Showing posts with label Jemima Brigges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jemima Brigges. Show all posts

Monday, 28 August 2023

Book Review: Counting the Cost by Jemima Brigges

 Book Review

 


Basic Details:

Book Title: Counting the Cost

Subtitle: Linmore - The Early Years (Linmore Series Book 2)

Author: Jemima Brigges

Genre: Literature and Fiction

Part of a series? Yes

Order in series: 2

Best read after earlier books in series? Yes

Available: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/50351036-counting-the-cost

Overall score:

I scored this book 5/5

⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️

Short Summary of the book:

A young gentlewoman who loses all and becomes a maid for the gentry. A rape resulting in pregnancy. A child taken from her and left as foundling. What will become of them all? What adversities do both have to overcome and will they?

What I liked about the book:

The book is full of heart-wrenching moments, egging on the underdogs, with at the centre a strong woman.

What I didn’t like about the book:

I enjoyed the entire book.

My favourite bits in the book:

I enjoyed the entire book.

My least favourite bits in the book:

The book was enjoyable in its entirety.

Any further books in the series? Any more planned by this author?

This is the second book I’ve read by this author, and I look forward to reading more.

What books could this be compared to and why?

This is a period drama.

Recommendation:

In summary, I would recommend this book for the following readers:

 

Children

No

Young Adult

Maybe

Adult

Yes

 

If you like period drama, this book may be the book for you.

I look forward to reading more by this author.

Book Description by Author:

It is generally assumed that a woman’s reputation once lost can never be restored...Counting the Cost – (Linmore - The Early Years) – begins the story of a young gentlewoman, who, having overcome adversity, sets out to help others less fortunate. Set in Pre-Regency rural Shropshire (1794-1808) at a time when the common man had few rights and women had none – other than those their menfolk deigned to bestow on them.(Reissued as the Prelude to Living in the Shadows).Necessity drives a hard bargain and Maria knows, from bitter experience, that a woman alone must do what she can to survive. Ten years ago, her life was in ruins, and she would have died but for the help of a gypsy herbalist. Afterwards, she determined to restore her good name and reputation, even if it took subterfuge.Since then Maria has, by sacrificing her youthful looks, become Miss Dinchope, housekeeper, the epitome of primness and virtue. Her past is forgotten but she has learned that respectability has many faces; some of which hide dark secrets that are every bit as threatening as her own experience.Appalled by the degree of ignorance and sloth, Maria adopts a regimented approach to raise standards in the household, and by degrees succeeds in her endeavour – but no one knows what the effort of being constantly on her guard against discovery, costs her.Sometimes in the lonely hours of the night, she vows to move on to better things but anger, an emotion she contrives to hide, drives her to protect the vulnerable servants for which she has responsibility. One little pauper child, a new housemaid, touches an inexplicable chord of memory, but where she has met the girl before – and when, escapes her.Nell Walcote is an anomaly, unlike any other servant in the household. Despite the girl’s poor upbringing, she seems strangely refined and eager to learn. She can read and write her letters, and Miss Dinchope determines to teach her the right way to behave. The prospect so appeals to the housekeeper’s sense of Christian charity, she feels it is her duty to train the girl for a better place in service, even if she must defer her own plans to gain advancement.To avoid the pitfalls, she encountered as a girl, Maria insists that Nell avoids men. Will the guidance of a maiden lady of indeterminate age be enough to keep her safe – and for how long will it be effective? A heart-warming story, which gives a rare insight into the lives of women to whom kindness, honesty and friendship mean more than money and social class – an introduction to an interlinking series that is filled with love, loss, life and laughs.First published as a standalone, Counting the Cost now sets the scene for The Foundling’s Path Trilogy. The story is the same; only the edition and the cover have changed.

About the Author:

Book Review: Brothers in Arms by Jemima Brigges

 Book Review

 


Basic Details:

Book Title: Brothers at Arms

Subtitle: Linmore - The Early Years (Linmore Series Book 1)

Author: Jemima Brigges

Genre: Literature and Fiction

Part of a series? Yes

Order in series: 1

Best read after earlier books in series? N/A

Available: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/27420097-brothers-at-arms

Overall score:

I scored this book 5/5

⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️

Short Summary of the book:

A father with a big heart, 2 orphaned children, a forced marriage and a secret love. When one of the children is somewhat troublesome, what trouble will it cost and what sacrifices will follow? Will both boys join the army as they wish?

What I liked about the book:

The book is full of heart-wrenching moments, egging on the underdogs, with at the centre a man with a big heart.

What I didn’t like about the book:

I enjoyed the entire book.

My favourite bits in the book:

I enjoyed the entire book.

My least favourite bits in the book:

The book was enjoyable in its entirety.

Any further books in the series? Any more planned by this author?

This is the first book I’ve read by this author, and I look forward to reading more.

What books could this be compared to and why?

This is a horror story with a paranormal touch.

Recommendation:

In summary, I would recommend this book for the following readers:

 

Children

No

Young Adult

Maybe

Adult

Yes

 

If you like period drama, this book may be the book for you.

I look forward to reading more by this author.

Book Description by Author:

The story of a friendship, which began in Shropshire during the Pre-Regency era (1794 – 1802)

Tom Norbery’s decision, to bring two orphaned children to live at Linmore Hall, changes the life of his son, Joshua, for the better.

 

It does not make his older brother less aggressive, or his mother kinder, but for the first time in his life Joshua has a friend. Someone to talk with, share his adventures and best of all his ambition to be a soldier. All he has to do is accept Charlie Cobarne’s little sister, which at the time does not seem too much to ask.

 

But Sophie, unlike other girls in the Linmore household, disdains female refinements in favour of masculine hunting pursuits at which she excels. She challenges her brother and Joshua to prove her mettle, until Charlie agrees that she can follow the drum when they join the army. In so doing, she binds their friendship together, but her continuing presence causes the once strong bond between the young men to become a recipe for misunderstandings.

 

Changing family circumstances force Sophie to conceive a plan of which she is sure Charlie will approve – knowing that Joshua always agrees with her brother. Single minded in her determination to keep them together, Sophie little considers the far-reaching consequences for them, and Linmore, if her plans should go awry. Or who, if she pushes them to the limit, has most to lose?

 

The first part of an interlinking series involving the landed gentry and the working classes at a time when the Napoleonic Wars rumble on in the background, and life, with its family feuds and intrigues, continues in a rural England coping with the changes of the Agricultural Revolution. A coming of age story.

About the Author: