Tag: Viking I series

Guest Review: The Bewitched Viking by Sandra Hill

Posted September 2, 2012 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 1 Comment

Publisher: Avon, Harper Collins

Judith’s review of The Bewitched Viking by Sandra Hill.

BEWITCHED, BOTHERED, AND BEWILDERED …

Even fierce Norse warriors have bad days. Holy Thor! ‘Twas enough to drive a sane Viking mad, the things Tykir Thorksson was forced to do — capturing a redheaded virago, putting up with the flock of sheep that followed her everywhere, chasing off her bumbling brothers. But what could a man expect from the sorceress who had put a kink in the King of Norway’s most precious body part?

If that wasn’t bad enough, his own skald was putting Tykir’s embarrassing escapades into sagas for all posterity to laugh about. And he was beginning to realize he wasn’t at all immune to the enchantment of brash red hair and freckles.

But he was not called Tykir the Great for nothing. Perhaps he could reverse the spell and hold her captive, not with his mighty sword, but with a Viking man’s greatest magic: a wink and a smile.

He was sent to fetch a witch . . . at least everyone thought she was a witch because Tykir’s king had a problem, a really distressing problem with his most precious male part, a part that had kind of a right turn in its length. She was the sorceress that had mumbled a “curse” on him when she caught him ravaging a nun, and now he wanted that curse removed. So a mighty warrior who was also a merchant and reknown purveyor of amber has been sent to take her into custody. Alinor was not beautiful, in fact she thought herself cursed as well with hair so read it nearly glowed in the dark and she had more than her share of freckles, a condition that was believed to be cause by the evil one. (As a redhead I would have agreed, especially in my younger years) But things never really seem to go smoothly for Tykir the Great — as his friend and fellow warrior Bolthor styled him. Not only did he have to contend with Alinor, he had to contend with her sheep as well. In addition, she had a bevy of greedy and controlling brothers, all of whom she wanted to avoid so that she could control her own life. Needless to say, this basic story line developed into a tale that was as laced with fun and humor as it was with passion and politics.

Sandra Hill has written this extensive series as an attempt to redeem much that is erroneously believed about the Vikings. First published a decade ago, the books have been redone and re-released by Avon Books and are a joy to read. A number of characters are carry-overs from the previous books. Tykir himself first appeared in book one with his brother, both of whom were having a very difficult time relating to their father who was trying to protect them from being killed by jealous royal relatives. Now he is a man with his own life, his business, and with a rather significant plate full of troubles.

I have really enjoyed reading through this series and I would recommend that readers start with the first book. It is historical fiction that is charming and funny, intense and sometimes erotic, full of believable characters and all of it interwoven with the difficult and often misunderstood politics of that Medieval Period. It is an insightful look at the culture clashes that made life difficult for all the citizens of the British Isles and which erupted often in armed warfare. Yet in the midst of all the push pull of greed and political machinations are people who love and care and get caught up in real life difficulties. Now the problem with the king’s most private part certainly gives spice and humor to the story, the dialogue and the overall context of Tykir’s & Alinor’s story. Suffice it to say that some of the funniest parts are the ridiculous and sometimes insightful but always humorous “sagas” or poems composed on the spot by Tykir’s friend, Bolthor the Skald, a gentle giant and loyal friend, one who no one would think of hurting or injuring his spirit.

So if you have a chance or the inclination to read a really delightful historical romance, latch on to this one. It is beautifully written, well-researched, and will be entertaining from page one.

I give it a rating of 4 out of 5

You can read more from Judith at Dr J’s Book Place.

This book is available from Avon. You can buy it here or here in e-format.


Tagged: , , , , , , , ,

Guest Review: The Tarnished Lady by Sandra Hill

Posted August 29, 2012 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 0 Comments

Publisher: Avon, Harper Collins

Judith’s review of The Tarnished Lady (Viking I series #3) by Sandra Hill

Disgraced!

Banished from polite society for bearing a child out of wedlock, Lady Eadyth of Hawks’ Lair spends her days hidden under
a voluminous veil, tending her bees. But when her son’s detested father threatens to reveal the boy’s true paternity and seize her beloved lands, Lady Eadyth seeks a husband willing to claim the child as his own.

