Someone to Care

Someone to Care by Mary Balogh is $1.99! This is book four in the Westcott series and I thought there was a review for this one, but nope. Sometimes everything just blurs together. If you’re new to Balogh or count her as one of your faves, I highly recommend this guest post.
The legendary New York Times bestselling author is back with a new Westcott novel about the dispossessed countess and wife of the late Earl of Riverdale, who throws all caution to the wind when adventure calls in the form of a handsome aristocrat.
No one has felt the death of the Earl of Riverdale more keenly than his wife, the now dispossessed countess Viola Kingsley. On her way home alone from Bath, Viola meets an adventurous aristocrat at a country inn. Since she is being forced to stay for a day and night, she goes to the village fair with him and impulsively gives in to his suggestion that they run away together for a while–a brief respite from their lives of duty and responsibility. What they discover together is the last thing Viola would have ever expected…
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RECOMMENDED: The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde is $1.99! I loved this fantasy novel and highly recommend it to readers who love the classics. The heroine works in literary detection, so when characters in famous novels go missing, she’s the one to call. Admittedly, the book does take a while to get into as you try to settle into the worldbuilding, but I think Fforde eventually finds his footing and the following books in the series just get better.
Welcome to a surreal version of Great Britain, circa 1985, where time travel is routine, cloning is a reality (dodos are the resurrected pet of choice), and literature is taken very, veryseriously. England is a virtual police state where an aunt can get lost (literally) in a Wordsworth poem, militant Baconians heckle performances of Hamlet, and forging Byronic verse is a punishable offense.
All this is business as usual for Thursday Next, renowned Special Operative in literary detection, until someone begins kidnapping characters from works of literature. When Jane Eyre is plucked from the pages of Brontë’s novel, Thursday must track down the villain and enter the novel herself to avert a heinous act of literary homicide.
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A Princess for Christmas by Jenny Holiday is $2.99! Carrie read this and gave it a B:
Overall, I really enjoyed this story. I found it to be feminist and sexy, loving and funny. It was the book I had no idea I needed and it comforted me right down to my toes. I absolutely recommend this as a holiday de-stressor and I am hoping that there is a more inclusive sequel for some of the supporting characters.
From USA Today bestselling author Jenny Holiday comes a modern fairy tale just in time for Christmas about a tough New Yorker from the other side of the tracks who falls for a princess from the other side of the world.
Leo Ricci’s already handling all he can, between taking care of his little sister Gabby, driving a cab, and being the super of his apartment building in the Bronx. But when Gabby spots a “princess” in a gown outside of the UN trying to hail a cab, she begs her brother to stop and help. Before he knows it, he’s got a real-life damsel in distress in the backseat of his car.
Princess Marie of Eldovia shouldn’t be hailing a cab, or even be out and about. But after her mother’s death, her father has plunged into a devastating depression and the fate of her small Alpine country has fallen on Marie’s shoulders. She’s taken aback by the gruff but devastatingly handsome driver who shows her more kindness than she’s seen in a long time.
When Marie asks Leo to be her driver for the rest of her trip, he agrees, thinking he’ll squire a rich miss around for a while and make more money than he has in months. He doesn’t expect to like and start longing for the unpredictable Marie. And when he and Gabby end up in Eldovia for Christmas, he discovers the princess who is all wrong for him is also the woman who is his perfect match.
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The Cecelia and Kare Novels by Patricia C. Wrede & Caroline Stevermer is $2.99! This is a set of three YA fantasy books and the first book is a great comfort read. The sale isn’t valid across all retailers, just as an FYI.
Courageous cousins are forced to do battle with magical foes in this series, collected here in a single volume
In Sorcery & Cecelia, cousins Kate and Cecelia have been inseparable since childhood. But in 1817, as they approach adulthood, their families force them to spend a summer apart. As Cecelia fights boredom in her small country town, Kate visits London to mingle with the brightest lights of English society. At the initiation of a powerful magician into the Royal College of Wizards, Kate finds herself alone with a mysterious witch who offers her a sip from a chocolate pot. When Kate refuses the drink, the chocolate burns through her dress and the witch disappears. It seems that strange forces are convening to destroy a beloved wizard, and only Kate and Cecelia can stop the plot. But for two girls who have to contend with the pressures of choosing dresses and beaux for their debuts, deadly magic is only one of their concerns.
