Books On Sale

Historical Fiction, Witches, & More

  • The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba

    The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba by Chanel Cleeton

    The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba by Chanel Cleeton is $1.99! I’m hoping this sale stays up and isn’t a leftover from yesterday. This one was mentioned in a Hide Your Wallet from last spring. Cleeton’s historical fictions have been recommended a few times on the site.

    At the end of the nineteenth century, three revolutionary women fight for freedom in New York Times bestselling author Chanel Cleeton’s captivating new novel inspired by real-life events and the true story of a legendary Cuban woman–Evangelina Cisneros–who changed the course of history.

    A feud rages in Gilded Age New York City between newspaper tycoons William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer. When Grace Harrington lands a job at Hearst’s newspaper in 1896, she’s caught in a cutthroat world where one scoop can make or break your career, but it’s a story emerging from Cuba that changes her life.

    Unjustly imprisoned in a notorious Havana women’s jail, eighteen-year-old Evangelina Cisneros dreams of a Cuba free from Spanish oppression. When Hearst learns of her plight and splashes her image on the front page of his paper, proclaiming her, “The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba,” she becomes a rallying cry for American intervention in the battle for Cuban independence.

    With the help of Marina Perez, a courier secretly working for the Cuban revolutionaries in Havana, Grace and Hearst’s staff attempt to free Evangelina. But when Cuban civilians are forced into reconcentration camps and the explosion of the USS Maine propels the United States and Spain toward war, the three women must risk everything in their fight for freedom.

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    This book is on sale at:
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  • Her Royal Spyness

    Her Royal Spyness by Rhys Bowen

    Her Royal Spyness by Rhys Bowen is $1.99! This is the first book in a series of the same name, and I know Sarah has been enjoying these books both on paper and audio. She gave this one a B-:

    The allure of the story wasn’t the mystery so much as it was Georgie and her friends. I loved her ingenuity and her way of managing people and situations, her determination and her sense of humor, and especially her friendships.

    London 1932. Narrator Lady Victoria Georgiana Charlotte Eugenie, 34th in line for the throne, is flat broke. She bolted from Scotland — and engagement to Fishface (Prince Stiegfriend) — for London, where she has:

    a) built a fire in the hearth
    b) fallen for an absolutely unsuitable Irish peer
    c) made a few quid housekeeping incognita, and
    d) been summoned by the Queen to spy on her playboy son

    When an arrogant Frenchman trying to swipe our family estate winds up dead in my bathtub, how can I clear my very long family name?

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    This book is on sale at:
    • Available at Amazon

    • Barnes & Noble
    • Kobo

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    We also may use affiliate links in our posts, as well. Thanks!

  • The Book of the Unnamed Midwife

    The Book of the Unnamed Midwife by Meg Elison

    PODCAST RECOMMENDED: The Book of the Unnamed Midwife by Meg Elison is 99c at Amazon! Lots of triggers for this one, including a pandemic and sexual violence. However, Thien-Kim Lam recommended this speculative fiction on a previous podcast episode, especially for it’s handling of the main character’s liminal gender. I, for one, and very curious!

    When she fell asleep, the world was doomed. When she awoke, it was dead.

    In the wake of a fever that decimated the earth’s population—killing women and children and making childbirth deadly for the mother and infant—the midwife must pick her way through the bones of the world she once knew to find her place in this dangerous new one. Gone are the pillars of civilization. All that remains is power—and the strong who possess it.

    A few women like her survived, though they are scarce. Even fewer are safe from the clans of men, who, driven by fear, seek to control those remaining. To preserve her freedom, she dons men’s clothing, goes by false names, and avoids as many people as possible. But as the world continues to grapple with its terrible circumstances, she’ll discover a role greater than chasing a pale imitation of independence.

    After all, if humanity is to be reborn, someone must be its guide.

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    This book is on sale at:
    • Available at Amazon

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  • The Vine Witch

    The Vine Witch by Luanne Smith

    The Vine Witch by Luanne G. Smith is $1.99 at Amazon! I’m obsessed with the moody florals of this cover. Last time we featured this one, a person mentioned in the comments that there are a lot of cats who are “exsanguinated” if that’s something you absoutely do not want. I saw one review that was disappointed the description didn’t overtly mention this was a romance novel. GOD FORBID.

