Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Can't Wait Wednesday: The Formidable Women Who Shaped Medieval Europe: Power and Patronage at the Burgundian Court by Susan Abernethy

 


For this week's Can't Wait Wednesday hosted by Tressa at the book blog, Wishful Endings, I'm featuring, The Formidable Women Who Shaped Medieval Europe: Power and Patronage at the Burgundian Court, by Susan Abernethy. This book is all about the Burgundian women of Europe who shaped politics through their connections with the rulers of the Valois dynasty in Burgundy. 

Before you think this is boring and worth skipping (I would have too at one time), consider that these women were instrumental in and all around Europe in the 14th-16th Centuries and involved in politics that carried to the players in the Wars of the Roses, the Tudor dynasty and on. I would not ever have thought I'd be interested in what happened in Burgundy or France but over time have seen how the history there was the beginning of these other more well known stories of Edward IV and Henry Tudor. 

I'm sure to learn a lot from this very unique book. I have a really hard time finding anything about the time period from 1400's-1600's France and Burgundy. I'm excited to see what new things I can learn. Trying to get it on NetGalley as an ARC. Fingers crossed!



History/Medieval History

 October 31, 2025

Book description courtesy of NetGalley

The formation of the Burgundian Empire by the four Valois Dukes of Burgundy would not have happened without the formidable royal and aristocratic women in their lives. These women, the wives, daughters, nieces, granddaughters and great-granddaughters, were vigorously engaged in the administration of the Burgundian empire, acting as governors and regents, making appointments, securing and making strategic marriages, raising taxes, negotiating treaties, engaging in cultural, religious and political patronage, giving birth to heirs and aiding in the military endeavours of their husbands. The history of these women involves numerous countries in Europe, including England, Scotland, France, Brittany, the Low Countries, Italy, Spain, the Holy Roman Empire, and many others.

Some of these women lived in luxurious comfort, and others were bullied and badgered into turning over some or all of their patrimony, allowing these all-powerful men to build an influential and powerful new state comprised of a numerous and varied collection of territories in Western Europe that existed from the late fourteenth century until the early sixteenth century.

We will meet women who were the daughters of kings, emperors, dukes and counts and even a queen regnant and a saint. The Valois dukes fully entrusted their wives with ruling in their stead while away fighting military and political wars. They used a deliberate policy of making marriages for their daughters and other female relatives into the many houses of Europe for political and territorial gains. In the end, the last Valois duke, Charles the Bold, put in motion a marriage for his daughter Mary, which would eventually bring about the end of the mighty Burgundian state, allowing it to be ruled by the House of Habsburg and absorbed into the Holy Roman Empire.







Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Mayhem in the Mountains by Kelly Oliver (Fiona Figg and Kitty Lane Book 3)

 

Publication Date:
August 15, 2023

Genre:  
Cozy Mysteries/Historical Mysteries

Length:   
 298 pages

Series: 

Fiona Figg and Kitty Lane Mysteries



Book description courtesy of Goodreads

1918 Italy

When a deadly blizzard traps Fiona Figg and Kitty Lane in the Dolomite Mountains, it's all downhill from here.

Their hotel is snowed-in, and no one can get in or out. Then a man is found dead in his locked hotel room - and the killer is still on the premises. But with no murder weapon and too many suspects, their investigation is treading on thin ice.

The colder it gets outside, the hotter it gets inside as Fiona squares off with both her beloved Archie and her nemesis Fredricks. With her love-life on a slippery-slope, Fiona risks everything in one bold move...

As fast and twisty as a downhill slalom, this slick new cozy from Kelly Oliver will have you melting into a puddle of laughter.

Snap in and enjoy the ride.


My Thoughts

The covers for these books are absolutely gorgeous. If nothing else, I started reading them for that reason alone. I still find this funny.....that a pretty cover can draw me in. I am a history buff and love serious books all day too, so it is funny to find as a grown adult that cozy mysteries and pretty artwork can make me drop everything and read them. But here we are, lol!

While this is listed as Fiona Figg and Kitty Lane Book 3 it is actually Book 6 for me in the series because the first three books are just with Fiona Figg as the main character. I do like the addition of Kitty, who seems to be a shrinking violet on the surface yet underneath is a trained operative well able to fend for herself. The relationship between the two women is amusing as a side plot because Kitty and Fiona are not that far apart in age yet Kitty is always pretending to be so much younger and it grates on Fiona's nerves. So I like the added bonus...plus Kitty's dog, Poppy is a cute addition.

