Month: April 2017

‘“I have a devastating comeback for that,” I informed him with dignity. “Just not right now.”’

Cassie Palmer, Embrace the Night (via fadeintoshadow)

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How Dorina Basarab fits in the Cassandra Palmer world

So, There are lots of Cassie Palmer fans out there who don’t understand the synergistic relationship of Cassie and Dorina.  After all, the two haven’t meet yet-which let me tell you, makes me wonder about Mircea Basarab.  Makes me mistrust him cause how do you keep your daughter from your wife?!?! But I am rereading Midnight’s Daughter and I Cannot imagine the Cassieverse without the insight I get from the Dorina books.  The Dorina books focus on the fae, but they also turn Louis-Cesar, Mircea,Kit Marlowe, Horatieu, and Radu into relate able characters.  Hell, it even turns the counsel into someone more than her position and brings ley  line racing and the senates into full focus.  Especially since the last few Cassie books where its all about pritkin…So, if you haven’t already, you need to read the Dorina books.  Start with Zombie’s Bite, it’s free! What do you think @windsurfingthroughhell @karenchancefan?

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timeline

timeline

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I appreciate the thought, but adornment is not needed. Bare skin will do admirably.” He carelessly let his robe drop and turned in a full circle, hands outspread. He not only hadn’t overdressed; he hadn’t dressed at all. “Many strange things are said about us,” he continued, “but most are quite exaggerated. For instance, the Norse believe all Fey to have a flaw somewhere on their person, a mar to their beauty. Fey women are even said to be hollow, with a beautiful frontal appearance but no backs!” In the dim light, he burned like a pale flame, his hair a flowing nimbus around his head. And if his body had a flaw, I didn’t see it. “ Nici un lucru sã nu crezi, cu ochii pânã nu vezi. ” The liquid syllables fell with ease from his lips. My mind was busy with other things, so it took me a moment to realize what I’d heard. Seeing certainly was believing in his case, but that wasn’t the point. “I thought you didn’t understand Romanian.” Caedmon sat on the side of the bed, naked and gloriously aroused. “In a life as long as mine, one picks up a great deal of esoteric knowledge.” “You read the note.” He looked slightly surprised. “Of course. Wouldn’t you? But obviously I could say nothing around the vampire.” “Louis-Cesare? He’s all right,” I said absently. Caedmon had my expression. “No, I did not think so. I do not trust him, either.” “Why not? You just met him.” “He’s a vampire, and others of his kind have been causing considerable trouble at home of late. It is possible that they are behind the current unrest, encouraging those who should know better to try for honors above their station.” This suddenly didn’t sound like a seduction attempt anymore, despite the hand on my thigh. “Why are you really here, Caedmon?” He tried to lift the coverlet, and I slapped a hand down on it. He grinned, unrepentant. “I told you. I have never before had a dhampir—I quite look forward to it. And afterward we can discuss our mutual problem.

Midnight’s Daughter, Karen Chance
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How to Make Lifelong Readers Out of Your Friends and Neighbors

wendeego:

1. Make a list of everyone in your neighborhood/city/college/elsewhere with a copy of any book in the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy.

2. Visit each person in turn and give them precisely one (1) copy of Kushiel’s Dart, by Jacqueline Carey.

3. ???

4. Love literature…as thou wilt!

Expensive, but most probably worth it.

Just gotta say I really dislike the fact the 50 shades is supposed to represent all edgy romance.  It doesn’t even begin to touch the really GREAT books in the world–books that make you question everything and become a warm flame to warm you on the darkest night….Hey I made a Jacqueline Carey reference without meaning to…

I actually have a friend who does this with Laurell K Hamilton books whenever she sees them somewhere cheap.  She buys 30 or 40 copies at 1 or 2 dollars a piece and randomly gives them out to people.  She says it makes up for the fact she refuses to lend out any of her Laurell K Hamilton books…positive book karma

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That moment…

disasterroad:

When you finish reading Imriel’s Trilogy and feel like curling up into a bawl weeping for the beautiful ending as well as the knowledge that this is your last book with these beloved characters! [ah well, there is always rereading, aye? :D]

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There is no situation so dire that a hot bath cannot improve one’s outlook; so I have always found to be true.

Kushiel’s Dart – Jacqueline Carey (via pogonabarbata)
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An Exile’s Lament

carryonyouwaywardidjits:

Beneath the golden balm
Settling on the fields
Evening steals in calm
And farmers count their yields
The bee is in the lavender,
The honey fills the comb,
But here a rain falls never-ending
And I am far from home.

-Jacqueline Carey

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Day 01 – Best book you read last year

dawnawakening:

After much deliberation (lying on my bed staring at the ceiling for 10 minutes) I have chosen the Phedre Trilogy from Jacqueline Carey’s Kushiel’s Legacy. Yes, I know that it’s three books but if you read them all one after the other, like I did, then they count as one. Logic.

Carey has created a world in these books that seems so real and rich in back story that you’re sure there should be history books out there about the land of Terre D’Ange. The characters that she created are equally rich in personal history and beautifully crafted in such a way that you can care for even the most hateful villian.

The trilogy follows Phedre from an unwanted orphan to the savior of her home lands that are poised on the edge of war. All along the way friendships are made and broken, relationships are kindled and put out, enemies are created and cut down.

The characters in these books quickly became some of my all time favourites, not only for their strengths but for their multitudes of weaknesses as well. (I may be 100% in love with Josceline Verreuil)

Disclaimer: These aren’t bed time stories to read to your kids. The whole axis that this epic tale revolves around is the fact that Phedre is marked by the angel Kushiel meaning that she finds pleasure in pain. Get where this is going? 50 Shades ain’t got nothing on these books. But know that Carey uses this element in her stories as a means to an end, a tool for Phedre to use to her advantage, not as the central focus.

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