A RED LETTER DAY!
WEE HOO!
Yesterday evening, D. Donovan, a senior reviewer for Midwest Book Review. Contacted me.
Who is Midwest Book Review? A prestigious review house best defined here, I would guess:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midwest_Book_Review"A visitor to the website Amazon.com emailed Cox in 2006 and asked about the organization's practice of giving all reviews posted to the site a five-star recommendation.[21] Cox replied explaining that he disagreed with the star-rating system in general, and noted, "If a book isn't good enough to pass our initial screening then it doesn't get reviewed in the first place."[21"
Inside of my email from Ms. Donovan.
Our Midwest office will also archive the review on our web site for 5 years and will send it to Cengage Learning for inclusion in the Book Review Index that goes out to thousands of school and community libraries throughout the US.
So yes! Getting a review from Midwest Book Review is a BIG DEAL.
Can I share it with you here? The coolest thing about Ms. Donovan's review, is that she 'gets' me. Like any artist, damn it, I want to be understood. I don't just write any 'ol stuff down onto the screen of my computer. IT HAS MEANING! She understands that meaning. My art is not about the history, (although that's fun to research). It is about relationships. It is about overcoming adversity. It is about...becoming...
Sometimes I get negative reviews because I may have missed some Medieval minutiae. For example, there were no pews in medieval churches. Oops. But I want to ask these people who panned me, but did you GET IT? Did you understand what this couple had to go through to find love? Do you get that love is HARD WORK?
hahah. oh well. Probably not. They were too busy scanning the manuscript for history misses. Anyhow. Here is Diane Donovan's review of 'How To Marry Your Wife.' I could not be more pleased.
The price of the ebook is $3.99 or available on Kindle Unlimited.
The Amazon link is:
http://a-fwd.com/asin=B017KPHKVODiane Donovan, Senior Reviewer
How to Marry Your Wife
Stella Marie Alden
Soul Mate Publishing
9781619359864 $3.99
Fans of Alden's prior book How to Train Your Knight might remember the protagonist Thomas in her latest How to Marry Your Wife, who was featured under main character Marcus in the first book. Set in England in 1276, Templar Knight Sir Thomas D'Agostine has found the ideal woman with whom he will handfast; only a love potion hastens matters and changes their lives - and this is only the beginning.
Anticipate the same solid attention to medieval history and detailed sexual scenes as in How to Train Your Knight; only from a different perspective as a minor character assumes major proportions in this novel. Time moves swiftly using two different, alternating timelines identified by chapter headings, so readers need to be on their toes to absorb a satisfyingly fast-paced story line that revolves around romance.
But the marriage (when it happens) is a farce and is completed only because Thomas won't have Merry bedding another man nor raising his son, and so love seems to vanish as the consequences of sex and love potions evolve. It's not often that a brand new bride hates her husband before the marriage takes place, but Merry has been branded a harlot because of Thomas, and her hatred of him is just as intense as her reluctantly ongoing attraction.
The process of turning hate into love and rekindling more than the physical fires of passion is the theme of a rollicking good medieval read that infuses its protagonists with the lingo, culture and social mores of its times, yet includes a healthy dose of sexual description for spicy reading.
Romance readers with an affinity for early history will relish its passionate, powerful protagonists and their diametrically opposing personalities, and will find this saga of scoundrels, secrets, idiots and wise men (and women) is filled with satisfying medieval atmosphere and twists and turns of plot.
Under Alden's hand, the sexual encounters reinforce and flavor events and the juxtaposition of battle scenes, romance, and the era's political overtones is exquisite. There's no need for either a prior familiarity with How to Train Your Knight or with medieval history and culture. As events unfold, Thomas and Merry are continually challenged both in their stormy relationships and in their stubborn natures which will ultimate lead to not just survival, but real love.
Without revealing spoilers, suffice it to say that the conclusion of How to Marry Your Wife leaves the door wide open for more - and readers who relish historical romances will welcome this possibility!