Lara Lee's Blog, page 24

January 13, 2019

Fun Quiz and Pre-order The Gryphon’s Handmaiden

The Gryphon’s Handmaiden is coming out January 29th and is ready for pre-order. During the week of January 27 through February 2nd, there will be a blog tour to celebrate its release. Check out this blog during those days to find out where the tour will be next. Here are some of the articles to […]
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 13, 2019 06:00

January 6, 2019

Book Review: Sir Gibbie by George MacDonald

Sir Gibbie was written in 1879 by a Scottish minister named George MacDonald. George MacDonald was the favorite author of C.S. Lewis and has been well-known for both his theological writing as well as his fiction. I have already reviewed The Princess and the Goblin and Phantasies which were both written by him. Sir Gibbie […]
1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 06, 2019 06:19

December 30, 2018

Cool Ad from ACX!

ACX made me this cool this cool ad for free to advertise my new audiobook. I think it looks awesome! You can get my book for free with a free trial of Audible. It’s a fun clean book that Ken Chambers narrate with fun accents. Get my audiobook for FREE on Audible: https://www.audible.com/pd/B07KX7K93C...
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 30, 2018 06:23

December 23, 2018

Year in Review

I read Brandon Sanderson’s year in review, and I felt tired. Seriously, who write that much in one year? Still, I was inspired to review my own year and make some new writing goals. It turns out I had a pretty busy year myself. It has only been this full year that I have worked […]
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 23, 2018 14:36

December 17, 2018

Blog Redesign

I just redesigned my blog. Why? Because my life motto is "I think I could do that better..."

https://laraswanderings.wordpress.com/
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 17, 2018 16:54

December 16, 2018

My Top All-Time 15 Favorite Books

[image error]*Click on the images to buy on Amazon – As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases*


Since it’s Christmas time and everyone is putting out their list of top books, I decided to do the same. This is not my list for just this year though. I also don’t include children’s books or non-fiction on this list. Those books often depend heavily on age or context. These are my all-time favorite adult fiction books that I recommend for everyone, all the time, in no particular order:


[image error]1. Lord of the Rings by Tolkien


This epic fantasy trilogy defined the genre for generations. Tolkien was a scholar who created a rich world based on the folklore of multiple western cultures. This tale of good versus evil forces us to examine the corruption inside of us. “It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.”


[image error]2. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austin


This romantic comedy is still far superior to anything that has been written today. I can read this over and over again and still fall in love with Darcy. I laugh each time at the ridiculousness of humanity, and yet the character seems like people who I would meet in reality. The story is just fun from beginning to end. The first line describes the plot perfectly: “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.”


[image error]3. The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Emmuska Orczy


I picked up this book at an airport while in college, having no idea what it was about. I fell in love with this swashbuckling tale and have read it three or four times. The mix of vanity and heroic in the main characters keep you guessing during the struggle to save lives during the French Revolution. A love story between two characters who are already married to each other is such a novelty. “They seek him here. They seek him there. Those Frenchies seek him everywhere. Is he in Heaven? Or is he in Hell? That damned, illusive pimpernel.”


[image error]4. Scaramouche by Rafael Sabatini


This book took me by surprise. It is a highly intellectual swashbuckling tale that keeps you guessing what the main character will do next. It has the best opening sentence I have ever read in a book: “He was born with a gift of laughter and the sense the world was mad.”


[image error]5. The Princess and the Goblin and it’s sequel The Princess and Curdie by George MacDonald


Perhaps fairytales are not considered adult-worthy books, but I love these even though I never read them as a child. So many fairy tales and children’s books have progress in ways that mars it somehow. This is just beautiful from beginning to end. A young princess and a coal miner boy experience magical adventures which end perfectly. “Seeing is not believing—it is only seeing.”


[image error]6. Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott


Knights, ladies, adventure and romance, what more could you want? This story is just beautiful in the historical context of the medieval world. I love the chivalry and the language. “Chivalry!—why, maiden, she is the nurse of pure and high affection—the stay of the oppressed, the redresser of grievances, the curb of the power of the tyrant —Nobility were but an empty name without her, and liberty finds the best protection in her lance and her sword.”


[image error]7. The Blue Fairy Book by Andrew Lang


The Blue Fairy Book is a collection of fairytales mostly from Europe. Unlike some of the other fairy books, most of these stories are clean love stories verse fables or generic folklore. We could use a broadening of our fairytales from the standard Cinderella, Snow White, and Beauty and the Beast stories we hear over and over again.


[image error]8. Ruth by Ellen Gunderson Traylor


Ruth is a retelling of the book of Ruth that enhances your understanding of the Biblical story rather than butchering it. Is it possible for a woman to love two men in a lifetime? In this story Ruth does, and the complexity of her emotions are real to life.


