Widow's Weeds and Weeping Veils


Book Description

During the 19th century, death shadowed daily life. A high infant mortality rate, poor sanitation, risk during childbirth, poisons, ignorance, and war kept 19th-century Americans busy practicing the ritual of mourning. The Victorian era in both Europe and America saw these rituals elevated to an art form expressing not only grief, but also religious feeling, social obligation, and even mourning fashion. Complete with period illustrations, Widow's Weeds and Weeping Veils explores how Victorians viewed death and dying as a result of the profound historical events of their time. This concise, informative work is ideal for students of Victorian-era culture and Civil War enthusiasts.




Widow's Weeds


Book Description

Edo, the capital of Japan, 1907. Helen Motosu is in deep mourning after the death of her husband, private investigator Shigeru Motosu. Restricted to caring for her young children and keeping her brother-in-law from his self-destructive habits, Helen feels stagnated and unchallenged. Until the charismatic Mitsuo Okabe, one of Edo's mayors, requests the Motosus' help in solving the murder of his brother, an energy scientist working on a solar-powered bullet train. The main suspect is a Russian prostitute who was with Dr. Okabe the night he died. Mayor Okabe knows that his brother had enemies in the city, rivals in the development of new energy technologies. The Russian girl refuses to cooperate with the Japanese police, but Mayor Okabe hopes that a foreign woman can convince her to reveal what she witnessed that night. Helen has never actively investigated anything on her own. To solve this crime, she must navigate Japan's scientific circles while maintaining her own precarious social position. Without her, an innocent young woman could lose her life, and a violent murderer will be free to kill again. WIDOW'S WEEDS is the first in an alternate history mystery series set in Japan. Set in a "steampunk-lite" timeline, the world of the Motosu Mysteries is slightly different from our own. Steam-power and clockwork are giving way to new technologies such as solar-power and electro-power. Imagine the world of Sherlock Holmes combined with a Ghibli movie, and you're quite close to the setting and tone of the Motosu Mysteries series.




Loveda Brown: Widow's Weeds: The Idyllwild Mystery Series, Book Six


Book Description

Three women conceal secrets beneath their widow’s weeds, but Loveda’s might be the biggest of them all. Loveda Brown discovers a dead man on the banks of Logan Creek, near the tiny mountainside town of Idyllwild, California, as yet the Wild West of 1912. Then it disappears without a trace. Unexpected guests sweep in with devastating secrets in their wake, forcing Loveda to confront a secret of two of her own. Will she find the killer before becoming a pawn in a sinister game of death and resurrection?




Widow's Weeds


Book Description

Lori Riley finds herself overwhelmed after the death of her beloved husband. When she finds a provocative note in one of his jacket pockets, she wonders if her marriage was as solid as she thought. As she contemplates the mysterious woman who wrote the note, she confronts her anger, grief, and loss. Lori's journey will resonate with anyone who has been affected by the death of a life partner or spouse. "Widow's Weeds-The Note" is the first installment in a trilogy that explores the journey widows and widowers take as they grieve the loss of a life partner.




Widow's Weeds & Weeping Veils


Book Description




Widow's Weeds


Book Description




Widow's Weeds


Book Description

The Camarilla, after losing ground along the East Coast in its recent war with the Sabbat, has claimed control of New York City at last. Now the story of their covert activities and greatest victories is finally told.




Widow's Weeds


Book Description

Dark pasts and darker secrets lie at the heart of the Deep South. Louisiana's Bayou Country sets the stage for this gritty debut collection of short fiction by Suzanne De Cayette. Bold, lyrically haunting, and richly woven Widow's Weeds and the accompanying stories explore taboos and secrets entwined in the history of the American South, offering an original voice to universal themes of social injustice, intolerance, and ultimately- hope. Widow's Weeds It's summer 1940 in St. Giles Parish, Louisiana. Nine-year-old Louie Parsons is on a quest to find his friend who disappeared one June night. From his perch in the live oak tree, Louie eyes Zandria Baudelaire as she gathers roots and herbs. An outcast, known by the town as the witch-lady, Louie believes Zandria is the one person who might know what happened to his friend Jesse. At first, fear and fascination prevent Louie from speaking to the witch-lady, but the need to know what happened to Jesse pulls him away from his world and into hers. When Louie's father, a respected member of the community and the Klan, poses a threat to Zandria, Louie must choose between the world he knows and the world she has taught him to love. As the result of Louie's decision, his father's life hangs in the balance. Child of Fire The short story that sparks the beginning of Zandria's journey; a child born into fire and raised in hell. Sing me a Sweet Song Tonight Claireborne Parish shelters a secret of sadness and loss. For Angel Hamilton, a 17-year old girl, her sense of loss turns to hope with the arrival of a mysterious traveling preacher, until the preacher's demons shadow even Claireborne's own, locking Angel into a battle for her self and soul.







Tremere


Book Description

One Million Words of Terror It began with Clan Novel: Toreador .... This book, Clan Novel: Tremere, is the twelvth in a 13-novel series concerning the Kindred -- the hugest event ever in the World of Darkness. From small details to grand spectacles, this epic series of one million words reveals the secrets of this hidden world through the eyes of individuals on both sides of a great conflict. The continued existence of all Kindred, from the youngest to the eldest Methuselah, hangs in the The Last of His Kind Further examination of the sketch that sent the Toreador Victoria Ash to Atlanta now reveals deeper secrets to Aisling Sturbridge, the leader of the Tremere chantry in New York City. A traitor in the ranks of the hierarchical Tremere, who was thought is discovered -- and he might be the very cause of the Camarilla/Sabbat war!