This weekly meme is hosted by Sheila at Book Journey
A slow reading week for me, but things are still on track from last week. I finished the second book of Diana Norman's Makepeace Hedley Trilogy and am well into the third. My intention is to read Spellbound by Helen Dunmore next, but sorting through my reading pile I've pulled out books by two authors I've not read before, South of Darkness by John Marsden and Return to Fourwinds by Elisabeth Gifford. 
Shirley by Charlotte Brontë, a classic I began to read months ago, is crying out to be finished. I admit I'm having difficulty with this one. A novel I thought would grab my interest straight away has turned out quite the opposite and I'm thinking of abandoning it. Many have read and enjoyed this novel so it may be a case of persevering in the hope it will get better.
What I Read Last Week
Taking Liberties by Diana Norman
Shirley by Charlotte Brontë, a classic I began to read months ago, is crying out to be finished. I admit I'm having difficulty with this one. A novel I thought would grab my interest straight away has turned out quite the opposite and I'm thinking of abandoning it. Many have read and enjoyed this novel so it may be a case of persevering in the hope it will get better.
What I Read Last Week
Taking Liberties by Diana Norman
 Makepeace    Hedley is frantic when she   learns that her young daughter,  sailing    home to England from the   rebelling American colonies, has been   taken   prisoner by the British.   With her usual determination,  Makepeace  sets   out for Plymouth to   rescue her child.   And when  Countess Diana   Stacpoole is asked by an   American friend to  help her son, also a   British prisoner, Diana   responds quickly and leaves   her genteel past   behind.   In the chaos   of wartime Plymouth the two  women face social   outrage,  public   scandal, and even arrest. Amidst  docks and prisons,   government    bureaucracy and brothels, they forge  an unlikely and   unshakable    friendship. And in freeing others, they  discover their own   splendid    liberty.
Though I enjoyed A Catch of Consequence, Taking Liberties was the better of the two. It was a great adventure story from start to finish.
Though I enjoyed A Catch of Consequence, Taking Liberties was the better of the two. It was a great adventure story from start to finish.
What I'm Reading Today
The Sparks Fly Upward by Diana Norman
Few    of those Philippa loves in London return her affection. Not the  love     of her life, who has a new bride. Not even her widowed mother,      Makepeace Burke. So Philippa decides on a marriage of convenience to a      prudish, if kind, man. Across the Channel in France, the Reign of    Terror   is causing the beheading of thousands from the French nobility.    Among   those in danger is Philippa's friend, the Marquis de   Condorcet.  Not  only  has Philippa the means of rescuing him from the   guillotine,  she's  got  the courage. And as fate would have it,   Philippa will find  love  where  she least expects it-while staring   death in the face.
What I Hope to Read Next
A Spell of Winter by Helen Dunmore
  Catherine  and her brother Rob do not understand why they have been   abandoned by  both their parents, or know where their mother has gone.   They are  brought up by servants in the house of their grandfather, an   Irishman  who made his fortune somehow and is known in the neighbourhood   as ‘the  man from nowhere’. The children cling to each other because  they  have  no-one else, but when they grow up their sibling love becomes    incestuous. As the world outside moves towards war, Catherine and Rob    are trapped in their own conflict. But little by little, the spell of    winter that has held Catherine begins to break, and she starts to free    herself from the weight of the past.  
South of Darkness by John Marsden
Thirteen-year-old Barnaby Fletch is a bag-and-bones orphan in  London in the late 1700s.Barnaby lives on his wits and ill-gotten gains,  on streets seething with the press of the throng and shadowed by  sinister figures. Life is a precarious business. When he hears of a  paradise on the other side of the world a place called Botany Bay he  decides to commit a crime and get himself transported to a new life, a  better life. To succeed, he must survive the trials of Newgate Prison,  the stinking hull of a prison ship and the unknown terrors of a journey  across the world. And Botany Bay is far from the paradise Barnaby has  imagined. When his past and present suddenly collide, he is soon fleeing  for his life once again. A riveting story of courage, hope, and  extraordinary adventure.
Return to Fourwinds by Elisabeth Gifford
One house. Two families. A lifetime of secrets. At Fourwinds they gather: Alice and Ralph, Patricia and Peter, to celebrate the marriage of their children. The marquee is on the lawn, breathing in and out in the summer heat. But the bride is nowhere to be seen. As both families are drawn together, the past floods through the corridors of the old house. What secret has Ralph been keeping from his wife? What is it about Alice's wartime encounter with Peter that has haunted her ever since? And what could have caused Sarah to vanish without a word to any of the people she loves? Moving from the orange groves of Valencia and the spacious houses of the British countryside to the post-war slums in the north, Return to Fourwinds is a sweeping, lyrical story of the things we tell and the things we keep to ourselves. Is Sarah's disappearance a culmination of the pressures that have kept the two families apart? Or can they work together to bring her back to Fourwinds?"
Return to Fourwinds by Elisabeth Gifford
One house. Two families. A lifetime of secrets. At Fourwinds they gather: Alice and Ralph, Patricia and Peter, to celebrate the marriage of their children. The marquee is on the lawn, breathing in and out in the summer heat. But the bride is nowhere to be seen. As both families are drawn together, the past floods through the corridors of the old house. What secret has Ralph been keeping from his wife? What is it about Alice's wartime encounter with Peter that has haunted her ever since? And what could have caused Sarah to vanish without a word to any of the people she loves? Moving from the orange groves of Valencia and the spacious houses of the British countryside to the post-war slums in the north, Return to Fourwinds is a sweeping, lyrical story of the things we tell and the things we keep to ourselves. Is Sarah's disappearance a culmination of the pressures that have kept the two families apart? Or can they work together to bring her back to Fourwinds?"






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