Rabu, 30 Mei 2012

Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Exactly how if your day is begun by reviewing a publication Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), By Color Him Mine But, it remains in your gadget? Everybody will consistently touch and us their device when getting up and also in morning tasks. This is why, we suppose you to likewise check out a publication Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), By Color Him Mine If you still puzzled the best ways to get the book for your gadget, you could follow the method here. As below, we provide Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), By Color Him Mine in this site.

Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine



Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Read Ebook Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Explore every curve and facet of one of the most beautiful creatures ever made: Men. This interactive activity book leads you through an assortment of detailed beautifully designed pen-and-ink illustrations of muscular handsome men - each needing that last touch to bring them to life - you! Appealing for adults of all ages.

Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2903890 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-29
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 10.00" h x .13" w x 8.00" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 54 pages
Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine


Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Where to Download Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Great Indie Coloring Experience!! By Jolene Llewellyn If you are looking for an indie, urban, fun and different coloring book, then you,would love this book! It would be great for bridal showers/stagettes, fun birthday present for single women and married women alike! It's FUN! And so different than anything I've seen!

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. So much fun! By ReaderWoman I love this book. Love love love. So fun!

0 of 1 people found the following review helpful. extremely risqué By Amanda ehh...I got this as a gag gift for a (very) single friend...and I think its way too risqué. Some photos are okay, but they're all shirtless- not a single one wearing a shirt! (come on, ladies, we know muscles look good in shirts too!) Theres a few of men just about naked with a towel covering their penises, which to me is too revealing and sexy. I wanted more photos like the cover- not just shirtless ones. I'll have to tear the extremely sexy ones, or i'll return it.

See all 3 customer reviews... Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine


Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine PDF
Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine iBooks
Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine ePub
Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine rtf
Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine AZW
Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine Kindle

Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine
Color Him Mine: Instant Boyfriend (Just Add Color) (Volume 1), by Color Him Mine

Sabtu, 26 Mei 2012

A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

Exactly how if your day is started by reviewing a publication A Lady Of Good Family: A Novel, By Jeanne Mackin However, it is in your device? Everyone will certainly still touch as well as us their gizmo when waking up and in morning activities. This is why, we suppose you to likewise review a book A Lady Of Good Family: A Novel, By Jeanne Mackin If you still puzzled how you can get the book for your gizmo, you can follow the way here. As below, we offer A Lady Of Good Family: A Novel, By Jeanne Mackin in this site.

A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin



A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

Download Ebook PDF A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

From the author of The Beautiful American comes a richly imagined, beautifully written novel about historical figure Beatrix Farrand, one of the first female landscape architects.   Raised among wealth and privilege during America’s fabled Gilded Age, a niece of famous novelist Edith Wharton and a friend to literary great Henry James, Beatrix Farrand is expected to marry, and marry well. But as a young woman traveling through Europe with her mother and aunt, she already knows that gardens are her true passion.   How this highborn woman with unconventional views escapes the dictates of society to become the most celebrated female landscape designer in the country is the story of her unique determination to create beauty and serenity while remaining true to herself.   Beatrix’s journey begins at the age of twenty-three in the Borghese Gardens of Rome, where she meets beguiling Amerigo Massimo, an Italian gentleman of sensitivity and charm—a man unlike any she has known before....

A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #539641 in Books
  • Brand: MacKin, Jeanne
  • Published on: 2015-06-02
  • Released on: 2015-06-02
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.23" h x .76" w x 5.45" l, .68 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 368 pages
A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

Review

Praise for A Lady of Good Family “Reading one of Jeanne Mackin's historical novels is the next best thing to having a time machine at your disposal. A Lady of Good Family is so immersive, so captivating in its depiction of famed Gilded Age landscape architect Beatrix Farrand—niece of Edith Wharton and friend of Henry James -- that I devoured it in one sitting.”—Jennifer Robson, author of After the War is Over andSomewhere in France   “Mackin has taken an unusual approach to a fictionalized biography by relating the story through another story: that of her friend Daisy Winters, an associate of Edith Wharton and Henry James. This novel depicts the various stages of love through the dissimilar characters’ lives. The simple yet beautiful prose charms.”—RT Book Reviews Praise for The Beautiful American “Readers will rank [it] right up there with The Paris Wife…A brilliant, beautifully written literary masterpiece…”—New York Times bestselling author Sandra Dallas “Will transport you to expat Paris…and from there take you on a journey through the complexities of a friendship…breathes new life into such luminaries as Man Ray, Picasso, and, of course, the titular character, Lee Miller, while at the same time offering up a wonderfully human and sympathetic protagonist in Nora Tours.”—Suzanne Rindell, author of The Other Typist “Leaves its essence of love, loss, regret, and hope long after the novel concludes.”—Erika Robuck, author of Fallen Beauty “Achingly beautiful and utterly mesmerizing… Sure to appeal to fans of Paula McLain's The Paris Wife and Erika Robuck's Call Me Zelda, or indeed to anyone with a taste for impeccably researched and beautifully written historical fiction.”—Jennifer Robson, author of Somewhere in France “An engaging and unforgettable novel. I couldn’t put it down.”—Renee Rosen, author of Dollface "An exquisitely imagined and beautifully rendered story of the talented, tragic, gorgeous Lee Miller."—Becky E. Conekin, author of Lee Miller in Fashion

About the Author Jeanne Mackin is an award-winning author of historical novels, including The Beautiful American, The Frenchwoman, The Sweet By and By, Dreams of Empire, Queen's War, and A Lady of Good Family. She lives in the Finger Lakes region of New York with her husband, artist Steve Poleskie.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

A Garden for First Meetings

This is the most difficult type of garden to design, since who can tell when first meetings will occur? However, if you are inclined to plan for the unforeseen, to hope for limitless possibility, I recommend a garden that includes elements of the romantic, the antique, and the implausible.

The romantic element should include a series of intersecting winding paths, trails from which, at the beginning, one cannot see the ultimate destination but only guess at it. The gravel for these paths should be very fine and make only the slightest whisper of noise when walked upon.

The antique element should include a small folly or casino, a shelter of some sort in which those meeting for the first time can find objects to feed their conversation. First meetings often involve a certain amount of shyness, diffidence, and anxiety. It is therefore helpful if the garden provides distraction.

The implausible should include a plant growing out of place. I do not normally recommend such a thing. Plants, after all, know where they like to grow and do not like to grow. Roses do not like shade and ferns do not like direct sun. If, however, you can convince creeping speedwell to grow in one twist of the gravel path, this serves as a reminder to those meeting for the first time that life is full of uncertainty and unexpected happenings. Above all else, we must cherish the mystery.

For plants I recommend pines as a backdrop, especially Roman umbrella pines if your climate will allow them. If not, a very small grove of Black Forest pines or, even better, pines from the Odenwald area of Germany, planted thickly.

Flowers should include angel’s tears daffodils of the narcissus species. They are smaller than other varieties and require a more observant eye; Aquilegia vulgaris, or common columbine, which looks best grown in semishadowed areas; Chrysogonum virginianum, goldenstar, which will bloom all summer in case the first meeting should not occur quickly.

And roses, of course. There should be roses in all gardens, and in a garden for first meetings the rose should be Rosa gallica “Officinalis,” the old apothecary rose, also known as the rose of Lancaster. This rose, with its very dark green foliage, blooms just once in the season, reminding us that first meetings are not to be taken for granted. It will also spread of its own will, sending out shoots in all directions, and is a good plant for sharing.

