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We didn't take photos this time at the Book Barn, but I have some on Flickr from our last summertime visit.
A guide to over 2,700 historical novels, 2004-present, plus info on the latest trends. Pub date 3/30/09.
Covers over 3,800 historical novels, 1995-2004, arranged by subgenre.
Here's what I'm bringing home. We have an international selection above, in terms of both the publishing houses and the subject matter. From left to right:
Emilio Calderón's The Creator's Map (Penguin Press, July): a historical novel/espionage thriller set in 1937, during the thick of the Spanish Civil War. Another recent translation from the Spanish. (American edition, also available in Canada.)
Susanna Kearsley's The Winter Sea (Allison & Busby/Georgetown, available now): a modern-day historical novelist travels to Scotland to research her new book and becomes embroiled in the story of an early 18th century ancestor. I waited a good thirty minutes in line for a signed copy of this book, standing on a concrete floor - for which my back has yet to forgive me - so feel in a sense like I earned it! (Available in Canada and the UK; no US edition.)
Ann Granger's A Mortal Curiosity (McArthur & Co / Headline, available now): the second in the Lizzie Martin historical mystery series set along the south coast of England in 1864.
C. C. Humphreys' Vlad, the Last Confession (McArthur & Co, Sept, also Orion UK, Feb 2009): novel of the historical Dracula, as told by two men and a woman who knew him better than anyone. I say with a bit of glee that I got the last ARC of Last Confession, as the publisher ran out of copies to hand out. Anyone who attended the HNS conference in Albany (where we also ran out of his books) will remember that his signings are very popular. I got the chance to chat with Chris after his signing ended, and he has a nice new blog which you should check out if you're curious at all about his novels or the publishing process in general.
Last but not least, Ami Silber's Early Bright (Toby, October, to be published in the US, UK, and Canada): literary novel about a Jewish man, living in exile in LA in the forties, who spends his nights in the all-black underground jazz scene.
Think I'll end here for now... another post about book-related purchases forthcoming later. Tomorrow is Niagara Falls, followed by a stay at my parents' house in CT over the next week.