'The Gods of Love' by Nicola Mostyn
I laughed when I saw the tag 'Bridget Jones meets Neil Gaiman' on the cover of 'The Gods of Love' by Nicola Mostyn, but it left me intrigued enough to borrow it when it appeared on the shelves of my local library. I'm so glad that I did.
Frida is a cynical divorce lawyer, independent, self-assured and, above all, great at her job. When the world's top tech company, NeoStar, invites her for a job interview, she sees it as the biggest opportunity of her career. But the day before the appointment, a stranger, Dan, bursts into her office, warning of a prophecy and insisting that she should stay away from NeoStar at all costs. Frida dismisses the bizarre visitor, unnerved but no less determined to go ahead with the meeting. When things don't turn out anything like she expected, however, she finds herself slipping into an alternative reality of terrifying gods, parallel dimensions and a conflict dormant for 3000 years. As the end of the world approaches, does Frida have what it takes to save us all?
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22 September 2018
08 September 2018
Catalina: Warrior Princess
'The Constant Princess' by Philippa Gregory
After the disappointment of something new in fiction, I decided to go for something old. This led me to one of my reading staples, historical fiction, in the form of Philippa Gregory's 'The Constant Princess'.
'The Constant Princess' is the story of Catalina, Infanta of Spain and Princess of Wales, the youngest daughter of Renaissance power couple Isabella and Ferdinand. Born while her parents are on campaign against the Moors, she lives and breathes war, religious ideology and a sense of destiny from childhood, until victory brings peace and the luxury of the Alhambra Palace. But at the age of 13 she leaves her parent's exotic court for England to marry Arthur, Prince of Wales, sealing an alliance between the newly united Spain and the freshly conquered country of Henry VII. But from the moment she arrives, Catalina finds herself at odds with the brusque king and the alien culture. She eventually finds solace and purpose in her marriage, but everything changes when an unexpected death leads Catalina to make a promise that will echo through history...
After the disappointment of something new in fiction, I decided to go for something old. This led me to one of my reading staples, historical fiction, in the form of Philippa Gregory's 'The Constant Princess'.
'The Constant Princess' is the story of Catalina, Infanta of Spain and Princess of Wales, the youngest daughter of Renaissance power couple Isabella and Ferdinand. Born while her parents are on campaign against the Moors, she lives and breathes war, religious ideology and a sense of destiny from childhood, until victory brings peace and the luxury of the Alhambra Palace. But at the age of 13 she leaves her parent's exotic court for England to marry Arthur, Prince of Wales, sealing an alliance between the newly united Spain and the freshly conquered country of Henry VII. But from the moment she arrives, Catalina finds herself at odds with the brusque king and the alien culture. She eventually finds solace and purpose in her marriage, but everything changes when an unexpected death leads Catalina to make a promise that will echo through history...
Labels:
book,
henry,
history,
katherine of aragon,
kathryn,
review,
six wives,
the eighth,
Tudors,
viii
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