ONE

1920Lenox, Massachusetts

My grandparents had a farm outside of Schenectady, and every Sunday my father, who worked in town, would hitch the swaybacked mare to the buggy and take us out there. I would be left to play in the field as my father and grandfather sat on the porch and drank tea and Grandma cooked. My mother, always dressed a little too extravagantly, shelled the peas.

A yellow barn stood tall and broad against a cornflower blue sky. A row of red hollyhocks in front of the barn stretched to the sky, each flower on the stem as silky and round as the skirt on Thumbelina’s ball gown. In the field next to the barn, daisies danced in the breeze. My namesake flower.

I saw it still, the yellows and reds and blues glowing against my closed eyelids. The field was my first garden, and I was absolutely happy in it. We usually are, in the gardens of our childhood. I, who had lost so much, wondered if I could ever be truly happy again.

When I opened my eyes I was on a porch in Lenox, a little tired from weeks of travel, a little restless. My companions were restless, too, weary of trying to make polite conversation, as strangers do.

Mrs. Avery suggested we try the Ouija board. We had, before that, been discussing rose gardens, and the new hybrids, especially the Miriam yellow with its garish, varying hues.

“Roses should be red or pink,” Mr. Hardy complained.

“Or white,” added Mrs. Ballinger.

“I like the new hybrids,” I said. “Those bold colors.”

“Oh, dear,” said Mrs. Avery.

Guests at the old inn, we perched in a row of rockers, recovering from a too-heavy supper. There was me, just back from campaigning for the women’s vote in Tennessee; Mrs. Avery, the youngest of us all yet seeming the oldest, a rabbit of a woman who spoke too quietly; Mrs. Ballinger, as round as a pumpkin, with hair dyed the same color; and Mr. Hardy, a tall, gaunt man who stooped even when sitting.

It was a late-summer evening, too warm, with a disquieting breeze stirring the treetops as if a giant ghostly hand ruffled them. Through the open window a piano player was tinkling his way through Irving Berlin as young people danced and flirted. In the road that silvered past the inn, young men, those who had made it home from the war, drove up and down in their shiny black Model Ts.

It was a night for thinking of love and loss, first gardens, first kisses.

The moon was cloud covered, and the inn’s proprietor did not turn on the porch lights, since they drew mosquitoes and moths. We sat in darkness, except for the occasional small flare when someone lit a cigarette.

An uneasiness charged the air, the feeling that something was going to happen. It is an uncommon sensation in summer, when the world seems to have settled into its own idea of Eden. The wind had a premature autumnal feel to it. “You feel the seasons in a garden, the passage of time,” my friend Beatrix told me once. “Whether you want to or not.”

The hotel had a rose bed in front of the porch. I wondered whether the roses were the same variety as what had grown in the garden at Vevey, Switzerland, where I had first met Gilbert. Pink roses all look alike to me. Perhaps that’s what Gilbert thought of me that evening at Vevey when we met. One pretty American girl looks much like all her sisters.

In a way, all hotels look alike, too. Some are grander than others, some have the Alps for scenery, some a little town in Massachusetts. I was staying, as my finances required, in one of the less grand inns of the town, but I was always aware that in those Berkshire hills nestled some of the most famous houses ever built, cottages where Melville and Hawthorne had resided, and later, after Lenox became fashionable with the wealthy, the larger estates where Vanderbilts and Morgans, and the writer Edith Wharton, had passed summer days.

I was content to be in an inn, where strangers come and go and you feel a bustle of life about you, what Mr. Henry James described as the rustling of flounces and late-night dance music, the cries and sighs as young people court and play.

Fashionable young girls did not wear muslin flounces anymore. Those were as out of style as calling cards.

We had, that night, already finished a game of bridge, and I had fleeced the others of their pocket money. I was usually popular with my peers, but not with their children. They found me a very expensive proposition, a bad influence. That from grown children who danced the black bottom and tango, the young women with their skirts almost to their knees.

What had most shocked me, during my years of campaigning, were the young people who had tried to shout us down, who did not want change. You expect complacency in older folks, not in the young. “Aren’t you satisfied with your homes, your husbands, your children? Leave politics to the men!” they had shouted.

Thank God my daughter, Jenny, had not felt that way. She had bailed me out of jail when needed, housed me often despite her husband’s antipathy toward me, and wined and dined a judge now and then when required. She had also paid in advance for my week at Lenox, so that I could rest after my traveling and marching.

“Penny,” said kindly Mr. Hardy, interrupting my thoughts.

I liked his face. It was open and somehow vulnerable. You could see that his life had not been easy, yet he was not bitter.

“I was thinking about gardens, and then about politics, and power, and men and women,” I said, but no one encouraged me to develop this conversation.

Instead, Mrs. Avery suggested we try the Ouija board. Since the war, it had become a national obsession.

“Let’s,” I agreed eagerly. “Perhaps Mr. James will come through.” He had died four years before, and I would have enjoyed a message from the master. Henry James’ letters to my dear friend Minnie had been so entertaining, and of course she had shared them, as he had meant her to do.

Mr. Hardy, grumbling a bit, went in to fetch the board as Mrs. Ballinger, Mrs. Avery, and I rearranged our chairs around a wicker table.

After we set up the board, placed the planchette in the middle, and put our fingertips on it, we waited.

And waited.

“Someone is not being open to the spirits,” said Mrs. Avery with more than a little whine in her voice. A stronger breeze stirred the treetops. Inside, the piano player tinkled his way through “Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning.”

“Maybe they don’t like the music,” suggested Mr. Hardy.

We laughed. Then the pointer moved. Just once. When we opened our eyes, it had settled over the M.

“You got your wish, Mrs. Winters,” Mrs. Ballinger told me, sounding envious. “It was to have been a message from the master.”

“Or my sister, Mary,” said Mrs. Avery. “It was, after all, my idea. It should have been a message for me.”

“For that matter, it could have been from my poodle, Mariah,” said Mrs. Ballinger.

“A useful letter, M,” agreed Mr. Hardy. “Could be anyone, anything. He pushed his chair away from the table and refused to continue. We restored our chairs to the assigned row and ignored the Ouija board.

“Nights like this, when I was a child, we told each other ghost stories to pass the time,” said Mrs. Avery. She had grown up on a farm near Rochester, and though I had known her for only a few days, I already understood that her childhood had been harder than mine. She had fled the hardscrabble farm life, and now she looked fondly back upon what she had hated at the time.

“Silly things, ghost stories,” said Mrs. Ballinger. We all turned to look at her, trying to convey the message that ghost stories were no sillier than a woman of her age wearing that shade of pink with that color hair, but Mrs. Ballinger was oblivious to such subtlety. “Silly,” she repeated with a condescending sniff. “Give me a good romance anytime.”

A car backfired just then and jolted Mr. Hardy out of his sulk.

“I saw a ghost once,” he said. “A lovely thing, all white and floating. Back when I was a boy in County Cork and almost dying of typhus.”

“That was an angel,” corrected Mrs. Avery. “I’ve never heard that ghosts are lovely.”

“It was my poor dead mother hovering over, and from what I’ve heard, she was no angel,” Mr. Hardy said.

“I’ve never heard of anyone who ever really saw a ghost,” said Mrs. Ballinger, her voice even more condescending.

“I once saw the ghost of Nero in Rome,” I said. “In Piazza del Popolo. It was all the rage that year. Anyone who was anyone saw him.”

