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Showing posts with label Winter of the Passion Flower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winter of the Passion Flower. Show all posts

Winter Of The Passion Flower



Miss Indigo de Vargas, a young gentlewoman of aristocratic Spanish lineage, lives on the Cornish coast in the 19th century, as the Crystal Palace exhition approaches.  She runs a futuristic holiday resort fuelled by the inventions of her late father, a scientific genius indeed.  That her late father was a man of the future is evident given the fact that he reportedly expired on a mission to the twenty first century. However, it is quite clear that the gentleman would have done well to have paid less attention to his scientific inventions and a little more to his daughter's moral formation.  The young woman's behaviour is simply scandalous.  Rumour has it that she has taken more than one lover to her bed and that she tires of gentleman easily.  She exhibits some overtly masculine traits which belie her feminine appearance - she tends to take the lead in her relationships with gentlemen. This is way too scandalous....

Oh, enough, enough.  That's my Victorian alter ego, Miss Mariah Perryman taking over.  She's a bit of a prude, don't mind her at all.  The Victorians did throw a bit of a blanket over the excesses of ages past.

No doubt, Indigo's throroughly liberated.  She was, I believe, full of inventive spirit and that can't exist in a straitjacket, moral or otherwise.  This book was my introduction to the steampunk genre and I was impressed.  Steampunk, is a sub-genre of historical, firmly set in the age of steam complete with the inventive, pioneering spirit of that age.  Indigo takes time travel in her stride. Not to mention ray guns and shape shifters.  She just hops into her rattling contraption of a time machine, cogs awhirl, brass fittings notwithstanding and off she goes.  She's just as much at home in jeans and a tee shirt as she is in a corset and a bustier.  

A delightfully humorous read, innovative and memorable.  Highly recommended.


This book is now re-released on Amazon.  Get your copy here or if you are in the UK, here.

Summer of the Moon Flower by Annie Seaton

Reviewed by Maria





Oh, dear!  Where do I put my review for a steampunk novel?  Paranormal?  Historical?  Fantasy?  I'd put my review for WINTER OF THE PASSION FLOWER into Historical Romance Reviews.  But there are elements of paranormality and fantasy in steampunk.  So my review for SUMMER OF THE MOON FLOWER goes into Paranormal Reviews.  We really should set up a Steampunk Review Blog here on Romance Book Haven.

SUMMER OF THE MOON FLOWER by Annie Seaton is a worthy successor to WINTER OF THE PASSION FLOWER.  This time we meet Sofia de Vargas, the younger sister of the more famous Indigo, the country matron and mother of four boisterous sons whom we last saw, pre-settling down,  time travelling in the Amazon jungle.  And no, she wasn't looking for free books (bad joke), she was searching for the elusive passion flower which held potent properties within - properties worth killing for.  Well, Sofia is on no less a noble quest, she is overseeing research into the elusive moon flower, which has life giving and life enhancing properties.  However, an underground secret society which everyone would have thought of as extinct by the  turn of the twentieth century (the date in which this steampunk is set) is on a quest to oppose Sofia's research and they will stop at nothing, even at murder, in order to achieve their dastardly aims.  Sofia's beauty and feisty nature stops her would be assassin in his tracks and supplies the romance which fuels this delightful story.  The ladylike Sofia and her enormous Scottish laird make an unlikely yet formidable couple.

I'd define steampunk as Victorian sci-fi actually.  It's got that innovative buzz of a time when technology was pushing out it's frontiers.  Perambulators, dirigibles and automatons throng the pages of this story, giving the Victorian steam age a buzz of excitements.  Wonderful.  An engrossing read, as wonderfully quirky as its predecessor, which is due for re-release soon if I'm not mistaken.  The Vargas ladies are worthy heroines who will hold your attention to till the final page.  One would almost be tempted to ask 'who needs heroes when heroines like this exist?'  But of course we need the heroes, don't we girls?  What would we do without them after all?

You can pick up a copy of this little gem of a read here.  Or if you are in the UK, here

4/5 stars.

Reviewed by Desere :

If you love action books filled with danger, suspense, mystery and twists and turns to keep you on the edge of your seats,but also like myself love when a bit of paranormal gets mixed it then this is the book for you.

Annie Seaton is one of the best author of our time and she delivers every time. Be it a good old fashioned romance or a steam-punk or call it paranormal action suspense, you name it this author can give me as reader everything I expect from her books.

In Summer of the moon flower she has certainly done so again. The book had enough action and suspense to make a James Bond movie look like a low budget action gone wrong. Not to mention the paranormal and steam-punk elements, that were so stunningly combined and incorporated brining forth a tale of a heroine that will stay with me as reader for a long time.

The author has a particular unique manner of writing that leaves me as reader with vivid descriptions, amazing "time zones" and memorable characters. The book left me with the impression that woman heroic or not can and will prove their worth if given the chance.I will add that the author not only brings that message into full play but also just blows you away!

The book kept me on the edge of my seat, seeking more to find the answers and hidden message beneath. This was not only a emotional and memorable read but one that will leave you entranced and wanting more.

Brilliant work Annie!

5/5 star review