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AnneWhitfield

AnneWhitfield

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Anne Whitfield is an Australian author, married with three children. She has written twelve historical novels, two contemporary novels and six short stories.
Her passions, apart from writing, are reading, researching, genealogy, collecting Victorian diaries, roaming historical sites, buying books and gardening.
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  • NS, Australia
  • member since July 18, 2007

Reviews

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Displaying 1-10 of 15 reviews
  • A Royal Duty: Updated with New Material
    • Rated 4 stars

    I read this book after years of not wanting to. I put it off because I didn't know how truthful it would be. My timing of reading it and the Royal wedding was bittersweet, as it made me sad that Diana wasn't there to see William get married.
    However, I did enjoy the book very much. I think Burrell was candid and truthful in many ways. I liked the background information of his life before starting his career with the Queen. I didn't know he worked for the Queen, or that his wife worked for the Duke of Edinburgh before they moved to the Prince and Princess of Wales' staff.
    I found his stories of the time with the Queen extremely interesting, especially her feeding the corgis herself.
    Overall, I felt very sorry for Burrell and his utter devotion for Diana, the Princess of Wales, which left a large gap in his life when she died, that even his wife and sons didn't seem to fill. I wasn't surprised to hear that he has since divorced his wife. That is rather tragic.
    I think he was lost after the princess’s death and the subsequent court case shattered him and his world, which is understandable.

    If you like learning about royal life behind closed doors, then this is a good book to read.

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Monday, May 2, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Moghul
    • Rated 4 stars

    Blurb

    India 1620: India is ruled by the son of the great Akbar, and is about to pass his crown to one of his sons. Brian Hawksworth, ship's captain and emissary of King James, must choose sides, but will he choose correctly? The future of England, and of India, depend on it.
    He had come to India to open trade for "barbaric" England and squeeze out the Portuguese, who try to kill him at every opportunity. But once on land, he becomes captivated by the country and the people. The beauty and romance of the exquisite Moghul Empire seduce him from his material goals to a new quest for supreme sensuality in music, mystical visions, and sacred lovemaking.
    From pulse-pounding sea battles, to tiger hunts, war elephants, harems and forbidden love--The Moghul takes you on a breath-taking tour of the India that existed before the British Raj.

    This is a long book! I have to say I enjoyed the first third of the book, but then, for me, it got bogged down in Indian politics of the time and made the reading a slow progress.
    The Moghul is not for the faint-heated and not one that you can easily put down for a few days and pick back up again. I did this and found myself lost. What makes it difficult is not only the foreign names, but the many characters. I am one who loves books that have numerous characters, but this book, with its unfamiliar place names and politics of the rulers of India at the time, was tough going in parts.
    The descriptions are wonderful and at the beginning the plot is clear and enjoyable, but sadly the middle to the end of the book lost some of its magic because of the weight of intrigue and I lost interest in those fighting for the kingdom.
    If the author had cut back on the politics I would have enjoyed the story much better.
    I did learn much about the early times of India though, which was very interesting.
    I read The Moghul by Thomas Hoover on my Kindle.

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Wednesday, April 27, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Good Wife Strikes Back
    • Rated 4 stars

    Blurb:
    After nineteen years of being the perfect wife to an ambitious politician, Fanny Savage is restless. Tired of merely keeping quiet and looking good at public engagements, she remembers the career she abandoned and the life she left behind as a successful partner in her father’s Italian wine business. She has devoted two decades to being the Good Wife. Was it worth it after all? Could it be time for a trip back to Italy—to the pleasures of sun, wine, and food? Could it be time for . . . a change?

    This is the first book by this author that I have read. I enjoyed it very much. The copy I read was the UK version and called simply, The Good Wife, which I think is a much better title than The Good Wife Strikes Back.
    The story is of Fanny and how, after a series of events, finds that she doesn't really know herself. After years of being wrapped up in her husband’s politic life, being a mother, daughter and carer for her alcoholic sister-in-law, she realises that she lost along the way the things she wants to do.
    Fanny’s journey is very realistic and portrayed well. I felt perhaps the ending wasn’t as clear cut as I would have liked. I felt she could have asserted herself more clearly and make define changes so that her husband would be less selfish, but on the whole, this is a very good story.