“Rome.” Mrs. Ballinger sniffed, indicating that for some reason Rome was beyond her approval. I suspected she had never been there.

We rocked in our chairs, listening to the crickets and watching eerie, silent sheet lightning flash in the eastern sky. The crickets were very loud with their ratchety, ratchety, and the frogs in the brackish pond sounded like they were auditioning for the Anvil Chorus. Silence, human silence, was difficult that night, and I felt a need to talk. They would be voting on the amendment in Tennessee in two days, and my nerves were taut enough to be strung on a violin.

“I know someone who saw a ghost under very strange circumstances,” I said, thinking of that M and seeing in my mind’s eye a piece of stationery with that single ornate initial on it. “Shall I tell you the story?” I asked.

“Yes!” said Mr. Hardy with enthusiasm.

“Oh, Lord,” sighed Mrs. Ballinger.

“It begins in Rome,” I said.

“I’ve never been,” said Mrs. Avery. “I bet it’s lovely.”

“I’ve been many times,” I said. “Rome and Paris. London. We used to live like nomads. Newport in the spring and summer, New York in the autumn, Europe in winter. We all did, though of course such travel was new to my family, since money was new to my family. I met my husband on my first trip to Switzerland, and even after the babies came we went back every year. He insisted. ‘My dear,’ he would say, ‘you don’t mean to say you are going to buy this year’s gowns in New York rather than Paris?’ So we would pack up the children and the nurses and later the governesses and board the steamer, seeing the same faces over and over, because society was all doing it. The Lusitania, the German torpedoes when they came in 1915, ended that.”

Mr. Hardy’s mouth clamped into a straight, sad line. He had lost a son in the war.

“Well,” I continued. “The story begins in Rome, in the gardens of the Villa Borghese. Mr. Henry James wrote about them. My friend Beatrix Jones was there, touring Europe, to look at those gardens. She’s the famous garden designer. The first American woman in the field, really, and making an excellent job of it. Even her male counterparts agree on that.”

“Women just don’t know their place anymore,” grumbled Mr. Hardy. He gave me a sideways glance of disapproval. I still wore my purple, yellow, and white rosette on my cardigan, the badge of the suffragists. He, like a good many men, was worrying over that upcoming vote in Tennessee, the last state in the union to debate giving women the vote. He was not in favor.

“We will not speak of politics tonight, Mr. Hardy. We are in the Borghese gardens with Beatrix. Rome. Early spring,” I insisted.

“Oh, Lord,” repeated Mrs. Ballinger.

TWO

1895Rome, Italy

“Is it possible to have a haunting without a sense of evil attached to it? Last night poor Mrs. Madden kept insisting she felt the presence of someone, some spirit, and instead of feeling afraid, she was comforted.” Mrs. Frederic Jones, christened Mary but known to friends and family as Minnie, frowned. Why had she brought this up? She hadn’t meant to speak of it. Everyone knew Mrs. Madden was, well, to be kind, a bit unmoored.

“I should think so,” said Mrs. Jones’ daughter, Beatrix. “It would be like—let’s see—like spring in the garden before the first seedlings are up. You can feel their presence even though you can’t see them.”

“Mr. James would disagree,” said a third woman, Edith Wharton. “I think he rather feels that this world and that other world are like Europe and America, with a vast ocean between them. Any spirit still lingering on the wrong side of the ocean must have a grievance, and a grieved spirit must have some sense of anger or wrath. Interesting concept, though, a harmless spirit. I wonder . . .” Her voice trailed off as it sometimes did when her thoughts moved from public discourse to a more private daydream. She looked pale, an indication that she had not slept well.

The little dog curled on her lap grew restive and barked to be set down. Edith held it closer.

“Nightmares again, Edith?” Minnie, her sister-in-law, reached over and patted the dog’s head. Edith had been “unwell” for the past year, suffering from depression and nerves.

“A very strange one,” Edith said. “A long avenue of trees, ashen olive trees, leading to a house I knew was haunted. The ghost was a woman who had been locked up by her husband . . .” Her voice trailed off again. Her hand fluttered in the air for a moment as if she were waving at someone, and then fell into her lap. Her dog barked once more, a high, demanding sound that echoed through a stand of umbrella pines.

“Hmm,” said Edith’s husband, Teddy. “This is the result of spending so much time reading and scribbling. More fresh air, perhaps. A good long walk after dinner.”

“The house was called Kerfol. Such a strange name.” Edith ignored Teddy’s comments.

“Blasted city,” said Teddy. “We should never have come to Rome.”

“But I wanted to see Minnie and Beatrix, and they were in Rome,” Edith said.

“It was that nurse who told you ghost stories as a child.” Teddy found a new source of blame, landing on one closer to the point than the city of Rome. Edith as a child had been ill in Germany, had almost died of typhoid, and her nurse had passed the long hours telling old village ghost stories to the child. Lord, how we torment our children.

Another wife, at this point, would have said, “Yes, dear,” and dropped the subject. Edith instead gave Teddy a scathing glare.

Mr. Wharton was a man who simply ignored what he could not comprehend, the type of person who never read a novel or poetry. This, Edith had discovered, was not a good quality in a husband. When she most needed encouragement to pursue her work—her scribbling, as he called it—he simply smiled and said, “My dear, perhaps we should go for a ride. Get you out of that dark library.”

“Well, I don’t know houses called Kerfol, but the nervous excitability of ghosts would account for Mrs. Ford’s experience,” said Minnie, anxious to fill a hostile silence. “She swears she saw Nero’s ghost when she visited the Piazza del Popolo. A raging old man in a white robe, making obscene gestures.”

“Did he have his fiddle with him?” Beatrix asked. “Some people are so gullible. Ghosts. Really. It is the result of being too much amid all these old places.”

“Women, my dear. Men are not so sentimental as to go looking for Nero’s phantom in the Piazza del whatever it was,” said Teddy. He was very handsome, with a dashing reddish brown mustache and fine blue eyes, but there was something unfinished about him, like a portrait still on the easel waiting for the artist’s final touches.

Teddy and Edith, though seated side by side, seemed a world apart, as couples do when both have come to the realization that the marriage is a failure and there they are, stuck with each other.

Edith had been a young woman hungry for approval when she wed. A daughter born twelve years after her mother had already produced the two required sons, she had been a lonely and to a large extent ignored child. When handsome young Teddy Wharton proposed, she accepted with what she thought was love or at least the possibility of it. It turned out to be relief, and relief is a short-lived emotion. Within months she realized that a love of small animals, their only shared passion, was not enough to sufficiently bind man and woman together.

She had tried to ignore her compulsion to write, to create stories and other worlds with more interesting people than those around her; she had tried to become a good society wife—tried, in other words, to become what others expected of her—only to find that such behavior . . . teas, the constant round of leaving calling cards, the interminable dinner parties, consultations with cooks, and other wifely duties . . . left her physically and emotionally ill. And so she had begun writing again. Some of her work had been published, and now Teddy had a literary wife. Not quite the thing, in New York or Newport.

And Edith was stranded on a silent, cold island of marriage with a man she neither loved nor was loved by.

“Piazza del Popolo. That’s where Nero’s ghost is seen,” she said now, her voice metallic with irritation.

