragon naturalist. She is the remarkable woman who brought the study of dragons out of the misty shadows of myth and misunderstanding into the clear light of modern science. But before she became the illustrious figure we know today, there was a bookish young woman whose passion for learning, natural history, and, yes, dragons defied the stifling conventions of her day.

    Here at last, in her own words, is the true story of a pioneering spirit who risked her reputation, her prospects, and her fragile flesh and bone to satisfy her scientific curiosity; of how she sought true love and happiness despite her lamentable eccentricities; and of her thrilling expedition to the perilous mountains of Vystrana, where she made the first of many historic discoveries that would change the world forever.

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  • Season of Storms

    Season of Storms by Susanna Kearsley

    Season of Storms by Susanna Kearsley is a Kindle Daily Deal today at $1.99, and it’s bring price matched – woo hoo! Kearsley’s books are usually over $9 in ebook format, so seeing them on sale is always nice. This book was originally published in 2001, and is a historical/contemporary time slip romance – Kearsley’s specialty – featuring the descendants of a composer and his muse, who mysteriously disappeared and was never heard from again. It has a 3.7-star average on GoodReads.

    A mystery trapped in time
    In 1921, infamous Italian poet Galeazzo D’Ascanio wrote his last and greatest play, inspired by his muse and mistress, actress Celia Sands. On the eve of opening night, Celia vanished, and the play was never performed.

    Now, two generations later, Alessandro D’Ascanio plans to stage his grandfather’s masterpiece and has offered the lead to a promising young English actress, also named Celia Sands-at the whim of her actress mother, or so she has always thought. When Celia arrives at D’Ascanio’s magnificent, isolated Italian villa, she is drawn to the mystery of her namesake’s disappearance-and to the compelling, enigmatic Alessandro.

    But the closer Celia gets to learning the first Celia’s fate, the more she is drawn into a web of murder, passion, and the obsession of genius. Though she knows she should let go of the past, in the dark, in her dreams, it comes back…

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General Bitching...

Comments are Closed

  1. Heather S says:

    I enjoyed “A Season of Storms”, even if towards the end, it did get choppy and difficult to keep track of what was happening. Some things weren’t shown that should have been to keep the narrative more understandable. I hate it when significant events happen “off the page”, so to speak, and you’re left with the aftermath of the events you never saw. :/ Still, any Kearsley is better than almost anyone else in the style that she writes. ^_^ It really lets us see how she grew as a writer between “Mariana” and “Season of Storms” to “The Winter Sea”. Speaking of, WS sounds like a PERFECT read for today!

    I love reading memoirs of women who ditched their hum-drum, sad, or somehow unacceptable lives and went out and had amazing adventures and met people and changed their lives for the better. Any more recommendations for books like that? (Along the lines of “Paris Letters” or “Eat, Pray, Love” (though I hated the last third of EPL)).

  2. Andrea T says:

    I’m trying to pick up Kearsley’s books as they continue to come up at a bargain, so thank you! Also, my husband and I have recently had conversations about changing our life, searching for a new happy, so Paris Letters definitely caught my eye!

  3. chacha1 says:

    okay, the Paris Letters and the Black Count are en route to my Kindle right now!

  4. SB Sarah says:

    @ Heather – you would like A Year of Living Danishly, I think. It’s similar!

  5. Kareni says:

    I read and enjoyed Paris Letters in hardback. Do you see any of the author’s artwork in the Kindle version? If not, it’s worth seeking out.

  6. Heather S says:

    SB Sarah: I probably would. It doesn’t come out until May, according to Amazon. I was going to request it from my library until Amazon said I’d have to wait. LOL

  7. FD says:

    I bought A Natural History of Dragons, and have since bought the sequel and pre-ordered the third. It is absolutely my jam, strong minded, quasi-victorian female naturalist/explorer… with dragons. Boom, sold! Better yet, the heroine has the vices of her virtues, and is all too enjoyably believable, rather in the mould of Lady Hester, or Gertrude Bell. Should note it’s not particularly romantic though, that’s very much a side show – her defining passion appears to be science.

  8. Karin says:

    @HeatherS, Eloisa James, the romance author, wrote a memoir about when she took a sabbatical from her job, sold her house and moved her whole family to Paris. It’s called “Paris in Love”.

  9. Annette says:

    I just finished Paris Letters- such a sweet book! I loved it.

  10. SB Sarah says:

    @Annette: I’m so glad ! I thought it was really sweet, too. And I like that the message throughout is that it’s ok to question what you’re expected to do as an adult, and that it’s ok to try something different that makes you happy, even if it means changing everything about your life. I like that.

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