Eirik of Ravenshire is England’s most virile bachelor, notorious for loving—and leaving— the most beautiful damsels in the land. Now a mysterious lady is offering him a vow of chaste matrimony in exchange for revenge against his most hated enemy, and Eirik simply cannot refuse. But the lusty knight’s plans go awry when he finds himself unable to resist Eadyth’s myriad charms…and he succumbs to the sweet sting of the tarnished lady’s love.


Life has never been easy for women:  the super dooper pooper scoopers of the human race.  They are left to pick up the pieces of destroyed relationships and families, raise abandoned children, have their dignity and personhood made into something that is merely a political pawn in men’s power games, or who must take extreme measures to protect themselves and those they love.  So it was in the 10th century in Britain, a land that was being pulled hither and yon by Saxons, Celts, the Irish and Welsh, as well as the Vikings from the North countries.  Eirik was half Saxon and half Viking, but he had been raised/fostered under the tutelage of the Saxon king so had more power than some in negotiating settlements between Saxon and Viking protagonists.  He had been at war for his king for years, and it was only a little while after arriving home, seeing the neglect and decay he had allowed by his absence, when he was verbally assaulted by Lady Eadyth of Hawk’s Lair with a ridiculous offer of marriage.  Eadyth was unmarried and unlikely to find a husband unless she managed that on her own.  And Eirik was overtly uninterested until Eadyth informed him that the person she most feared was Eirik’s greatest enemy.  THEN he listened to her proposal, and even though she had styled herself as an elderly lady, there was  much fun to be had as the surprises were unveiled and the true nature of many things became apparent.  
This was the first book in this series I read even though it is really Book Three in the series.  I was so delighted with it that I went back and read the first two before moving on to the later novels.  Eadyth was a woman of great industry, a wonderful business manager and a creative one to boot.  It was a marvelous part of the book to watch Eirik discover who his wife really was, the depth of her character and honor, the wounds she carried because of the selfish and cruel acts of his enemy, and the dimensions of her ability to love, not only her son but Eirik’s two illegitimate daughters.  He was a man who had experienced early life being ignored by his father and shuttled from one abode to the next.  When Eadyth opened her heart to his motherless daughters it brought something to life in him and their love story became far more intense, hot, and vibrant.
Like all the books in this series this novel can be read alone.  I certainly had no difficulty appreciating it even though I had not read the first two books.  It is a wonderful “window” into the life and ways of the Vikings, a culture that is greatly misunderstood because of many errors in our history books.  They were certainly not pacifists, but then few people in that time could afford to be.  Yet they were merchants, traders, artisans, family people, and men and women of deep loyalty.  So I hope those who really like a historical full of love and adventure will take the time to read this book which is now re-released and updated by the author.  It is well worth the time and effort and may actually get you to look for the other books in this series.  (You may find older versions at your library with different covers.)

I give this novel a 4 out of 5

The Series:

Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover

You can read more from Judith at Dr J’s Book Place.

This book is available from Avon. You can buy it here or here in e-format.


Tagged: , , , , , , , ,

Guest Review: The Viking’s Captive by Sandra Hill

Posted August 28, 2012 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 3 Comments

Publisher: Avon, Harper Collins

Judith’s review of The Viking’s Captive (Viking I series #6) by Sandra Hill.

Tyra, Warrior Princess

She is too tall, too loud, too fierce to be a good catch. But her ailing father has decreed that her four younger sisters cannot be wed ’til Tyra consents to take a husband. Alas, with no suitors begging for her hand, it looks as if the sisters will all remain virgins.

Then a journey to save her father’s life brings Tyra face to face with Adam the Healer. A god in human form, he’s tall, muscled, perfectly proportioned. Here is the physician who could cure her father, and the lover who could finally seduce her to his bed furs.

Too bad Adam refuses to fall in with her plans. Holy Runes! What’s a lady to do but truss him up, toss him over her shoulder, and sail off into the sunset to live happily ever after.