Their knowledge of Roman ghosts having been exhausted by that brief conversation, the four of them sat wrapped in the silence of early-spring heat and foreign places, each secretly wishing to be elsewhere. The Borghese gardens were all very well. But there was an unpleasant sense of requirement to the visit. When in Rome, one must visit St. Peter’s Square, the Spanish Steps, the Trevi Fountain, the Pantheon, the Baths of Caracalla, the Borghese gardens, and so they had, dutifully, done so.

This tour of European gardens was to further the education of her daughter, Beatrix, but Minnie was more interested in the Common People than in gardens. Her eyes were focused inward, on the suspicious doings of a certain Nurse Henrietta back in New York, who sometimes filched from the infirmary where Minnie performed charity work.

Minnie sat straight-backed in her chair, both feet flat on the ground, the proud posture of a woman who could trace her family back many generations, whose ancestors had tossed tea into Boston Harbor, whose lawyer father had visited President Lincoln in the White House; a woman raised to know good wines, read in several languages, arrange flowers. Minnie knew how to dress for a Patriarch Ball and what to order at Delmonico’s, but she also knew that life was serious and short, and a wise woman would use her time well. Minnie, suffering through her own failed marriage, had learned the value of good works and doing one’s duty.

Some of this wisdom she had already passed on to Beatrix, who sat listening and watching. Waiting, she would have said, though she didn’t know what for; perhaps simply waiting to become who she was meant to be, free of interference, of the need to please others. And that is one of the hardest things in life to achieve, especially for a woman.

While her friends had been dreaming of marriage, Beatrix, with her mother’s approval, had planned for a career in landscape design. She wanted to add beauty to the world. A fresh morning, a wheelbarrow, and a dozen bushes to be planted or trees to be pruned, no one in shouting distance to yell at her that she was grass staining her dress or ruining her hands—that was what she wanted of life. A lady’s hands said everything about her, Uncle Teddy had stated once, glancing disapprovingly at hers.

After only a month of the planned six-month tour, Beatrix already missed her home and garden in Bar Harbor. She wanted to be digging in the winter-freshened soil of Maine, planting the first lettuces and peas, working to the music of gulls crying overhead and rollers breaking against the rocky shore. In Bar Harbor, gardens were not far removed from a wilder nature; in Rome the gardens seemed beaten into submission.

Bar Harbor was more home to Beatrix than either New York or Newport, and their cottage there was a house of women; of long, easy days and Sunday afternoons spent discussing books and music without male bluster and tumult. Her father and mother had ceased living together soon after arriving at Mount Desert Island. There had been shame for Minnie in that separation—a failed marriage was a failed marriage, no matter who was to blame—but a measure of peace as well.

Now, sitting in that public garden in Rome, Beatrix was all too aware that her long-absent father was only two days’ travel away, in Paris. She was used to having an ocean between them. She thought she preferred it that way.

Perhaps that’s why she later sent for me to come visit her in Rome, to provide a little taste of home. We had become very good friends. I was in Paris that spring with Mr. Winters and our three youngest daughters. Our two sons were in New York, studying, and the eldest daughter, Jenny, was at Mrs. Prim’s Academy in Geneva, Switzerland. Mrs. Prim wasn’t her real name, of course, but that was how I referred to her.

“I don’t wish to leave the girls,” I told Mr. Winters when Beatrix’s letter arrived for me. And I didn’t, not even for Beatrix.

“It is unnatural for a woman to spend so much time with her children,” said my husband, who had spent very little time indeed with his own mother. “You should go. It will do you good. I’m not certain Paris agrees with you.” I suspected that my presence did not agree with Mr. Winters at the moment. It was the racing season and we had had enough quarrels over his gambling and his numerous broken promises that he wished me out of the way. At my husband’s behest, I reluctantly packed my travel case and prepared for a trip to Rome, to visit Beatrix.

Probably it was just as I was packing my new walking suit that Beatrix was sitting in the Roman sunshine, her strong fingers yearning for the crumble of soil. It was maddening for her to sit feet away from a weed popping up in a flower bed and not be able to bend over and pluck it.

However, when in a public garden, or a private one owned by another, one did not squash aphids no matter how thick they were on the petunias, or pull weeds. One merely sat, like the elderly, the infirm, or the merely lazy, and admired what others had done, or had not done, or had not done well.

Beatrix sighed and studied the scenery. All those moldering buildings and old ruins. That weed taunting her from the edge of the gravel path was driving her to distraction.

“One must expand one’s horizons,” Minnie said for the dozenth time. “Remember there is a purpose to all this. There is always a purpose.”

The purpose, of course, was to learn, to study, to experience. To see how other people experienced the wonder that was life, what they made of it, how they shaped it. That was what travel allowed.

That spring of ’95, though, there were more English and American people in Rome than there were Italians. They filled the benches, the gravel walks, the little terrace tables, the men all in gray frock coats and tall hats, the ladies in their pastel silks tightly cinched at wasp waists. They talked of the midnight escapades of the Prince of Wales, the tennis matches at Wimbledon, the debutantes of the New York season.

They talked, Beatrix thought, of everything but Rome. She was twenty-three years old that spring. It took determination, in those days, to be twenty-three, of a good solid New York family with sufficient income and attractive appearance, and remain unencumbered of a groom. She had busied herself with work and study at the Arnold Arboretum in Boston, and now she ran her quick, bright eyes over the Borghese grounds, taking in the expanse of lawn, the temple in the distance, the crumbling casina in the other direction. She was trying to ignore that single taunting weed with all the effectiveness of a child trying to ignore a plate of cakes.

The flowering plant beds were severe in their geometric rigor and the temple not well placed, fronted as it was by that little fake lake in the middle of what was obviously a dry plateau. Like a tableau vivant waiting for the posers to arrive. No. More like something in a dream from which one is eager to awake. What would Mr. Olmsted think of all this, he who had designed Central Park without a single straight line, who made the plantings follow the lay of the land and the granite outcroppings, rather than the other way around?

“Lovely day, isn’t it?” An American matron had stopped in front of their café table and addressed Beatrix’s mother. She looked vaguely familiar, though Teddy was completely indifferent to her presence and had already looked away with as much condescension as he would have shown a waiter.

Edith’s little dog barked so insistently that she placed it on the ground, where it ran at the stranger and worried the hem of her gown.

The American matron smiled even more broadly. She had light brown hair graying in broad streaks, thick brown eyebrows over impossibly pale blue eyes, and a pointed face, all giving her a wolfish look. Gathered around her was her pack of three daughters of marriageable age, decked in pale colors and trailing skirts. They swayed, twirled their parasols, and kept looking coyly about, like girls in a ballroom waiting to be asked to dance.

“Lovely day,” Minnie agreed, nodding but still not remembering. “The sun is quite pleasant.”

“It is a bit warm, though.” The woman eyed the glasses of lemonade, the shade of the umbrella, the free chair.

Mrs. . . . Mrs. . . . Beatrix couldn’t for the life of her remember the woman’s name, only that they had met at another woman’s home, probably in New York, although it could well have been there, in Rome. Traveling was an excellent occupation, except it required so much memory, and the only details in which Beatrix was truly interested were plants and landscape. Her memory for Latin taxonomy names was inexhaustible; for matrons, brief.

“A bit too warm, perhaps,” agreed Edith, squinting a bit from the sun.

Mrs. Of-the-Forgotten-Name eyed Edith with a distinct lack of approval. It was rumored that the Wharton woman had written poetry as a young girl. She had even published in journals. Unsuitable. And that niece, Beatrix. Yes, she had heard about Beatrix Jones. Imagine, a lady digging in the dirt, standing in the sun for hours, working for a living. In truly good families, even husbands didn’t work for a living.

