Showing posts with label Barrett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barrett. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Step into the Wind by Bev Prescott


THE RAINBOW READER WELCOMES YOU TO A SPECIAL SEGMENT


With Special Guest Reviewer, BARRETT, author of DAMANGED IN SERVICE and  DEFYING GRAVITY


Book:  Step into the Wind
Author:  Bev Prescott
Publisher:  Blue Feather Books

For a kid growing up in the Midwest, every summer brought the opportunity of “going up north” for vacation. I believe there’s something magical about the north woods for children, as well as adults. Maybe it was the quiet or the sheer joy of being swallowed up by, what seemed like, endless acres of trees and lakes.

My family, like hundreds of others, packed the car before dawn to make the excruciatingly long drive to Northern Wisconsin. For two blissful weeks my brother and I led a carefree existence of swimming, running loose, picking blueberries, fishing, and capturing frogs.

When I was a little older, I had the chance to go to scout camp in Wild Rose, Wisconsin. Some of the memories are just as vivid today as they were then. It was my first time away from home and I met dozens of other girls enjoying a special week of coordinated recreation and learning. I also learned the wonder of “camp counselors” for the first time.

Author Bev Prescott’s new release, Step into the Wind, offers readers a peek behind the scenes of a landmark camp in the beautifully described town of Glasgow, Maine. The Marcotte Camp has been a rite of passage for decades for many lucky children. But with the death of their son, the beloved Marcotte family is self-destructing.

Alex Marcotte fled the town and her family after the tragic death of her twin brother. Finally, on the pretext of researching the wildfires in Maine, she returns to her hometown. Sadly, Alex carries with her the same emotional burdens that she had when she left. The psychological wreckage that, after so many years, continues to metastasize through the roots of her family, hooks her back in almost immediately.

A lifesaving distraction appears in the form of self-assured wildlife biologist named Zoe Kimball. Tasked with studying a very special pair of breeding eagles on an island owned by the camp, Zoe Kimball finds herself drawn into the vortex of a growing storm. Her attraction to Alex blooms, but it’s her rock solid courage and patience that bond her to the unmoored young woman.

At first glance, the story lines up to be a romance. And to be sure, the relationship between Zoe and Alex develops in halting steps. But the real story, from my perspective, is one of survival on many levels. Ms. Prescott has intricately woven a tapestry of back-story that involves not only the Marcotte family, but all of the colorful individuals who make up the saga.

The well-researched tale of the eagles and their offspring is gripping and enchanting. (It reminded me of Marlin Perkins and his Sunday night “Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom” television show). By the end of the story, I was truly hoping for a sequel about the baby eagles. 

Anyone who knows Bev Prescott, will understand her passion for the bounty of nature surrounding all of us. When you read her words, you will feel it.

Each character is drawn with the same meticulous attention to detail, and you’ll feel as though you know each one of them.

The pacing of the story moves quickly and evenly. I engaged early and had trouble finding a place to stop for the night. The only time I felt slowed, as a reader was midway through when Alex slipped into a dark space of self-analysis. Her emotional state is vital to understanding the story, but I understood that earlier.

There’s richness in the novel that resonates even after its finish. And it stems from the very title—Step into the Wind. It’s a matter of trust, it’s a matter of survival, and it’s a matter of seeing what’s in front of you. At one point, they discuss the remarkable vision of the eagles, the ability to spot their objective from hundreds of feet in the air.

Bev Prescott has given us a well-written story layered with some of her authentic observations that give her writing a rich satisfying ring of truth. I enjoyed my time in Glasgow, Maine and I’m sure I will revisit Step into the Wind soon. In the meantime, I will be paying  a lot more attention to birds nests.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

The Rainbow Reader Awards - The Very Best of 2012


Tomorrow is December 21, 2012—the date popularly regarded as the end-time of a 5,125-year-long cycle in the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar.  While Mayan scholars and crackpot pseudo-religious prognosticators differ on their learned interpretations of its significance, they all agree that it is a time in which transformative or cataclysmic events will occur.

