Good morning all on this rather nippy but sunny Easter Sunday morning. The sun has got their hat on but by bunkum its cold outside this morning with even a touch of frost, so I thought I pop in here and tell you about my March reads instead.
As our little crafting group can't meet up at the moment due to COVID 19 restrictions we thought it might be nice to include a book club as part of our little gang as we can take our time reading the selected book and then have a zoom meeting to discuss and of course there may be a little glass of something and some chocolate involved in these meet ups, but that's ok isn't it?
The City of Tears is based some 10 years from where we left Minou and Piet, they are now married and have two children of their own. The Wars of Religion continue across France and those who once were your friends and neighbours have now become your enemies. A wedding is to take place between the Catholic crown and the Huguenot King in a bid to bring balance and peace to France. Minou, Piet and their family receive an invitation to the wedding and although Minou has her reservations about attending it is decided they should go, but what they cannot know is that their oldest enemy Vidal will also be there. Within days of the marriage and on the eve of the feast of St. Bartholomew Minou's family will be scattered to the four winds when violence breaks out within the city and unbeknown to Minou one of her beloved children will be lost after sneaking out of the house alone, disappeared without a trace. Minou and Piet search for their child but when a bloodstained bonnet is found they fear the worse and make the hardest decision of their lives, to leave France to find refuge in Amsterdam. In the City of Tears we find the family fighting to stay together whist they continue to try and find out what happened to their missing child. Minou and Piet torture themselves everyday not knowing if they are alive or dead. If alive where have they been all this time and who has been looking after them and if dead the one things neither can contemplate, what happened to them and where is their last resting place.
I am not a huge fan of Kate Mosse novels the period of history she likes to write about, especially French history is not a period of history I know anything about and therefore I wouldn't know if it was factually accurate or not. I have read a couple of her other novels in the past, they have all been beautifully written with a good command of language and the text tends to flow through the storyline very well. I thought the City of Tears a better storyline than The Burning Chambers but for me personally I am glad that I decided to read the first in the series to get the background of all the characters and to a certain extent you could easily loose elements of the characters and their stories if you haven't read the first.
I would recommend this series of books and I will definitely read the third when it is released.
What a good idea to do a book group, then zoom to discuss it. And of course some chocolate and a glass should be at hand. Sweet about daughter and her Dad with the same book. My Dad hasn't read in years, is the same age though. We've been using Facetime once a week to communicate from his Assisted Living Center. Staff set's it up for them since the Covid. It's good her Dad has continued to read to keep his mind going.
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