“Well,” said Mrs. What’s-Her-Name, angry that she hadn’t been asked to sit with them. The Jones family was strange, but they were of old blood and old money. The Joneses and Whartons were just the kind of society she needed to get those three daughters married off, to get them, finally, onto Mrs. Astor’s list of those to be invited to future balls and New York charity events. What luck to run into them in Rome!

But now the Joneses and Whartons had as good as snubbed her in a public place. Bad enough that they couldn’t remember her name, but not to offer her a chair and a place in the shade under their sun umbrella—that was too much.

The woman flushed. “Will we be seeing you this evening?” she asked. “So many dear friends have sent their acceptances, I can’t quite keep them straight. The princess Constanza will be there.” She had already resolved that if the Joneses and Whartons did not attend her musical evening, she would find a way to make them sorry for the slight.

Minnie remembered now, with a visible sigh of relief, who this inconvenient woman was. “Thank you so much for thinking to invite us, Mrs. Haskett.” They had met in New York a few years before, and Newport before that, at various charity balls and public events. Her husband had speculated and accumulated a fortune in one of the industries, but Minnie couldn’t remember which. He had died recently, heart trouble. She recalled now that Mrs. Haskett always had her three daughters in tow. They seemed especially difficult to marry off, still being paraded about after so many seasons. And then Minnie repented of that thought, for wasn’t the same being said of her Beatrix?

“I do worry, though, that my headache may keep me in this evening,” Edith said.

“It must not,” Mrs. Haskett insisted. The three daughters smirked.

“Beg pardon?”

“I said, Mrs. Wharton, that your headache will probably disappear between now and nine thirty and I would so hate to have you miss the music. Signor Lucente is on violin, and Madame Granados will be singing. Perhaps Miss Jones will also sing for us. I hear she has a lovely voice.”

Beatrix pretended to find a loose thread in her crocheted bag and did not respond. Mrs. Haskett’s eyes narrowed.

Mrs. Haskett was a social climber of consummate skills. In a few short years she had risen from her beginnings as a shopkeeper’s daughter in Montana to a society wife, sans accent, sans homemade clothing, sans a Western taste for bread dipped in bacon grease.

But when she first arrived in New York as a young bride, she had hit the brick wall of Mrs. Astor’s dislike of the nouveau riche and stalled there, smashed on the sidelines of old families and old money. Her widowhood had not advanced her cause—single women could be so hard to seat at a dinner party—and though she was invited to parties and balls, they were not the right parties and balls, not the exclusive ones in the Fifth Avenue mansions. Bitterness and envy smoldered in her like an autumn bonfire that will never die completely out but only smoke away, threatening the houses in the near vicinity.

And now, having made it as far as Rome, as far as a private tea with the princess Constanza, who, though of questionable character, was a bona fide princess of an old Savoy family, she was being snubbed yet again by the New York brigade. She would not have it.

“Till this evening, then,” she said. “Come, girls. We will be late for our appointment with the hairdresser.” She turned and stalked away, head high as though sniffing the air for her next attack.

A group of young men, mustachioed and with swinging canes, appeared on the walk and set the three Haskett daughters into a fit of simpers and giggles.

The Whartons and Joneses watched the blushing girls and their mother disappear down the gravel path.

“I thank whatever fortune guides me that my Beatrix is not silly,” said Minnie. “Imagine making it your life’s work to marry off those creatures.”

“We must go to her party, I suppose,” Edith said.

“She knows I had forgotten her name. I saw it in her eyes. How unpleasant.” Minnie sighed.

“I would have remembered her if there was any distinction to be remarked,” Beatrix said defensively. “They do all look alike, don’t they? Some simply wear larger jewels and more padding in their hair. I do wonder if there are any New Yorkers left in New York.”

“You need more exercise,” said her mother. “You are sounding bored. Perhaps you should walk a bit. We’ll stay here.”

In fact, it was Minnie who was most bored. Beatrix was still being taunted by that weed, and those in the midst of temptation are not bored. But one of the advantages of being a mother was that one’s faults could so easily be assigned to one’s daughter. Not that Minnie was unpleasant about it. She and Beatrix were close and loving, certainly closer than Beatrix and Minnie had ever been with the third part of the family trinity, the husband and father.

Mr. Frederic Jones, Edith’s brother, was currently, and had been for some time, in Paris with his mistress. If, in some rare minutes, Beatrix, with her soft gray eyes, regal height, and long, straight nose, reminded Minnie of that straying husband, she never said so. She had once loved Freddie, well enough to defy dear Henry James’ fearsome edict that they should not wed.

Early during Freddie’s brazen adulteries, Minnie had tried to forgive him because of that supreme favor he had once done her: bringing her in contact with Mr. James. Henry had been a college friend of Freddie’s and, knowing the man well, had gone to New York to plead with him not to wed the serious bluestocking Mary Cadwalader Rawle, not because of any imperfection in Mary but simply because of oil and water. That was what he had said. They would never mix well, never be happy together. He had been correct, as always. Henry knew human nature.

Freddie hadn’t been at home to receive the warning, that afternoon of many years before, so Henry had called on Minnie, instead to voice his doubts about the coming nuptials. It was impudent on his part, even a little rude, but Minnie hadn’t taken it amiss. She had already read his stories and reviews in The Atlantic Monthly and was flattered by the attention of a man of his reputation. In fact, she quizzed him closely on his opinions of Sir Walter Scott, and they spent a pleasant hour together discussing not marriage or Freddie Jones but the novels of Scott, which Mr. James admired and Minnie did not. However, Minnie was in love with Freddie, and Henry James hadn’t been able to talk her out of the marriage. Despite that, they had been friends ever since.

“You do look bored, Edith. So am I.” Teddy tugged at his collar and then, understanding his words could be considered boorish, gave his wife a false smile of reassurance. “My immediate company is charming,” he quickly added. “As always. But all these gardens and ruins. What good are they?”

“You ask what the point of a garden is. Really, Teddy.” Edith tapped her foot with impatience.

Beatrix shifted in her chair, feeling the perspiration that made her clothes stick to her back and arms, and longing, absolutely yearning, to lean over and pluck that weed.

THREE

“Your story is very gossipy,” protested Mrs. Ballinger, the creak of her chair pausing for a moment as she leaned across Mr. Hardy to complain. “I’m not certain I approve.”

“It is important to reveal character as well as situation,” I explained. “That would have been Mr. James’ defense for detail. Beatrix would have said that the soil must be thoroughly prepared before the planting. Gardeners pay attention to detail. I do not invent, and if you are to understand what follows, you must understand what Beatrix was thinking at the time. I will continue now, Mrs. Ballinger.”

“Do,” said Mrs. Avery.

Lightning split the Lenox sky in two like a theater curtain. Girlish shrieks and laughter sounded from the parlor where the young people were dancing.

“Storm’s coming,” said Mr. Hardy, smiling. He was remembering, I thought, a storm of his youth, when a bolt of lightning sent a pretty young girl, shrieking and laughing, into his arms. “I like a good storm. Cleans the air,” he said.