[image error]9. The Mark of the Lion Series by Francine Rivers


The Mark of the Lion is a series of three books, but I have to be honest and say I only read the first two. The first two books follow a young Jewish girl named Hadassah as she is taken into slavery in Rome during the destruction of Jerusalem after Christ. The first and third books follow a gladiator who was also somewhat interesting, but not nearly as interesting to me as Hadassah. I had expected these books to be another one of the standard Christian fiction bland stuff, but instead, it has a lot of depth. Hadassah is a Christian, and she stays a Christian even when it becomes hard, including costing her life, or so she thinks. This isn’t a book about missionary dating or whining to God about why life it hard. This is a gritty story about faith that has a beautiful love story as kind of an afterthought.


[image error]10. The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis


One of the few original portal fantasy stories. Some see a gospel message in the Lion, Witch, and the Wardrobe, but if you don’t limit yourself by a search for allegory, you’ll find a beautiful series about faith and courage. I love how each book holds its own adventure. Narnia grows and changes and so do the children in each book.


[image error]11. The Chronicles of Prydain by Lloyd Alexander


I read this as a lark because my cousin recommended it and I was bored. I never expected to fall in love with the whole series. We have all heard of the stereotype of a farm boy becoming the called hero, king, or wizard in tons of fantasy fiction. What if the farm boy is a lower pig herder and he stays a pig herder, most of the time. This is a fantasy series about being content in who you are and making the most of it. What a novel idea!


[image error]12. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë


In some ways, this books seems like two stories. In the first we see Jane Eyre overcoming her suffering as a child to become an independent woman. The second part is her love story and effort to be true to her desires and morals at the same time. The complex characters have you feeling a full range of emotions.


[image error]13. Christy by Catherine Marshall


Christy is another Christian fiction book that I expected to be sappy and trite. Instead, it touched me deeply. It’s based on a true story about a young woman who follows God’s call to teach the children in the Appilaciation mountains. Christy discovers that her commission is much much harder than she realized. As she deals with poverty, harsh conditions, and an ignorant, isolated society, she also develops a relationship with a grumpy Scottish doctor and an idealistic minister. This is the only book I have ever read that had a love triangle that was tolerable because it wasn’t deceptive. The trying of all the character’s faith is intense. The ending is powerful.


[image error]14. Arabian Nights


Who wrote this? No one knows, but it’s remarkable in how it holds layers and layers of stories that almost never end. If a less skilled writer attempted this the reader would get bored or lost. Instead, this story or stories is/are engaging and never gets old. This is about a sultan who marries a new woman every night and kills his bride in the morning. His new bride,  Shahrazad, prolongs her life indefinitely by telling a never-ending series of stories.


[image error]15. My books: Gryphendale, The Shadow of the Gryphon, and The Gryphon’s Handmaiden (being released January 29th)


So maybe it seems unfair to add my own books to this list, but since it is a list of my personal favorites, I’m being honest. I really do enjoy my own books and read them over again. I write the kind of books I like to read. These books are grown-up fairy tales with a Christian worldview. They are fun and end with hope. The characters are each different from each other in their own quirky ways, and I laugh at my own jokes. I also cry at my characters’ sorrows. I suppose that if I didn’t like my books then why would I expect anyone else to love them?

Some books profoundly influenced my life that did not make it onto this list. It’s hard to choose favorites when there are so many outstanding books. My criteria was whether I would read the books over and over again which I almost never do with most books. I also cheated by counting an entire series as a single book on the list. This is because I would recommend buying the series at the same time. I like books and can’t imagine not finishing a series! These are all classics for a good reason. I may do a “best of” this year at some point, but I don’t read many brand new books except by indie writers. The only reason is that I’m cheap like that.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 16, 2018 14:17

December 9, 2018

Book Review: The Lark and The Wren by Mercedes Lackey

[image error] Buy on Amazon – As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases

The blurb for this book was just an excerpt from one of the most important scenes in this tale. It described the main character, Rune, playing her fiddle for the Ghost of Skull Hill. This is also the image on the cover. I was hooked.


Mercedes Lackey is a master writer with over 140 published novels, and the quality of her stories are reliable. This novel tells the story of a fourteen-year-old girl named Rune who is the illegitimate daughter of a tavern wench. Rune struggles to learn the fiddle with the help of passing mineral who stay at the tavern on their way through town. The iconic scene in which she plays for the ghost because of a dare happens early in the book and is the turning point in which Rune runs away to try to become a Bard. She doesn’t know that women are not allowed in the Bard guild and has many adventures before she finds her path in life.