Coincidentally, it’s also the day the first of my holiday guests begins arriving….

So, in an effort to clear my calendar such that I may properly get “in the holiday spirit” (i.e., ebrius funditus,) I hereby declare:

Yea verily, another year is officially gearing down, flipping on it’s bright yellow turn signal, and aiming its scrunched up little nose towards the exit ramp for Auld Lang Syne.

And as the year careens around the late December cloverleaf of festivities, I want to take you back through The Rainbow Reader reviews, and bestow the Very Best of 2012 Awards.

However, before we jump into the good stuff, I want to mention that in the last twelve months, I had the honor and privilege of reviewing 25 books; and was fortunate enough to post Guest Reviews from four amazing and talented authors – Kate Christie, Susan X. MeagherBarrett, and Ann McMan.  Additionally, fellow reviewer, Cat from Good Lesbian Books, stopped by to post her thoughts on one of her favorite pieces of historic lesbian fiction. And, last but not least, avid reader and budding humorist, Michelle Brooks donned her sparkly peep toe slingback Louboutin’s and took TRR out for a quick spin around the block.

Not a bad run for a twitchy little dyke and her super cool partners in crime, eh?

But seriously, as a reviewer, my most sacrosanct goal is to cover the full spectrum of lesbian literature, such that authors have an expanding platform to showcase their work, and readers can consistently find books and stories that they love.  To that end, in 2012 TRR took on a few mainstream books, a comic book, a couple of frisky whodunits, an award-winning blog opera, and a handful of humor, romance, erotica, social justice, and period works of fiction.

Heck, I even reviewed books about a zombie apocalypse, sorority girl vampires, and a pack of post-menopausal werewolves just to cover all the Lesfic bases.

And, much as I did last year, I want to extend special and sincere thanks to each and every one of my Victims (i.e., the brave and valiant authors) for having the guts, grit, and determination to make your work available.  It takes an amazing amount of talent to write a book, and it takes a constitution of steel to voluntarily become vulnerable to a world of readers and reviewers, and our myriad, sketchy opinions.   

I also want to thank you, The Readers, for stopping by to read my reviews.  Many of you have left comments on this blog, which I appreciate.  Many others have sent me emails or contacted me on Facebook, and I want to thank each of you for letting me know what you think. Well, except maybe for that one reader who hijacked one of my social media sites, questioned my ethics and credentials, and referred to me as (lower case) “the blogger”—that was a wee bit of an exaggerated response and it felt a skosh too personal.

But, them's the breaks in the glamorous world of Lesbian Literature.

