Book Review: C.C. Humphrey’s Jack Absolute
Meet Jack Absolute – rogue, duelist, charmer and captain in the Light Dragoons. From the field of honor in London through the pivotal battle of Saratoga to a hunt for a double agent in wintry Philadelphia.
Meet Jack Absolute – rogue, duelist, charmer and captain in the Light Dragoons. From the field of honor in London through the pivotal battle of Saratoga to a hunt for a double agent in wintry Philadelphia.
An English novel exploring the intersection of individual psychology and wider politics and is richly overflowing of a Tudor England as a half-made society.
1913: In a sprawling manor on the outskirts of London, three young women seek to fulfill their destinies and desires amidst the unspoken rules of society and the distant rumblings of war. . .
The town of Lansquenet, to which Vianne Rocher had sworn never to return, welcomes her with Father Francis desperate for her help and the Muslim community in an uproar.
Matthew and Diana scour Tudor London of 1590 for the elusive manuscript Ashmole 782, and search for the witch to teach Diana how to control her remarkable powers.
Matthew Corbett, Magistrate Woodward’s clerk, begins his own investigation among the townspeople, believing the widow accused of witchcraft is innocent.
An unfinished duel, a midnight murder, and the treachery of a prostitute lead to the imprisonment of Sharpe. Escaping, he becomes a fugitive, hunted by ally and enemy.
Love will find a way for a young Russian American girl and her African American brothers to buy their gramma Eula an Easter hat…in just the right way.
A reluctant sorcerer, Ruithneadh of Ceangail and Sarah of Doìre must collect and destroy his father’s spells before the Nine Kingdoms plunge into darkness.
A chance conversation informs Baxter of the joys of Shabbat dinner, and he wants to join in the fun. Only he’s not kosher . . .