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Sweet as Candy
Curse of the lending librariesMaria Addams stood Jared Branden up at the alter. Maria jilted him because she wasn't convinced he loved her. Because of his unexpressive family, Jared had always had problems verbalizing his feelings. Ten years later, they have both have moved on with their lives, but both are unmarried. (Well, Maria is a dowager countessa after a "grand tour," but she is available.) Jared has since became a bit of a wastrel while Maria, always the romantic, has spent her life rescuing friends from unwanted entanglements. They meet again at a house party Jared's uncle, Lord Brixted, is giving for Valentine's Day. Learning Brixted, who is unaware of their history, has set his cap for Maria, Jared tricks his uncle into making the former lovers partners again, even if for the temporary games of a ball.
Maria is in the thick of another scheme to save the niece of a domineering duke from an unwanted alliance when Jared comes into her life again. She is surprised he still has the same giddy affect on her as he did when she was seventeen, although he is an irritant when he tries to talk her out of helping the "hen-witted" girl she's made a crusade. He comes to Maria's aid while she's being threatened by the duke, and her conviction against Jared starts to melt. When she turns down his marriage proposal a second time, he does what he thinks it will take to change her mind.
The characters in this 1994 novel are one of Carroll's finest ensembles. Maria's quest for the romantic, nurtured by the many gothic romances she read while growing up, brings about some of the funniest Regency contretemps that can be found since the work of Georgette Heyer. Not only do the conflicts between the two lovers provide some good laughs, but the supporting characters are also vivid and quirky, especially Miss Lucas, the "damsel in distress"; Alice, Maria's literal abigail; and Frontenac, Jared's self-righteous valet.
Whether or not this book adhers to its holiday marketing is a no-brainer. Any romance category story--no matter what the subgenre--captures the spirit of Valentine's Day. Carroll, regardless, has sprinkled this one with a Valentine's Day ball and cards, so it's overt.
It's also interesting to note that Maria's eccentricities are timeless. Although today's media has increased the methods of how these stories are delivered, females of all ages are still inspired by romance, but most keep their yearnings in perspective. Anyone looking for a good drawing room comedy is sure to love THE VALENTINE'S DAY BALL. This is an example of Carroll at her best.


Great book for helping create a memorable wedding experience
Fabulous guide to carving your own pathMy husband is from New Delhi, India and we finally opted to have one wedding there and one in the states. We did both with great style and for far less than we could have had a medium sized wedding in New York City, our current residence. Reading about other people's individual choices really helped us figure out which traditions we wanted to skip and which ones we wanted to keep. Surprisingly, in the end both weddings were fairly traditional for their respective cultures but without extraneous and superficial fluff.
We had considered every conceivable option from a simple elopement to various long distance locals to trying to combine the Christian and Hindu cultural ceremonies. Finally, my best friend loaned me her copy with her highest recommendations. I loved the book and it really helped me sort out what I did and didn't want.
Good Luck!
All the advice you'll need is right in this bookOf all the books I read when planning my wedding (and I read a lot!), this one gave me the courage to have the wedding I really wanted, and the strength to not be guilted or bullied into the wedding I didn't want.
Everytime I hear that someone is planning a wedding, I recommend this book. No others. Just this one. It's really all the advice you'll need.


More fun with Patricia Ann and Mary AliceThis time the sisters get involved in a death at an art gallery featuring "outsider" art (think quilts, primitive oils, etc.) The book is strong on humor, sisterly chat (and teasing), winter in Birmingham and teacher love. The mystery is pretty weak -- particularly the conclusion which both comes out of nowhere and is way too convenient.
Bottom line -- a fun, light read of the cozy kind. As another reviewer mentioned about Anne George, it's nice to find an author that you can recommend to your senior citizen mother.
I'm Hooked!
Love these sisters!dialogue is clever, the situations are rather unique, and the gallery owner has been deemosoed. Read it to find out. I LOVE Joan Hess. Her tales of Maggody have often made me laugh out loud. Now, after reading all of Hess's, I have a new Southern author to seek out. Patricia Anne and Mary Alice (the sisters) are my new "light read." Funny, I finished this one in 2 days while my "serious" book kept calling to me. I'm off to Border's to find more of Anne George.


an older poet
Ohmigoddess, Jim Carroll rocks!
Jim Carroll at his best!!!