So, with no further ado, I present The Rainbow Reader’s Very Best of 2012 Awards 


Book Title
Author
Publisher
Award
After the Night
Rachel Dax
Self Published
Ida Lupino Award for Best Women’s Prison Romance of 2012
Aftermath
Ann McMan
Bedazzled
Stanley Tools Award for Most Innovative Use of a Pry Bar in Literature
Almost Heaven
Susan X. Meagher
Brisk Press
Hazel Dickens Award for the Plot Advancing Use of Satellite Dishes in Mountaintop Literature
Batwoman
J.H. Williams III, Greg Rucka, W. Haden Blackman
D.C. Comics
Peppermint Patty Award for Excellence by a Lesbian Comic Book Character
Beebo Brinker
Ann Bannon
Gold Medal Books Naiad Press
Cleis Press
Gale Wilhelm Award for Near Miss Happy Endings in Period Pulp Fiction
Being the Steel Drummer
Liz Bradbury
Boudica Publishing
TRR Special Award for Use of “Shall” as an Auxiliary Verb in a Bondage Scene
Better Off Red
Rebekah Weatherspoon
Bold Strokes Books
Victoria’s Secret Award for Best Use of Moist Lace Panties
Camptown Ladies
Mari SanGiovanni
Bywater Books
Sholem Aleichem Award for Richest Rooftop Dialogue in Lesbian Fiction
Carry the One
Carol Anshaw
Simon & Schuster
TRR Special Award for Innovative Use of Elementary Mathematical Concepts in Mainstream Literature
Clara’s Story
Doreen Perrine
Bedazzled Ink
Lesbian Psychiatric Association (LPA) Award for Best Therapist Named Gary in a Lesbian Romance
Come and Go
Lee Harlem Robinson
Self Published
International Lesbian Temperance Union Award for Blog Opera Excellence in The City That Opium Built
Eat Your Heart Out
Dayna Ingram
BrazenHead
TRR Special Award for Pioneering Use of a Cheating Ex-Stripper Girlfriend-Cum-Gun-Wielding Warrior Babe in a Zombie Apocalypse
Everything Pales in Comparison
Rebecca Swartz
Bella Books
Thomas Nashe Award for Best Use of the Red Herring Plot Device in a Romantic Thriller, Eh?
Faithful Service, Silent Hearts
Lynette Mae
Regal Crest
Tyne Daley Award for Best Tough & Chewy Butch with a .50 Caliber, Fully Automatic Rifle Loaded with Armor-Piercing-Incendiary-Tracer Ammo
Hidden Truths
Jae
L-Book e-Publisher
Bureau of Labor Statistics Award for the Highest Concentration of Lesbyterians Per Square Mile in 19th Century Oregon
In One Person
John Irving
Simon & Schuster
TRR Special Award for Softest Breasts on a Transgendered Librarian
L World
Taryn Rose
Ravenous Romance
Readers Award for Most Vagina Euphemisms in a 300 Page Book—Ever
Open Water
Pol Robinson
Bella Books
2012 Oolala Award for Use of “Repechage,” the Sexiest Word in All of Lesbian Fiction
Oranges and Lemons
Liz Bugg
Insomniac Press
Galdys Mitchell Award for Best Smokin’ Hot Love Interest with a Sketchy Past and Tantalizingly Firm Breasts
Pennance
Clare Ashton
Self Published
Praelatura Sanctae Crucis et Operis Dei Award for Most Effective Use of Self-Flagellation in a Modern Gothic Romance
Piper’s Someday
Ruth Perkinson
Spinster’s Ink
TRR Top Dog of 2012—Awarded Posthumously to River the Amazing Tripod
Rhapsody
KG MacGregor
Bella Books
2012 Walk The Talk Award for a Happy Ending with a Flashing Neon Caveat
Sarah, Son of God
Justine Saracen
Bold Strokes Books
Vasily Zvyozdochkin Award for Best Gender Bending Nested Thriller of 2012
Seminal Murder
Mary Vermillion
Regal Crest
TRR Special Award for Ballsiest Use of Semen as a Main Character in Lesbian Fiction
Silver Moon
Catherine Lundoff
Lethe Press
Maude Findlay Award for Best Ever Menopausal Storyline in Lesbian Fiction
Strangers
DeJay
Regal Crest
Ain't No Mountain High Enough Award for Greatest Incidence of Emotional Demons in Dramatic Fiction Featuring a Car Wash
The Girl’s Club
Sally Bellrose
Bywater Books
Barbara Barrie Award for use of “The Dreaded Bowel Disease” as a Non-Speaking Main Character
The Indelible Heart
Marianne K. Martin
Bywater Books
Pittmann Puckett Award for Addressing Social Conscience in Lesbian Fiction
The Sea of Light
Jennifer Levin
Plume Books
Esther Williams Award for Multiple Ah-Ha Moments In and Out of the Pool
The Way
Kristen Wolf
Crown Publishing
Orlando Award for Intense Consideration of Nature and Gender Roles
Touch Me Gently
D. Jackson Leigh
Bold Strokes Books
Charles Francis Xavier Award for the Promethean Use of Exploding Light Bulbs During Hot Lesbian Sex in a Southern Novel

Well, that's it for TRR in 2012—here’s wishing each and every one of you a safe, happy, healthy, and festive holiday season, and a 2013 full of joy, love, and wonder!

And, as always, thanks for stopping by The Rainbow Reader.