Sunday, September 28, 2025

Stacking the Shelves #69

 


Stacking the Shelves is a weekly meme hosted by Reading Reality. It's a place to showcase any books I have purchased, borrowed, or been lucky enough to have been given an advance copy of. 

Hope you find something that looks interesting to you or that makes you remember a favorite book you need to finish. Happy reading ya'll!




The Big Four by Agatha Christie (Hercule Poirot Book Five)

LIbby Audiobook Borrow: Free

I have decided to just continue with Hercule Poirot books in order. I have read so many for the Read Christie challenges but there are gaps and he's my favorite of them all! In this one he tries to figure out the identity of a mysterious man who appears in his bedroom covered in dust and then falls. Sounds very strange but I have to find out how on earth she makes a story out of that!



Nemesis by Catherine Hanley 

Sample: Free (will buy if I read the sample and love it!)

I absolutely love Catherine Hanley's books and when she's on a podcast featuring a new one I always listen. This is her latest and as always she picks unique subjects and topics. I confess this is just a sample as the book is expensive even on Kindle but if I love it I will buy it or try to get it at the library. It is about Phillip II of France and his interaction with the Plantagenets. There aren't many books devoted entirely to him so I will learn a lot. She is a great writer of medieval history.



The Last Queen: A Novel by C.W. Gortner 

Kindle Purchase: $1.99 with digital points

This is a novel about Juana of Castile. I find her fascinating. Way more interesting honestly than her sister Catherine (probably because there is so much written about her and I've read a lot!). Juana's story is tragic and whether or not she really was "mad" is still up for debate. Some say her circumstances drove her to insanity as she navigates court politics in Flanders. I hope this is a good, historical read as I've heard good things about Gortner's books before. 














Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Can't Wait Wednesday: Murder on the S.S. Cleopatra by Sara Rosett (Lady Traveler in Egypt Book Two)




 
For this week's Can't Wait Wednesday hosted by Tressa at the book blog, Wishful Endings, I'm featuring, Murder on the S.S. Cleopatra, by Sara Rosett. I have wanted to start this series before and hadn't gotten around to it. I love all things set in Egypt and the first book, Murder Among the Pyramids, is one I keep forgetting about! So now there is a new one to catch up with as well. I really need to add these to my TBR pile for winter. It is very Agatha Christie like in that our heroine is cruising down the Nile and encounters a murder. Set in the 1920's it should be a fun read. I hope you've found something you can't wait for! Happy reading ya'll!





Cozy Mysteries

 October 21, 2025

Book description courtesy of Goodreads


Luxury, lies, and murder on a Nile cruise

Join Blix Windway, an adventurous lady traveler, on a journey down the Nile in 1924. An eclectic mix of passengers boards the steamer, including a captain of industry, a former stunt-girl reporter turned lady of the manor, an archaeologist, an American teacher, a British doctor and his invalid wife, and a German photographer.

When a passenger is found dead, the elegant cruise turns into a floating crime scene. With everyone confined on board, tensions rise and secrets surface. Even her traveling companion, Hildy Honeyworth, is behaving as if she has something to hide. Blix must navigate the treacherous waters of the investigation and uncover the truth.

Set against the stunning backdrop of the Nile River and the ancient wonders of Egypt, this classic whodunit is the second book in the 1920s Lady Traveler in Egypt series from USA Today bestselling author Sara Rosett.




Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Books On My Fall 2025 TBR List

 


 


This week's theme for Top Ten Tuesday, hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl, is to list the books on my TBR list for fall. I love posts like this but I usually end up with many unread by the next season. Still, it's fun to look ahead with the best intentions and I truly love going to other blogs to see what they have posted. So in no particular order, here are ten books I'd like to finish before the end of December. Happy reading ya'll!

Click on the book title to link to GoodReads:

1. Murder in an Irish Castle by Verity Bright
2. The Enemy and Miss Innes by Martha Keyes
3. Hammer of the Scots by Jean Plaidy
4. A Fatal Encounter in Tuscany by Vivian Conroy
5. Murder at Everham Hall by Benedict Brown
6. Midwinter Murder by Agatha Christie
7. Tudor Dawn by David Field
8. Secrets of a Scottish Isle by Erica Ruth Neubauer