Hey Oprah!, Here's One of the Best Books of the Year!
Don't stereotype Carroll
a wild ride.. destination unknownBut I didn't expect to be as sucked in as I was to the story and its various turns and bizarre events. I could not put this book down.. and as soon as I finished reading it I started it again. After the first read I was left with questions -- I think I took some of the more fantastic elements of the plot a bit literally -- the answers to which become more apparent on the second read -- which I approached in terms of looking at the life of Frannie McCabe, much as the first reviewer suggested. But dont see this as a reason NOT to dive into The Wooden Sea. It was well worth the journey!
The writing style is a joy: very conversational with a pearl that made me smile every few pages and at least one stunner per chapter. Carroll made me care about these people and I plan to buy his others books as soon as I finish writing this review!
And I liked the idea that seemingly odd things would occur that I did not expect -- life throws us wingers every day, okay maybe not as strange as those in the book, but I appreciate the wonder he presents the reader. Its a small book that tells a fun story and packs a lot in besides that if you care to investigate. The notion of our various "selves" at different ages being present to help us out of jams and to consult with about life's problems is a provacative one. Carroll is an author to keep an eye on, no doubt. Read this, again and again.


A Very Good Study Bible Overall
A Very Good Study Bible Overall
Two-in One

More mystery than fantasy
One of Carroll's best, deals with murderous obsessionBy Bram Eisenthal
It was 1985 when I first discovered one of the horror field's greatest latter-day writers. I asked a clerk at Ottawa's House of Speculative Fiction if he could recommend someone really unusual - I had my fill of early Stephen King at the time - and he immediately whipped out a book and thrust it at me. "Land of Laughs," he said. "It's unbelievable... really different."
I had never even heard of Jonathan Carroll before and I generally knew my horror authors, so I was perturbed. How good could he be? Published in 1980 and the New York-born resident of Vienna's first novel, The Land of Laughs lived up to the clerk's billing. Highly imaginative and very frightening, it showcased the talents of a writer who excels at setting a macabre stage by allowing the horror to creep up on you v-e-r-r-r-y slowly. His tales are happy, funny and whimsical to start with, but chapter by chapter, Carroll adds sinister elements. Before you realize it, you're staring death squarely in the face. His second, Voice of Our Shadow, is even more shocking for its sinister stealth.
Kissing the Beehive is Carroll's tenth novel; one of the more recent ones, The Panic Hand, is a Bram Stoker Award-winning anthology that I highly recommend. As with the others, Beehive begins innocently enough, with a few stragglers rather than the swarm yet to come. Author Sam Bayer is in a slump, meeting with his agent in an attempt to untangle the cobwebs responsible for his terrible writer's block. His pending divorce is really creating havoc. Later, at a book signing, he meets an incredibly gorgeous fan, a California blonde named Veronica Lake. She really knows her Bayer, down to her business card, which contains an image from his novel The Tatooed City.
Bayer jogs his sluggish memory in an attempt to birth ideas. He drives to his hometown of Crane's View, visits old haunts, looks through high-school yearbooks and greets former acquaintances. The trip is the perfect panacea for his blues, as Bayer delves into an unsolved boyhood murder mystery, that of a free-spirited young woman named Pauline Ostrova. Her nude body, which had spawned so many adolescent fantasies, had been found by the young Bayer. Over the years, he had shunted the awful memory aside, but now he seizes the opportunity to gather important facts and unburden his soul.
During the excitement, unable to get her out of his thoughts, Bayer contacts Veronica Lake, they meet again and make love. He tells her about the burgeoning plot for his new novel and she is thrilled about her confidante status. Remember, she is his number one fan, like the character in Stephen King's Misery... only much more dangerous.
Bayer heads back to Crane's View, his teenaged daughter Cassandra in tow. He meets up with Frannie McCabe, childhood bad-boy turned chief of police, and brings up the Ostrova mystery. The police chief has his own take on the dossier and suspects that the town's crime boss, Gordon Cadmus, since murdered, had something to do with her demise. She had been seeing his son David, now a Hollywood film producer... and the old man as well.
In typical Carroll fashion, the story begins its slow spiral into madness just as Bayer and McCabe initiate their joint sleuthing. Also, something is terribly wrong with Veronica Lake. Bayer uncovers unsettling facts about her, most notably the fact she was two-time porn movie headliner Marzi Pan and a member of an infamous suicide cult. He decides not to see her any more, which first saddens and then infuriates her. Meanwhile, someone with knowledge of their unofficial Ostrova investigation is following Bayer and McCabe around, as well as videotaping unspeakable things, like the murder of David Cadmus on an L.A. street.
Lake, whom Bayer is trying to ignore, is in-his-face throughout. She slyly interacts with all his witnesses, subtly threatens his daughter and her boyfriend and, after McCabe barely survives an attempt on his life, befriends the cop. We also learn that she is a deft film technician and has been taping lots of footage, including shots of Bayer taken in a suit he had discarded years before and explicit images of them having sex.
The horror escalates when Cassandra goes missing, every father's nightmare but nothing compared to Bayer's ultimate scenario. His novel has taken the most sinister twist possible.
Jonathan Carroll is still unknown to many fans of mainstream horror literature, rather surprising in light of the stellar quality of every single one of his works. The author humbly pays homage to "Pat Conroy, Stephen King, Michael Moorcock, Paul West - Friends, Mentors, Wizards" - in the dedication, but I dare say that he has earned the right to appear right up there with them on that marquee.
In Doubleday's press release on Kissing the Beehive, King is equally complimentary, one master of the macabre to another. "A stunning novel of obsession and memory by the always amazing Jonathan Carroll. A brilliant writer - Jonathan Carroll is as scary as Hitchcock, when he isn't being as funny as Jim Carrey."
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Kissing the Beehive Nan A. Talese, an imprint of Doubleday HC, 232 pgs., $31.95
One of Jonathan Carroll's most accessible books to date

