Blog Tour & Giveaway: Crimson & Bone by Marina Fiorato

Crimson&BoneCoverI’m thrilled to be today’s host on the blog tour for Marina Fiorato’s latest book, Crimson & Bone, a gripping story of love and obsession set in 19th century London, Florence and Venice.

WinPlus, I’m delighted to give one of you the opportunity to win a copy of Crimson & Bone (UK & Republic of Ireland only).  To enter, click the link below. The giveaway closes on 26th May 2017.  

Enter the giveaway

Follow my blog with Bloglovin


About the Book

London, 1853. Annie Stride has nothing left to live for – she is a penniless prostitute, newly evicted from her home and pregnant. On the night she plans to cast herself from Waterloo Bridge into the icy waters of the Thames, her life is saved by Francis Maybrick Gill, a talented pre-Raphaelite painter – and her world is changed forever. Francis takes Annie as his artist’s muse, elevating her from fallen woman to society’s darling. With her otherworldly beauty now the toast of London, her dark past is left far behind.  But Annie’s lavish new life is not all is seems – and there are some who won’t let her forget where she came from…

Book Facts

  • Format: Hardback
  • Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
  • No. of pages: 320
  • Publication date: 18th May 2017
  • Genre: Historical Fiction, Historical Romance

To purchase Crimson & Bone from Amazon.co.uk, click here (link provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme)

Find Crimson & Bone on Goodreads


My Review

I have really enjoyed all the previous books by Marina Fiorato that I’ve read so I came to this one with high expectations and I wasn’t disappointed.

For the first part of the book, the author moves away from her usual Italian setting and we find ourselves in London of 1853.   Alongside Annie’s story, the reader is given tantalising glimpses of the story of her friend, Mary Anne, and how the two girls first met. In their names and occupation, there are echoes of actual historical events in the East End of London of that era.  Only towards the end of the book does the reader learn how their two stories converge.

As well as being his muse and model, Annie quickly learns that Francis expects her to be grateful for his rescue of her and to express that gratitude both verbally and by going along with his plans for her. For him, ingratitude is the most heinous of sins. Annie learns how to please him – by altering her dress, deportment and speech according to his instruction – similar to the way she learned to meet the sexual needs of her clients, suppressing her own nature in the process. As part of this transformation of her, Francis introduces Annie to works of art, literature and music – but always those of his own choosing.

Francis seems to want to ‘remake’ her in the image of some idealised woman for a reason as yet unknown. Here the reader may observe intertextual links with Pygmalion, both the Greek myth of the sculptor who falls in love with his statue of the sea-nymph, Galatea, which eventually comes to life, and the George Bernard Shaw play in which a ‘flower girl’ (possibly a euphemism for prostitute) is transformed into a society lady. Other links include the fact that Edward Burne-Jones, a leading Pre-Raphaelite (the school of art with which the fictional Francis Maybrick Gill associates) painted a series entitled ‘Pygmalion and Galatea’.

There are explicit references as well: to Dante, the death of whose great love, Beatrice, inspired his greatest work, The Divine Comedy; to Alexandre Dumas’ La Dame aux Camelias, based on the author’s love affair with a courtesan; and to La Traviata, Verdi’s opera based on Dumas’ novel. The flower, the camellia, will come to play a significant role in Annie’s story. Themes of control, death and obsessive love are a constant undertone to the emerging narrative.

The novel is full of beautiful descriptive writing about art and, as the title suggests, it is suffused with colour, both actual and metaphorical.   At one point, Annie likens the way she is being ‘remade’ by Francis to a transformation from black and white pen and ink sketch to ‘fully coloured’.   She feels Francis has approached her like one of his paintings, starting with the background, then adding broad strokes, then blocking in the colour and finally adding the detail in finer strokes.  Later, Annie’s introduction to the colours of the rainbow will mark an awakening of other feelings and herald new possibilities.

In the last two sections, the story moves to Florence and Venice, where the sense of gothic melodrama increases as dark and disturbing secrets are brought to light.   In the end, as a mystery tour, it’s not too difficult to guess the destination but this by no means spoils the journey which is lavishly depicted, dark and compelling.   After just a few pages, I found myself completely immersed in the story and enthralled by the gorgeous, lush writing. I think this is my favourite of all the author’s novels to date.

Thank you to Jenni Leech at publishers, Hodder & Stoughton, for my proof copy in return for an honest review.