    A young witch emerges from a curse to find her world upended in this gripping fantasy of betrayal, vengeance, and self-discovery set in turn-of-the-century France.

    For centuries, the vineyards at Château Renard have depended on the talent of their vine witches, whose spells help create the world-renowned wine of the Chanceaux Valley. Then the skill of divining harvests fell into ruin when sorcière Elena Boureanu was blindsided by a curse. Now, after breaking the spell that confined her to the shallows of a marshland and weakened her magic, Elena is struggling to return to her former life. And the vineyard she was destined to inherit is now in the possession of a handsome stranger.

    Vigneron Jean-Paul Martel naively favors science over superstition, and he certainly doesn’t endorse the locals’ belief in witches. But Elena knows a hex when she sees one, and the vineyard is covered in them. To stay on and help the vines recover, she’ll have to hide her true identity, along with her plans for revenge against whoever stole seven winters of her life. And she won’t rest until she can defy the evil powers that are still a threat to herself, Jean-Paul, and the ancient vine-witch legacy in the rolling hills of the Chanceaux Valley.

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    This book is on sale at:
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Comments are Closed

  1. Jill Q. says:

    I thought the first few Lady Georgiana mysteries were really strong, but I will say I got tired of them right around the time of FOUR FUNERALS AND MAYBE A WEDDING because it had the problem that a lot of cozies do where I don’t feel the heroine is getting any smarter. She keeps making the same type of assumptions and mistakes she did a few books ago in order to keep the plot moving. But that may just be a me thing more than an actual writing flaw.
    Also, totally not important, but the heroine also complained about something having too much garlic and while I don’t doubt that was totally accurate to a gently bred English lady in 1930s, I don’t need the type of negativity in my life 😉 Garlic is a food group as far as I’m concerned.
    I might read some more again after a cooling off period. This is my long way of saying $1.99 is probably a good price to try it at if you like this short of thing, but just go in with realistic expectations for the series.

  2. WS says:

    @Jill Q Oh, no– I agree that the heroine isn’t getting any smarter. So it’s not just you. I’ve been a couple of chapters into the book set in Africa (Love and Death Among the Cheetahs) for a couple of years now and haven’t picked it back up again.

  3. Sujata says:

    I was very disappointed in “The Vine Witch” – I found it cheesy (not in a good way!) and pretty blah overall. I had this on Audible and I don’t think it was the narration putting me off the book….but would love to hear other thoughts.

  4. Lizzy says:

    @Sujata I really liked The Vine Witch, it was a little predictable but I found it kind of cozy.

  5. MirandaB says:

    I didn’t like Vine Witch. Feisty, impulsive heroines make me tired.

    I used to really like the Georgiana series, but they’ve moved from ‘buy’ to ‘check out of library’.

  6. Karen H near Tampa says:

    @JillQ – It’s definitely not just you. I am also having this problem with cozy mysteries and have slowed a bit on reading some of them. Actually, I stopped one series, by an author whose other 3 series I am still reading, in the second book because the heroine/sleuth was annoying me so much. I’m actually enjoying historical mysteries more these days, perhaps because my expectations for women’s behaviors in the past is less rigorous. Or perhaps because they’re just written better. I don’t know the answer to that.

  7. Kris Bock says:

    I also used to like the Lady Georgiana mysteries, but I found the last two, including the one set in Africa, tedious, so I’m giving up. 🙁

    Fortunately it’s not hard to find mysteries set in the early 20th century. Lately I’ve been enjoying the Professor Bradshaw mysteries, with an electrical engineering professor hero, set in Seattle in 1901.

  8. LisaM says:

    I have no interest in reading about exsanguinated cats, so thank you or the warning. That’s an easy pass for me on the Vine Witch.

    I gave up on the Lady Georgie books when she started writing more of the Royal family into them. Though I think it was the one set in California that finally lost me.

  9. Lisa F says:

    My pick here is definitely The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba; The Book of the Unnamed Midwife was such a disappointment to me, every character was flat as a pancake.

  10. Jenny says:

    Just picked up The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba and it’s only £1.99 in the UK for anyone this side of the pond. Thanks so much for the tip!

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