My husband, Mr. Winters, had enjoyed a good storm as well. He used to bet on how long it would take for the rain to arrive, once the first lightning struck. He’d bet on which raindrop would trickle down the window first. It was his flaw, his fatal weakness. But he had carried excitement with him the way another man might bundle the daily paper under their arm. I think it was because he had spent so much of his youth and childhood abroad in Switzerland, where because so much is forbidden he had grown up with a sense of outlawry.

That is the problem, you see, with the overly strict rearing of children. If even little things, such as putting one’s elbows on the table and saying “damnation” when a toy breaks, are condemned as criminality, then the child feels himself to already be a criminal. In for a dime, in for a dollar.

This was partly Edith’s problem, as well, I believe. Her mother had been strict and undemonstrative, making it quite clear she preferred Edith’s brothers. Edith learned, eventually, to please only those who pleased her, Mr. James among them.

“Didn’t Mrs. Wharton have a home in Lenox?” Mrs. Ballinger asked.

“Not far from here,” I said. “But now we are in Rome, not Lenox.”

•   •   •   •

“So sorry you are bored.” Edith didn’t look at Teddy but stared into the green distance. “The gardens are lovely, though, aren’t they?” Her voice was clipped and cold, in contrast to the Roman heat.

Teddy tugged at his collar again and looked at his pocket watch.

I will never marry, Beatrix thought. Never.

She had passed through the first heady years of womanhood, the first balls, first waltzes, first dancing card and house party invitations, quickly discouraging any serious suitor. “My mother,” she had simply explained when any young man tried to call on her a little too frequently, implying that her duty to her solitary, hardworking mother made it impossible to accept other affections. Now that most of those young men had already wed, she felt she could easily avoid the issue permanently.

She jumped up, eager to be away from the table. “I will walk.” She stepped closer to the taunting weed. She bent. She pulled and plucked. It had fibrous roots rather than tap, just as she had suspected. She put the weed in the pocket of her jacket for later sketching and identification and looked around to see if anyone had caught her in this furtive maneuver. Only Edith, who smiled conspiratorially.

Still, they might never have met, the Italian and the American.

Beatrix could have walked in the opposite direction, away from the temple. She could have strolled through the rose garden or gone into the casina. But she chose the temple, that eerie replica of pagan passion.

“Don’t be too long, Trix. We have invitations for this evening,” Minnie reminded her.

“Fifteen minutes,” Beatrix called over her shoulder, already moving quickly away. “That’s all.” She walked with determination, strides a little longer, a little faster, than was acceptable for a lady during a leisurely afternoon.

An air of decrepitude, a smell of unwholesome rot and stagnation, circled the part of the garden surrounding the temple. It was like moving from one reality to another, and not entirely pleasant.

The temple made Beatrix think of Bluebeard and his wives, knights locked in dungeons. To dispel the gloom, she tried to imagine Uncle Teddy as Bluebeard, trying to lock Aunt Edith into her room. Impossible. Edith would climb out the window and be away, never to return.

They will divorce, too, Beatrix thought. It is just a question of time. What was the point of it, then, courtship and love and marriage? In a garden, things began and ended according to season. In relations between a man and a woman all was disorganization, discord. I will never marry, she repeated to herself.

I dread marriage, thought a young man walking a good distance away. He had been taking the air before going home, enjoying a walk between the lawyer’s office and the dilapidated palazzo he inhabited with his father. The lawyer had been unpleasant, his voice bordering on a continual sneer, his statements full of ultimatums and warnings. Shoulds and musts. Or else. Your father insists.

The gardens were full of Americans; the young man who had just been soundly berated by the family lawyer disliked the sounds of their voices, so full of German consonants, not at all soft like his own Italian. The sounds of conquerors, he thought, laden with wealth and greed and taking much of his homeland back with them when they returned to New York and Boston and Chicago. That’s what the visit to his lawyer had been about: the possible sale of several artworks. That, and the other business.

Empires rise and fall. He lived in a land of fallen empire, part of a family that was falling even faster than the rest of the empire.

There was no cure for history except to sell: collections, paintings, sons.

Perhaps Mrs. Haskett would be in the gardens again today. He could accidentally encounter her, remind her that she had promised to come look again at the painting.

Ahead of him was an example of the fall of empire: a group of boys, dirty, sly eyed, begging, and worse, their grimy hands snaking into the folds and cuffs of passing men and women, searching for coins, watches. They had surrounded a young woman and were practicing their street skills on her. He saw her face, the terror behind the forced calmness of a tight smile. He changed direction and headed toward the crime in action.

Still, they might never have met. He could have waved from a distance, yelled something the boys would have understood, driven them off with words. But he kept walking toward her.

Beatrix, suddenly surrounded, trapped by the clamoring children, was forced to a complete halt.

Where had they come from, this cluster of noisy urchins, each one beautiful enough after a necessary washing to pose as an angel? As she stood, speechless, they grew bolder, tugged at her sleeves, jumped up at her. “Me, me,” they shouted. “Choose me for your guide. A penny. Only a penny, miss.”

She felt one little hand snaking into the folds of her skirt, searching for a pocket, a purse. The scene changed from charming to fearsome as the children swarmed ever closer, forcing her in one direction, then another. She couldn’t breathe, couldn’t escape. She put her hands over her ears, trying to shut out their cries.

They pressed closer, suffocating her. She became dizzy and was afraid of stumbling, of falling beneath the frenzy of screaming children, being trampled by them.

“Alt! Attenzione!” A man’s deep voice scattered the boys. One by one, the hands and shoulders and knees that had been closing on her flitted away.

She opened her eyes to see the last of the children scurrying off, sticking his tongue out at her over his shoulder.

“Are you all right, miss? May I help you to a bench?” The man’s voice was melodious, with soft middle vowels, slightly rolled r’s. His hand was on her elbow, guiding her, and still flustered, she pushed him, her long arms windmilling in panic. He backed away.

“Pardon,” he said more stiffly.

“No, please pardon me.” She offered him her hand apologetically and looked straight at him. This was Beatrix’s way. Direct, open, no coyness.

Their eyes met in a shock of recognition though they had never met before. Did all birdsong, all conversation, cease for a heartbeat when their eyes met, or did they merely imagine it? You know the moment, don’t you? This one, and no other. If you have never experienced this moment, you have my condolences for your loss. Whatever comes after, the moment is worth it.

Beatrix, though, was already thinking, There is still time to stop this. She could simply turn away and hurry back to her table, her family. But she stood her ground.

He had a kind face, a good face. Olive complexion, black hair and eyes, but with none of the leer or suggestion that traveling women often faced in strangers’ eyes in public places.

Her face was flushed pink, the color of distress that comes over women with hair that particular shade of auburn. Her nose was long and sharp, her mouth and eyebrows straight, no hint of a curve. A handsome rather than pretty woman, with pale gray eyes full of sweetness, though when she was crossed they became the color of a cold rain.

“Sorry,” she said. “Thank you. I will sit for a moment. Catch my breath.” Her voice, he thought. It sounded of arias and violins, danced up and down scales within those few phrases.

He extended his arm, palm up, in the direction of the bench. He did not attempt to touch her again.

“They can be troublesome, these little boys,” he said, sitting as far away from her as the bench allowed. “It is better not to walk on your own in these gardens.”