In three words: Intense, dark, compelling

Try something similar…Fingersmith by Sarah Waters


MarinaFioratoAbout the Author

Marina Fiorato is half-Venetian. She was born in Manchester and raised in the Yorkshire Dales. She is a history graduate of Oxford University and the University of Venice, where she read for a master’s degree in Shakespeare. After university she studied art and worked in the film and music industries, creating visuals for U2, The Rolling Stones and the Queen musical, We Will Rock You. Her novels Daughter of Siena and Beatrice & Benedick were shortlisted for the Romantic Novelists’ Association Historical Fiction Award. Marina was married on the Grand Canal in period costume and lives in north London with her husband, son and daughter.

Connect with Marina

Website http://www.marinafiorato.com/
Twitter https://twitter.com/marinafiorato
Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/772663.Marina_Fiorato

 

Blog Tour: Last Witness by Carys Jones

Last Witness Blog tour banner

I’m delighted to host today’s stop on the blog tour for Last Witness by Carys Jones. Last Witness is the sequel to the bestselling psychological thriller, Wrong Number. I’m pleased to say that Carys has written a guest post on ‘Getting into Character’ which you can read below.

Spoiler Alert: If you intend to read Wrong Number, you may want to skip to the guest post. To purchase Wrong Number click here


LastWitnessAbout the Book

With her husband gone, and his legacy in her hands, Amanda Thorne is hell-bent on revenge.

Amanda Thorne is on a mission to avenge her husband. Restoring his honour and protecting his legacy will be dangerous, but she will not rest until all those who have hurt her loved-ones have been dealt with.  Her only option is to go undercover in the murky world of the gang kingpin McAllister. So, with her loyal companion Shane by her side, she heads back to Scotland to finish what they started.

McAllister’s world is one of seedy nightclubs, drug deals and beautiful women, but he is a hard man to get close to. As Amanda gets deeper and deeper into his dangerous world, what secrets from the past will come back to haunt her, and will she be able to protect the last witness to the truth?

A compelling, heart-stopping thriller which you won’t be able to put down…

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Book Facts

  • Format: Paperback
  • Publisher: Aria
  • No. of pages: 300
  • Publication date: 1st May 2017
  • Genre: Thriller

Purchase links*
Amazon
Kobo 
iBooks 
Google Play 
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme)
Find Last Witness on Goodreads


Guest post: ‘Getting into Character’ by Carys Jones

In my books my characters are always so real to me that they feel like friends. I know everything about them – their favourite food, movies, what their early morning routine is. In many ways I tend to know them better than I do myself. But it doesn’t start out that way.  Whenever I start a new book I have to get to know my characters.  I tend to go about this by figuring out their core.  I think that a person’s central characteristics reveal a lot about them and have a ripple effect on their actions.

Take Aiden Connelly from my Avalon series. At his core he is desperate to do good and it’s this drive to do good that ultimately causes him to make mistakes. He’s always doing things for the right reason but that doesn’t mean that they are the right thing to do.  With Wrong Number and Last Witness, at his core Will Thorn is protective. He’s protective of Amanda and she loves that about him and it’s these instincts which drive his story.

So when I’m writing a new character I ask myself what characteristic defines them above all others. With Amanda it’s her determination. Curiosity is a close second but at her core she’s determined. It’s this tenacious attitude which makes her feel compelled to find Will in the first book and in the second to protect those closest to her. She always refuses to sit back and be a victim because she’s so determined.

I even look at myself this way. At my core I’m imaginative. This bleeds out in to all aspects of my life from my career to how I spend my free time.

What lies at your core? What about some of your favourite characters? People by their nature are complex but I think, when getting to know a character, it really helps to figure out the heart of their personality. Are they inherently cruel, kind, shy, afraid, fearless? And how will that core characteristic shape their journey?

I love getting to know characters. I feel like each time I do I end up learning a little bit more about myself xoxo


 Jones_CarysAbout the Author

Carys Jones loves nothing more than to write and create stories which ignite the reader’s imagination. Based in Shropshire, England, Carys lives with her husband, two guinea pigs and her adored canine companion Rollo.

Connect with Carys

Goodreads   https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7314534.Carys_Jones
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CarysJAuthor
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CarysJonesWriter/
Website: http://www.carys-jones.com/

Connect with Aria Fiction

Website: www.ariafiction.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ariafiction/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Aria_Fiction
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ariafiction/?hl=en
NetGalley: http://bit.ly/2lkKB0e
Sign up to the Aria newsletter: http://bit.ly/2jQxVtV