The story is fascinating and interesting all the way through. My only gripe and why I can’t give this book five stars on Amazon or Goodreads is the arbitrary inconsistency of Rune’s morals. I don’t expect non-Christian books to have Christian morals, so I don’t judge this book according to that. The problem is that at the beginning of the book, one of Rune’s motivations in running away is to not be like her mother and to protect herself from the boys in the village who want to rape her. Then it is mentioned in passing that she is deflowered by a passing character we hear of twice who actually has a crush on another character. The two of them are friends and come together with no expectations and leave as friends. Why? Just because? When Rune meets her main love interest, she then only has the desire to sleep with him. I am more convinced that he is in love with her than she with him. They sleep together just to marry later. This creates an emotionally dissatisfying love story, and I am left wondering if she will end up just sleeping with someone else after they are married.


The love story is not the main part of this novel, so this gripe is not enough to diminish the fun of the adventures. There isn’t one plot to this novel. It is entirely a character-based story that goes from one adventure to another. The only strangeness is how Mercedes Lackey has focused exclusively on Rune’s point of view for most of the book and then starts seeing the world through her love interests point of view periodically from halfway through the book on. It takes away from this being Rune’s story.


Overall, the story was exciting and enjoyable. The world was full, and the magic was just enough to keep you guessing. The sex is stated or implied without a full description. There is minimal cussing. There is little violence or fighting. I would recommend this book to older teens and adults who are not too sensitive to secular morals.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 09, 2018 16:30

December 4, 2018

New Cover for Gryphendale

[image error]


Gryphendale now has a new cover… again. Sorry, but being a graphic designer I just like designing new covers. I was wanting a cover that more clearly showed what this book was about and marketed it clearly as young adult fantasy fiction. Each time I think to myself that I can do better than the last time. So what do you think?

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 04, 2018 15:54

December 1, 2018

FREE Books for Christmas!

I am giving FREE books for Christmas! Just use the coupon codes below on Smashwords:

https://www.smashwords.com/books/view...



Gryphendale:

When Autumn, a human from our world, investigates a lone door in the woods, she is thrust into a faerie realm ruled by the evil wizard, Maldamien. Immediately, she is cursed to look like a child with her memories erased. She must depend on a scholarly satyr, Puck, to help break the curse and unravel the mysteries surrounding her, including the photo she holds of the missing faerie Queen. At the same time, Sage Goliad, a Huldra hero of the people, and Toble, the elderly Dryad inventor, must piece together the newest plot by Maldamien before he destroys the world and becomes a god.

The Shadow of the Gryphon:

Thirty years after the events of Gryphendale, a new adventure begins. Join three travelers on a witty adventure set in an exotic fairy world. An unusual Brownie adventurer named Arthur, and the twin princes, Timothy and Nathaniel, join forces to travel to the underside of their coin-shaped world to break the curse that has turned Nathaniel’s fiancee into stone. Arthur must face his traumatic past as he leads Nathaniel and Timothy on the same journey that killed his friends more than forty years before, getting them all stuck far from home with only one impossible way home. Things continue to go wrong when they learn that this curse is just the beginning of more significant problems threatening to destroy the Guardian of the Ocean. Struggling through a debilitating injury, Nathaniel must risk everything to save the ones he loves. Timothy must let go of his dark magic past to use his fire magic against the alliance that threatens to destroy the world with water.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 01, 2018 16:53 Tags: free-books, the-shadow-of-the-gryphon

November 30, 2018

The Audiobook is Here!

[image error]Its Here!!!



The Shadow of the Gryphon is now available on audiobook! It has taken us a long time to get this made, but I feel like it is worth it. Ken Chambers is the narrator, and he does a wonderful job with bringing to life the characters with unique accents and wonderful drama. If you have a subscription to Audible, you will be able to listen to it for free. If not, it’s for sale on Amazon and iTunes.





You can find it here: 











Join three travelers on a witty adventure set in an exotic fairy world. 





An unusual Brownie adventurer named Arthur and the twin princes, Timothy and Nathaniel, join forces to travel to the underside of their coin-shaped world to break the curse that has turned Nathaniel’s fiancee into stone. Arthur must face his traumatic past as he leads Nathaniel and Timothy on the same journey that killed his friends more than 40 years before, getting them all stuck far from home with only one impossible way home. 





Things continue to go wrong when they learn this curse is just the beginning of more significant problems threatening to destroy the guardian of the ocean. Struggling through a debilitating injury, Nathaniel must risk everything to save the ones he loves. Timothy must let go of his dark magic past to use his fire magic against the alliance that threatens to destroy the world with water.





 

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 30, 2018 05:16