In The Grand Tour, seasickness during the Channel crossing is the price Cecelia must pay for her budding magical skill. As her nausea ebbs, she is comforted by her new husband, James, and the knowledge that at long last they are on their honeymoon. In their company is Cecelia’s cousin Kate, newly minted as the Marchioness of Schofield, and her husband, Thomas. The shared journey guarantees the two couples a happy start to married life, if they can survive the perils of the Continent. In Calais, a mysterious woman visits Cecelia with a package intended for Thomas’s mother. Inside is an alabaster flask of noble manufacture, one of the royal artifacts that have been vanishing all over Europe as part of a magical plot against the French crown. This is no simple honeymoon: On their tour of Europe, Kate and Cecelia must save the monarchy from an emperor-in-exile named Napoleon.
In The Mislaid Magician, it’s been a decade since Kate and Cecelia foiled Napoleon’s plot to reclaim the French crown. The cousins now have estates, children, and a place at the height of wizarding society. It is 1828, and though magic remains at the heart of the British Empire, a new power has begun to make itself felt across England: the steam engine. As iron tracks crisscross the countryside, the shaking of the locomotives begins to disrupt the workings of English magic, threatening the very foundations of the Empire. A foreign wizard on a diplomatic mission to England vanishes, and the Prime Minister sends Cecelia’s husband to investigate. In order to accompany her husband to the north of England, Cecelia leaves her children in Kate’s care. As Cecelia and James fight for the future of magic, Kate is left with a no less daunting problem: how to care for a gaggle of disobedient, spell-casting tots.
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I adore THE EYRE AFFAIR. Fforde is quirky and weird and very funny. Thursday is a fantastic heroine.
(I am still desperately hoping Fforde writes a sequel to SHADES OF GREY. I don’t think I’m going to get it though!)
I love the Thursday Next Series so far (have them all on my Kindle but only have read 1-3). Sadly I miss the propaganda posters that are in the physical copies. Great posters reminding you to eat your toast and tourist posters for the Socialist Republic of Wales (not always raining)
I also adore the Jasper Fforde books. (I too want more books in the Shades of Grey series and the Nursery Crime series, but I fear neither one will happen.)
Mary Balogh is great, particularly later Mary Balogh. The Westcott series and the Survivors’ Club books are some of my very favorite historical romances.
Bought Someone to Care because I really want more middle-aged romances. (Although I have to admit that I like early Mary Balogh more than later, even if some of her heroes are terrible.)
I remember reading a blurb about THE EYRE AFFAIR when it was first published in England, something to the effect that people weren’t happy with the ending of JANE EYRE. Inconceivable! Of course, I needed this book immediately and ordered a copy from a London dealer.
I wish I could bottle or make in pill form my absolute and giddy delight from that first page: My father had a face that could stop a clock. The entire series and all Fforde’s other books will remain on my keeper shelf for eternity.
BTW, visit his website, jasperfforde dot com, if you haven’t and prepare to disappear for hours. There are book upgrades to download!
@Darlynne that was a great first line. Why hasn’t this been made into a tv series? It can’t be the Author stopping it as his YA candlepunk series the last dragonslayer has been made into a mini series.
Joining the chorus of praise for Thursday Next, but cheering also for Cecilia and Kate. I love epistolary novels.
I read Ffordes books years ago,and loved the Thursday Next books and the Nursery Crimes series!
I also LOVE Sorcery and Cecilia and the two books that follow. The first one was originally written as a writing exercise between the authors who took turns writing chapters. The catch is, they could not tell each other what they had in mind for their characters or the plot,so even if they tried to steer the story a certain way, the other could unknowingly derail their plans when they took up the story for their chapter. It’s so wonderful.
Love, love, LOVE the Thursday Next series! Thursday is a fantastic heroine and her family and friends are all great characters, too. I have a copy of the map of Fiction Island hanging above my desk at work, and it’s made it through two remodels and a move.
Another box set on sale for 99¢ is the first three books in Jade West’s Dirty Bad series. These books are definitely on the extra hot and spicy side. I respect that she really goes for it, but read the descriptions first. YMMV.
Love love love Sorcery and Cecelia. It is YA in the loosest possible terms, because it’s Regency with the usual younger heroines, and predates the modern marketing of young adult books. As the blurbs tell you, they’re older in the third book and are parents themselves. However, they are closed door/no sex on page.
Someone To Care is a favorite in the Westcott series that I love almost as much as the Bridgertons.
I don’t normally do magazine layout, but my head contains the cover displey for PLOCK: THE MAGAZINE FOR DODO FANCIERS, BREEDERS, AND OWNERS. (special article by Thursday Next about her experience with her dodo and training it to fetch keys).
Mary balogh stopped being an autobuy after the Slightly series. I loved slightly married and made it through the rest, hoping that Slightly Dangerous would restore my love of MB .But nope. I hated SD. Couldn’t stand Christine.
I’ve tried a few more baloghs since then but my tastes have obviously changed.