A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

Where to Download A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Enjoyable Historical Fiction/Romance By Maria D. I received a complimentary copy of this book as a part of a book tour from the publisher via NetGalley and rated it 4 out of 5 Stars.A mixture of literary fiction and historical romance, A Lady of Good Family by Jeanne Mackin, tells the story of real life landscape architect Beatrix Jones Farrand. Written in third person narrative, Ms. Mackin’s tale paints a picture of both America and Europe as both continents experience the last days of the Gilded Age, the ramping up of the Women’s Rights movement and the never ending battle between “old money” and the “Nouveau Riche”. Clearly a lover of gardening herself, Ms. Mackin’s descriptions of the gardens and landscaping Beatrix Jones Farrand would have visited, studied and eventually designed herself, remind me of the simple beauty and peace one can find when working with plants.I believe Ms. Mackin does a good job introducing us, via reflection by a secondary character, to the young woman Beatrix Jones could have been during the time the story takes place; a young woman from a rich upper class society expected to marry but unwilling to do so. A “handsome”, well-educated and liberated woman, Beatrix is a study in contrasts. While she comes from old money, and a coveted social standing, she’s very aware of the how the world is changing and refuses to be tied down to a traditional role like many of the women she knows. Ms. Mackin’s easy to follow writing style made it very easy to connect with Breatrix and to root for her to be able to forge her own path.Ms. Mackin’s secondary characters are very well developed and I really enjoyed getting to know Beatrix’s mother Mary (aka Minnie), who devoted her life to “giving back to the world” to make up for her failing marriage, her aunt Edith Wharton, a writer I have to admit I’ve never read, and the fictional narrator and confidant of all three women, “Daisy Winters”, the only woman who had a loving and truly functional marriage, though it too had issues. I also thought Ms. Mackin did a good job developing Amerigo Marrismo, the young Italian gentleman Beatrix meets and becomes attracted to while visiting the Villa Borghese Gardens while in Rome. The attraction Beatrix and Amerigo begin to experience, which develops over chance encounters, is unfortunately soon offset by the conflict in the paths they want their lives to take and the interference of another wealthy American woman.Will Beatrix choose to put her plans for landscape design and professional gardening aside for a future with Amerigo or will the different paths their lives are taking tear them apart before too much emotional damage can be done? And if Beatrix walks away, who will she become? You’ll have to read A Lady of Good Standing to find out. I enjoyed it and look forward to reading more of Ms. Mackin’s work in the future.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Decent story, a little boring By Courtney Nissley I found this book to be a little dull. I bought it to read on the beach and got so bored at times I considered not finishing it. There is good potential in the story but the ending was unsatisfactory. I had difficulty caring for the characters. And the constant gardening references were too much!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Follow Your Heart Carefully! By Viviane Crystal In The Gilded Age of the 1920s in New England, a woman was fated to marry, raise children, socialize and talk of mundane matters and travel to Europe to tour, rest and socialize some more. This then is the story of the passionate and famous gardener and landscape designer, Beatrix Farrand, who conforms at a minimum level but truly follows the dictates of her heart and soul.The story is narrated by Daisy Winters, a close friend of Beatrix, and the story opens with Beatrix’s relationships with her Aunt, Edith Wharton, the author Henry James and Minnie, Beatrix’s mother who is currently in the process of divorcing her husband, also a huge break from acceptable tradition of staying married no matter what troubles prevail. Indeed most of the couples in this novel are either always irritated or unhappy about their spouses. What really comes across in the narrative is the lazy boredom of all these rich couples.While touring in the Borghese Gardens in Italy, Beatrix meets Italian Amerigo Massimo and her word dramatically changes. It is truly “love at first sight.” While his views about women are more conservative than her perspective, it doesn’t stop the magic and they soon become the talk of society. However, nothing stops her from pursuing her study of gardens and art throughout Europe. It is just as well as the reader receives a shock later on in the story regarding priorities in love.As an aside, it’s fascinating how Wharton and James are portrayed herein. Edith appears less stiff than how she writes and James seems to be the arbiter of decisions that accords with his writings; it’s all about what society accepts or rejects. Beatrix and Minnie are refreshing rebels herein, indeed!This reviewer absolutely loved the vivid, energizing descriptions of gardens Beatrix visits and the way she slowly articulates how a garden is meant to refresh, rest and inspire viewers. At the same time, the dialogue is plodding among the rich but miserable other characters. A bit of social satire herein?A Lady of Good Family… is a fascinating, rich story of love, gardens, society and the woman who would break tradition enough to become one of America’s foremost landscape gardeners, presenting her visions throughout America and even at the White House. Recommended reading for sure!

See all 18 customer reviews... A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin


A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin PDF
A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin iBooks
A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin ePub
A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin rtf
A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin AZW
A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin Kindle

A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin
A Lady of Good Family: A Novel, by Jeanne Mackin

Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers)

Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

Composting For Beginners: A Gardener's Guide To Enrich The Soil, Reduce Waste And Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), By Timothy Pena. Reading makes you much better. That says? Lots of sensible words claim that by reading, your life will certainly be much better. Do you think it? Yeah, show it. If you require the book Composting For Beginners: A Gardener's Guide To Enrich The Soil, Reduce Waste And Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), By Timothy Pena to review to prove the smart words, you could see this page completely. This is the site that will provide all guides that probably you require. Are guide's compilations that will make you really feel interested to read? Among them right here is the Composting For Beginners: A Gardener's Guide To Enrich The Soil, Reduce Waste And Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), By Timothy Pena that we will suggest.

Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena



Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

Read Online and Download Ebook Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

We all love to grow beautiful plants and flowers in our yards. When spring comes, it is only natural to want to get out there and get our hands dirty. Well, the one thing that we don’t want to do is spend a lot of money on planting materials and chemicals that we don’t want in our food and flowers anyway. So what are we to do? Well, this is where composting comes in. When we start building our own compost, we are building our own natural fertilizer and growing materials. Sine we are creating these compost piles ourselves we know what is going to them and what is not. In this book, we will walk you through the misconception many people have about composts and why you should start one. We will talk to you about what items you need to have in your compost piles in order to achieve the greatest benefits and what items you never want to add. And finally we will walk you through the process you need to follow in order to start your compost pile, maintain your compost and how to effectively use it to grow the healthiest gardens and plants that you can.

Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2395280 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-28
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .9" w x 6.00" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 38 pages
Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena


Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

Where to Download Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. This is a great, clear cut By Maria Clarke This is a great, clear cut, interesting and fun-to-read book! There's more to composting than just sticking a bunch of dead things in a pile and waiting for it to rot - although that will work. It can be a virtual art form, and this book proves it. I very much enjoyed this book because it laid out the basics for the beginner, explained a small bit of the science, gave the list of do's and don'ts, and didn't get too technical for me. I can't wait to try the compost trenches for my garden next season!This is a good choice for beginners and those who just want to learn more about composting, I would highly recommend this book.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Disappointment By LLC The 'book' arrived today. Description says it is 38 pages. That would be front and back and four of those pages are title, copyright, introduction, and table of contents.Please know that this is a very small, what I would call a booklet. I would think it would cost more like $4.00, maybe $5.00.Very disappointed.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Recommended By Jun Mei Gardening can be an interesting hobby. This book has great insight on gardening and how to save money doing it. It has great tips and content that is easy to understand. I recommend giving it a try.