About Vietnam?
A must read for any 20th century history buff............"American Requiem" should be required reading for any 20th century history course and it might not be a bad read for a catholicism course. Since I was raised catholic and still practice in my own way, I could sympathize with the agony Mr. Carroll and his father experienced when it came to their faith. Fortunately, James Carroll was able to vocalize the conflict surrounding his love of God and a church that gives him spiritual balance and the problems with that same church's power and its decisions that appear to be made sometimes more for political gain rather than spiritual enrichment. The real tragedy falls in Mr. Carroll's father's story. Although the senior Carroll's professional life is nothing short of fascinating, his personal life reminds us how empty it all can be if we do not acknowledge the things that are truly important.
This was the first "history" based novel that I was unable to put down. Go get it now.
powerful and evocative

One of the best books on how to reclaim our integrity.
A Book That Will Free You and Empower You
Excellent summary of the teachings of a modern day nagual.

Good reference
Perfect 10! Every fan should own this book
A ton of information
Crossing swords and words with her this very morn was not something he was expecting, but they could not seem to exchange friendly words between them if their lives depended on it. Maria did not know why he was here - but finding him standing there - handsome as ever - always seemed to weaken her knees until he opened his mouth to say something so 'Jared like' to hasten up all parries to his sword thrusts. Would he interfere with her latest scheme to save a young damsel from a forced marriage arranged by her cruel guardian?
I really enjoyed this very light regency romance - the characters were darling and their very witty and biting 'word plays' were highly amusing. Ms. Carroll also offers up a wonderful cast of secondary characters - from the stuffy and irreverent valet to the 'clueless' damsel in distress. Very, very funny and a delightful read I can certainly recommend