Sunday 26 December 2021

The Audible Imagining Violet

 The Audible version of "Imagining Violet" has arrived in the world, and can be found at Audible.com for those who prefer to listen to their books. I am absolutely delighted with the performance of Jacqueline de Boer who narrated and produced this edition. I listened to all 8.9 hours of it and found Violet to be a most engaging young woman. 

I have a supply of promo codes and would be pleased to provide one upon request either through a comment on this post or to my email, if you have it. In the meantime,

Here are links to the sample on Sound Cloud and the Audible page:  

https://soundcloud.com/search?q=imagining%20violet

https://www.audible.ca/search?keywords=imagining+violet&ref=a_hp_t1_header_search

Here is the link to the posting on Amazon.com where you can listen to a free sample of Jacqueline's excellent work:

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=imagining+violet&crid=2P31U2HYH7PCK&sprefix=imagining+violet+%2Caps%2C170&ref


Wednesday 22 December 2021

Reviews of "Letters from Lake Joe"

S. Lynn Hilton, a writer of fantasy books, wrote this on Goodreads:

 This lovely historical fiction book tells its story of summers spent cottaging at Lake Joseph, Muskoka, Canada, through the medium of letters written by the main character Violet (Courtenaye) Welsman. Illustrated with period photographs and postcards, the book is divided into two parts, each a different historical period. The first part is the longer of the two and far more detailed. That is Violet’s time period. The second part, while shorter, was just as enjoyable to read and contained the author’s thoughts and reminiscences of times spent at Lake Joe in roughly the middle to last half of the 20th century.


Violet’s fictional letters read like something I’d expect a woman of that time period and status to write and painted a detailed picture of the lives of the people who summered at the lake. The story provides a delightful taste of life from another time, both good times and a few sad times, and its conversational tone perfectly fit the (mostly) leisurely pace of the summers described. I enjoyed how the small collection of “mid-century Muskoka memories” rounded out the book and provided a different view of the cottage and island where Violet summered so many years earlier.

I really liked this creative non-fiction (as the author describes her books about her ancestor Violet). The book is an engaging slice of life story, an entertaining read.
 

Chester Sing added this: 
This is a wonderfully written and imagined series of letters that transports the reader back in time to a rustic, simpler era. It is charming and nostalgic, and is a lovely ode to the author's grandmother and family history. Read this for a trip back in time to a bygone era!