One of Western Europe’s most extended and intense struggles for power was between the Saxons and the Vikings, both invaders in the land known then as Britain. For a time the entire northern portion of Britain was under the rule of the Vikings while the Saxons ruled the southern portion of the country. So it was not out of the expected for Viking and Saxon to come into close contact, sometimes in a very sharp adversarial encounter while others were more congenial. In this story, however, Adam the Healer, a brilliant physician who readers first met as an abandoned young boy trying to survive with his younger sister on the unfriendly streets of Jorvik and who was eventually adopted by Selik and Rain Jordan as their son. Now he is grown and has traveled the world in search of medical knowledge and has achieved quite a reputation as one whose knowledge and skill is known far and wide, all the way to the Northlands. When faced with the demand to come and treat her dying father by Tyra the Viking Warrior Princess, Adam refuses but underestimates his adversary, waking up on Tyra’s longship, well on his way to her Norse home.

This story continues the tale of a young kid who had absolutely nothing going for him in book 2 of this series, whose petty crimes were only for the purpose of survival after the death of his parents and to care for his younger sister. Yet now he is a grown and educated man, living a productive life in his own right, and a testimony to the power of care and love. Yet his heart is broken at the death of his sister, and when Tyra finds him, he has been on a two-year emotional fast, having withdrawn from relationships, life, public life, refusing to see patients, denying any future with his chosen profession. It is a story of a man who not only needs to awaken to the world around him, who needs to get back in touch with the passion of his profession, but also recognize the needs that dwell within himself, no matter how dormant they may have lain for two years. It is an important story, filled with laughter and loving, with the clash of cultures that was so much a signature of the Western European development of the 10th century, and the journey of one man to come alive once again. It is also a poignant look at a woman who is powerful in her own right but who has suffered inwardly from a very wounded self-image and whose re-birth as a beautiful, sexy, and powerful woman became possible with the authentic loving of a kind and compassionate man.

This is the sixth book in a wonderful historical series that I just couldn’t put down, that I just had to plow through from book to book, to follow the stories of these gritty and realistic characters, no matter if they are transported back a thousand years or are people that live their lives through the pages of several novels. It is another treat for Sandra Hill readers, but it is also a treat for any lover of historical romance fiction with the delightful and deeply emotional love stories that are at the core of these books. This, like those before it, is a stand alone novel. But reading them in sequence makes them even more fun. First published in 2002, it has now been reviewed and somewhat re-written and re-released by Avon. It’s worth reading, by all means, if it is new to you. If you read the book 10 years ago, have another go. It is just that good.

I give it a rating of 4 out of 5

The Series:
Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover

You can read more from Judith at Dr J’s Book Place.

This book has been re-released by Avon Book in January, 2011. You can buy it here or here in e-format.


Tagged: , , , , , , , ,

Guest Review: The Blue Viking by Sandra Hill

Posted August 21, 2012 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 1 Comment

Publisher: Avon, Harper Collins

Judith’s review of The Blue Viking (Viking I series #5) by Sandra Hill

Life has not been the same for Rurik the Viking since leaving Maire of the Moors, the fiery witch who put the blue zigzag on his face after a night of passion. For a fierce warrior, this blue streak is the last straw. And in the end, he’ll bring the witch to heel–or die trying.