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Sunday, April 17, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • Silent in the Grave
    1 of 1 members found this review helpful.
    • Rated 5 stars

    This book reaffirms why I adore reading. Deanna Raybourne has created such a wonderful cast of characters for this book, which is also the first book in a series about Lady Julia Grey.
    Set in late Victorian London, Silent in The Grave is a masterful tale of secrets and mystery told in first person through Lady Julia.
    Within pages I was swept up in the lives of the characters.
    Ms Raybourne has excelled in setting the moods, the scenery, the foibles and the uniqueness of Victorian London. Her characters are real and true, the descriptions enjoyable and clear. The plot is weaved successfully with the odd twist and turn to keep the reader guessing and delighting in this story that leaps from the page and takes you on a wonderful journey.

    I can’t wait to start the second book.

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Monday, March 7, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Ravenscar Dynasty
    • Rated 3 stars

    I was disappointed in this novel - not in the plot, which I thought was fine, but I felt the book was in need of a good edit. Repeated information and unwieldy dialogue tags got on my nerves.
    it was a long book but a good edit could have made it much shorter.

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Monday, November 10, 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Race: A Novel of Grit, Tactics, and the Tour de France
    • Rated 5 stars

    For anyone who loves cycling or the Tour De France, you must read this book. It's takes you right there into the hero's mind as he completes a mountain stage.

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Wednesday, September 17, 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Duking Days: Rebellion
    • Rated 5 stars

    For those who love well researched historical novels, don't pass up Duking Days by Anita Davison.

    The story of Helena Woulfe, and her family, as they struggle to survive the impact of the Monmouth rebellion is an enjoyable read, full of great details and descriptions, with a likeable heroine, and a wonderful supporting cast. We witness the emotional growth of Helena from a country girl to a young woman living in the heart of fashionable London.

    Duking Days is a satisfying read, and a definite keeper

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Thursday, January 17, 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Eliza's Hope

    Eliza's Hope

    by Vicki Gaia
    • Rated 5 stars

    Eliza's Hope, set in New York in the bustling era of 1910, is a moving story of a family evolving and adapting to a changing world, and also changes within their family.
    For Eliza is is coming to terms with a past that haunts her, and falling in love with the one man who has always been the most important in her life.

    I really enjoyed reading Eliza's Hope. Vicki Gaia writes a stirring tale of love, friendship and above all, hope, and set in a time of change within one of the greatest cities in the world - New York.
    I highly recommend Eliza's Hope. You won't be disappointed.

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Sunday, November 11, 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Long Distance Love
    • Rated 5 stars

    Fleur Stanthorpe, an Australian, arrives in Whitby, England to live out a dream after surviving cancer. She's to open a bookshop café and experience the English way of life for the summer before returning home and settling down.
    Only she hasn't counted on meeting gorgeous Irishman, Patrick Donnelly. Their attraction is instant - their goals a world apart. He is looking for a solid relationship for the first time since his divorce five years ago. She is having her last fling at freedom before returning home to family and responsibilities.
    Their problems are more than surviving a hot summer of romance, but wondering what will happen when the summer draws to an end and Fleur returns to the other side of the world.

    The Gentle Wind’s Caress
    1876 - On the death of her mother and sister, Isabelle Gibson must fend for herself and her brother in a privately-run workhouse. To escape a life of drudgery and near-rape at the hands of the matron’s son, Neville Peacock, Isabelle agrees to marry Farrell, a moorland farmer she has never met. But Farrell is a drunkard and a bully in constant feud with his landlord, Ethan Harrington. When Farrell bungles a robbery and deserts her, Isabelle and Ethan are thrown together as she struggles to run the farm. Both are married and must hide their growing love. Despite the secrecy, Isabelle draws strength from Ethan and his best friend, Hamish MacGregor, as she faces the return of her long lost father and Neville Peacock. And when Farrell returns to claim his wife, tragedy strikes, changing all their lives forever.

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Friday, July 20, 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Sunne in Splendour
    • Rated 5 stars

    An all time favourite of mine. Great medieval!

    AnneWhitfield wrote this review Wednesday, July 18, 2007. ( reply | permalink )
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Displaying 1-10 of 15 reviews