Once again author Sandra Hill has gifted her historical fiction fans with the continuing story of life in 10th century Britain and in the Scandinavian countries, most especially ancient Norway.  Rurik is your quintessential Viking–strong, big, ruggedly handsome, thinking of himself as a gift to women, and a man who is willing to wade into just about any situation, be it war or peace.
Yet he has now encountered a circumstance about which he can do nothing.  He bears a blue mark on his face–right down the center of his face–similar, according to some accounts, to the warrior marks on ancient Celtic faces.  Yet this mysterious mark appeared following a single night of passion several years before our present story begins, a night when Maire became his love, fell in love with him, and unbeknownst to him, became pregnant with his son.  At the time she was a witch in training and Rurik blames her for his disfiguring mark and is bound and determined to make her remove it.
What he finds when he returns to Scotland is a Campbell clan in disarray, nearly beaten to death in more ways than one by their neighboring clan, led by Maire’s brother-in-law who wants the land the power and the position of being laird of Maire’s clan.  This would mean death for her as well as for her son.  Not quite the same situation as when Rurik was first in this part of the country.
This is a very serious book in that it chronicles quite graphically the political and cultural situation of ancient Scotland, the involvement of the Norse in this land, and the on-going struggle between the Scottish clans that continued on for generations.  But don’t forget–this is also a very intense love story but always there are those wonderful personal interactions that are rib-tickling funny, the wonderfully corny and crazy “sagas” of Bolthor the Skald–a kind of oral historian and entertainer with his poems. some of which rhyme but almost all of which are summarily dismissed by his listeners.  Yet everyone loves the gentle giant and his loyalty to his companions and theirs to him is never in doubt.  I have to confess that seldom did a page go by but what I was laughing.  It is fun to get to “know” these various characters as they will pop up in future books, some of which will feature these men and tell their stories of love and adventure.  There is joy here, lots of it along with sorrow and disappointment, wondering what the future can hold for two very different people who are tied to pieces of the planet that are great distances from each other.  
This book is a stand alone novel but reading the previous books makes each succeeding story that much more engaging.

I give this novel a rating of 4 out of 5

The Series:

Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover

You can read more from Judith at Dr J’s Book Place.
This book is available from Avon. You can buy it here or here in e-format.


Tagged: , , , , , , , ,

Guest Review: The Outlaw Viking by Sandra Hill

Posted August 14, 2012 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 3 Comments

Publisher: Avon, Harper Collins

Judith’s review of The Outlaw Viking (Viking I series #2) by Sandra Hill

As tall and striking as the Valkyries of legend, Dr. Rain Jordan is proud of her Norse ancestors despite their warlike ways. But she can’t believe her eyes when a blow to her head transports her to a nightmarish battlefield of yore—and there standing before her is the barbarian of her dreams.

A wild-eyed berserker, Selik can slay a dozen Saxons with a single swing of his deadly sword—yet he can’t control a saucy wench from the future. In his eyes, Rain is a prisoner and he’d dearly love to avail himself of her medical skills—not to mention her considerable knowledge of the male anatomy. But the infuriating woman has ideas of her own. If Selik isn’t careful, the stunning siren might very well capture his savage heart and make a warrior of love out of . . . The Outlaw Viking.


Once again Ms Hill has gifted her reading public with a fascinating look at the Viking culture of the 10th century, a culture that has been widely misunderstood by most of us, probably due to a variety of influences not the least of which is poorly researched fiction about the Dark Ages or historians who have allowed their personal bias to pick and choose only those aspects that are most negative.  To be truthful, there isn’t a whole lot about the Dark Ages that we contemporary citizens of the world would find appealing, certainly not their attitudes toward male/female relationships, marriage as a trade agreement or as a power grab, and certainly not the fluctuating political climate that was so dangerous for individuals, families, villages and larger communities.  War was the order of the day, whether it be provincial, village against village, or family against family.  Whole communities were wiped out, people whose paths had never crossed that of the aggressors, but whose affiliation with a particular noble family or aristocrat automatically made them the enemy.  Ms Hill has taken all these facets of life in what is now known as the British Isles and Scandinavia and woven a literary tapestry that will keep historical romance lovers interested from the first paragraph.  This is the second of a series of novels about the Vikings, all of which can be read as stand alone reads, but all are connected through family history or locality even though some are set in a context that is a number of years removed from the previous stories.
Just as Ruby Jordan was a modern woman transported back in time, so her daughter also found herself in ancient England just after a huge battle between those loyal to the Saxons and those loyal to the Vikings who had held power in what was known as Northumbria.  Thoraine Jordan, Ruby’s daughter, was a trained emergency medicine doctor and whose skills were urgently needed for those wounded she found around her.  “Rain” Jordan was as mystified about her time travel experience as was her mother initially, but as events unfolded and as Rain met various individuals whose names were known to her through her mother’s memories, she began to realize that all her mother’s musings were not just fantasies but involved real people who had lived a thousand years before.  In contemporary time it had been 30 years since Ruby returned to her American home, pregnant with her Norse husband’s child ( and Thork was the spitting image of Ruby’s American husband, Jack Jordan), but only 12 years had elapsed since Ruby “disappeared.”  Now Rain has returned to find her “half-brother” wounded along with one of his closest friends, a man whose wife and baby son had been destroyed by gang-rape and murder by the Saxons and who had made revenge the cause celebre of his life.
Like all really good historical fiction, this is a complicated book and requires that readers put their minds into the reading task as well as a very active imagination.  One must also have some appreciation for this time period as the various cultural and national groups appear and interact, all of whom eventually merged into the peoples of Great Britain.  Much of Ms Hill’s research is based on the archeological dig that begn in the 90’s in York and which is available to the viewing public today.  The Vikings were indeed a war-like people, but so was everyone else.  It was the way of the times, with provincial rulers guarding their holdings, more powerful rulers engulfing smaller fiefdoms, and so forth.  It was also a time, Rain found, that was greatly in need of her skills and knowledge.  Medical treatment consisted of herbal treatments and “bleeding” by means of leeches or literally draining blood from the patient, surgery performed with crude instruments and no understanding of cleanliness or sterile conditions.  (Most women are unaware that obstetricians didn’t even wash their hands between deliveries until late in the 19th century, and the man who pioneered this level of cleanliness was drummed out of the medical community as being unstable and mentally ill.)  
But at its core, this is a love story between Rain and that revenge-filled friend of her half-brother.  Selik had always been the clown of the friendship circle–a man who could come back with the humorous or ribald crack, the bit of a funny story, or a tease that would have everyone chuckling.  No more.  Now he was a dark and dangerous man who considers Rain a prisoner who can help save his companions and fellow soldiers, but who is far more dangerous to the emotional walls of stone he has built around his heart.  She was a constant challenge to him, to his friends, to the family of his dead wife and son, to almost everyone with whom she came in contact.  And she never failed to keep him riled up with her efforts to help people, to find ways of bringing her far more advanced medical knowledge to bear especially knowing that the physicians of the time would think her treatments to be “dark magic.”  Medicine was the property of the Church, and even though most people had “accepted” Christian baptism, the Norse gods were still widely worshipped and invoked.  No deity was invoked by Selik, though.  He didn’t believe in God or gods, or love, or trust, or anything else.  He held close a very small group of loyal warriors, his dead wife’s family, and not many others–certainly not Rain.  So any reader must be prepared to encounter some very thorny exchanges between these two as somehow they travel life paths that keep on bringing them together, keep on forcing them to face each other and their respective values and cultural differences, and where they are forced to consider a future together.
I found this novel fascinating because I have always really loved stories set in the context of the Dark Ages, and mostly because I am really an Anglophile at heart and love the stories that bring  British history alive.  I also appreciate the Viking history in a new way, having toured the Viking museum in York and realized that much of what we now believe about those ancient peoples is erroneous.  This novel is filled with colorful characters who each stand out in their own way, whose personalities are unique and whose involvement in each other’s lives is both poignant and humorous.  The certainty of war hangs over everyone’s heads and the possibility that changing political loyalties can endanger life and limb is never far from anyone’s daily awareness.  These kinds of tensions make relationships far more immediate and the sexual tension far more evident.  No one ever knew if they would life to see another day.  And it is a testimony to the stalwart human spirit of many of those ancient communities that they forged on in spite of those kinds of negative possibilities.
I have been a Sandra Hill fan for some time now and while it has been a while before beginning this series since I read a Viking-based story, these novels have certainly captured my interest in a very big way.  I found I couldn’t put them down once I began one.  Like all the books in this series, this novel was originally released a number of years ago and is now being re-released by Avon Books.  I am so glad to have discovered them now as the author has updated some of the references and re-polished the book as a whole.  And, in her own words, she was attempting to ” . . . tug at [our] heartstrings with [her] tormented hero Selik,”  and get us to ” . . . laugh at the cluelessness of men through the ages.”  As far as my reading experience goes, she succeeded in spades.  I think historical romance fiction readers will really like this one.

I give it a rating of 4 out of 5.

The series:
Book Cover Book Cover

You can read more from Judith at Dr J’s Book Place.

This book is available from Avon. You can buy it here or here in e-format.


Tagged: , , , , , , ,