See all 4 customer reviews... Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena


Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena PDF
Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena iBooks
Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena ePub
Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena rtf
Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena AZW
Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena Kindle

Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena
Composting for Beginners: A Gardener's Guide to Enrich the Soil, Reduce Waste and Save Money Through Composting (Gardening & Fertilizers), by Timothy Pena

Kamis, 24 Mei 2012

A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

When obtaining this e-book A Pound Of Flesh, By Sophie Jackson as reference to check out, you could get not just motivation but additionally new understanding and also sessions. It has even more than common benefits to take. What type of e-book that you read it will work for you? So, why ought to get this book qualified A Pound Of Flesh, By Sophie Jackson in this post? As in link download, you could obtain the publication A Pound Of Flesh, By Sophie Jackson by online.

A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson



A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

Download Ebook A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

Orange Is the New Black meets Jennifer Probst’s New York Times bestselling Marriage to a Billionaire trilogy, featuring a strong-minded prison tutor who discovers that her sexy bad-boy student is far more than he appears to be.Haunted by nightmares of her father’s street murder fifteen years ago, Kat Lane decides to face her fears and uphold his legacy of helping others by teaching inmates at a New York prison. There she meets arrogant Wesley Carter, who’s as handsome as he is dangerous, as mysterious as he is quick-witted, and with a reputation that ensures people will keep their distance. As teacher and student, Kat and Carter are forced to leave their animosities at the door and learn that one should never judge a book by its cover. As Carter’s barriers begin to crumble, Kat realizes there’s much more to her angry student than she thought, leaving them to face a new, perilous obstacle: their undeniable attraction to one another. When Carter is released and Kat continues to tutor him on the outside, the obstacles mount. Can they fight the odds to make their relationship work? Will Kat’s family and friends ever accept her being with someone of his background? And will Kat’s discovery of Carter’s role on the night her father died force them apart forever...or unite them?

A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #500543 in Books
  • Brand: Jackson, Sophie
  • Published on: 2015-06-09
  • Released on: 2015-06-09
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.25" h x 1.20" w x 5.31" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 448 pages
A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

Review "A Pound of Flesh is an intriguing tale of acceptance, and understanding, and finding love in unexpected circumstances. What sets it apart from others is the way Sophie weaves storylines to build suspense before everything ultimately comes together, leaving the reader guessing and gasping until the very end." (J.M. Darhower, author of Sempre)"[Sophie] writes the type of stories today's reader wants: beautifully created characters filled with emotion, and a storyline that sticks with you long after you turn the last page." (Tara Sue Me, New York Times bestselling author of the Submissive series)

About the Author Sophie Jackson writes fanfiction under the online handle Jaxon22. She is the author of the award-winning A Pound of Flesh series, including the e-novellas Love and Always and Fate and Forever. Follow her on Twitter: @SophieJax

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. A Pound of Flesh                                                                1                                                                Wesley James Carter, Arthur Kill Correctional Facility inmate and all-around punk, smirked at the disgruntled prison guard who’d been demanding his prison number for the past ten minutes. To say that Carter’s insolent behavior and amused expression were agitating the overweight, balding man would be an understatement. Dude was nearly foaming at the mouth. It was Friday, and five minutes after the guard had clocked out. All the more reason for Carter to be a difficult bastard. The guard ran an impatient hand over the back of his plump neck and his tired eyes narrowed. “Listen,” he warned in a low, dangerous voice that no doubt worked like a knife to the throats of other inmates. “It’s very simple. You give me your number. I put it on this form that I have to complete for your corrections counselor, and then I get to go home.” Carter raised a defiant eyebrow and glared at the pudgy shit. Undeterred, the guard sat back in his swivel chair. “You don’t give me your number and my wife gets pissed. She gets pissed and I have to explain to her that some cocky punk kept me waiting. Then she’ll get more pissed and yell that our tax dollars are what keep losers like you in three meals a day and coveralls.” He sat forward. “So, last time. Number.” Carter glanced nonchalantly at the guard’s fist gripping the baton attached to his belt and exhaled a long, bored breath. Any other day, he’d be ready for the douche to take a shot; he’d take the beating with a smile plastered on his face. But today, he wasn’t in the mood. “081056,” Carter answered coolly, unable to resist a small wink. With a fierce scowl, the guard scribbled the number on the form, then wheeled his seat over to give the form to a young blonde admin assistant. The fat fuck was too lazy to get up and walk the six steps. Carter waited while Blondie typed in the number that had been his adopted name for the past nineteen months. He knew what charges would appear on the monitor: car boosting, handling a dangerous weapon, drug possession, drunk and disorderly conduct to name just a few. Contrary to popular belief, he wasn’t proud of the list of crimes and misdemeanors, which could fill up two full screens. Nevertheless, it did give him a sense of self, which was something he’d been searching for aimlessly most of his twenty-seven years. He was still searching for it and, until he found that something the list was all he had. Whatever. He rubbed a palm across his buzz cut. He was sick of thinking about it. The sound of paper ripping from an ancient printer had him back on point. “Well, Mr. Carter.” The guard sighed. “It appears your stay with us stretches for another seventeen long months. Being caught with coke will do that.” “It wasn’t mine,” Carter uttered flatly. The guard gave him an insincere look of pity before grinning. “Damn shame.” Carter didn’t respond, knowing that his parole application was mere weeks away, and snatched the form with a quick hand. Flanked by another stern-looking guard, Carter strode past the desk and down a long, narrow corridor toward a white door, which he opened with a loud slap of his palm. The room was claustrophobic and sterile, and reeked of confessions. Despite the many hours he’d spent in the godforsaken place, it still made his pulse quicken and his palms sweat. With a straight back and stiff shoulders, he walked toward the cheap wooden table where a large ape of a man smiled as Carter approached. “Wes,” Jack Parker, his corrections counselor, greeted him. “It’s good to see you. Please take a seat.” Carter pushed his hands into the pockets of his coveralls and dropped ungracefully into the chair. Jack was the only person who used his first name. Everyone else called him Carter. Jack had been insistent about it, explaining that it was a way the two of them could build a trusting relationship. Carter had explained that was a crock of shit. “Got a smoke?” Carter glanced dismissively at the guard standing at the door at the other end of the room. “Sure.” Jack tossed a pack of Camels and a book of matches onto the table. Carter’s long, pale fingers grappled with the wrapper. It’d been two days since his last cigarette. He was desperate. Two broken matches and a string of curses later, he finally inhaled the thick, lush smoke. He closed his eyes, held his breath, and, for a split second, all was right with the world. “Better?” Jack asked with a shrewd smile. Blowing the smoke across the table, Carter nodded. Carter was impressed when Jack resisted the urge to wave the smoke away. They both knew doing so would only encourage Carter to do it more; he gripped on to any sign of weakness or irritation with the tenacity of a terrier. It was a defense mechanism, apparently. They’d discussed it in one of their first sessions. The mechanism was so well executed that Carter came across as strong, dominating, and, the majority of staff and inmates at Arthur Kill would agree, intimidating as hell. Jack pulled a seven-inch-thick file from his briefcase and opened it, flicking through the numerous reports, court statements, and testimonials that, over the years, described Carter as being a “menace to society,” a “strong-willed character,” and an “intelligent individual who lacks the self-confidence to assert and channel it correctly.” Again, whatever. Carter was tired of hearing how much potential he had. Yeah, he was intelligent, and fiercely loyal to the people he cared about, but for as long as he could remember, he just couldn’t seem to find a path that fit. All his life he’d been drifting, never welcome or comfortable in a place for long, dealing with his fucked-up family and friends who couldn’t stay away from fucking drama for more than five minutes. At least in lockup, shit was simple. Real-life problems were like urban myths told by those who visited from time to time. Not that Carter had many regular visitors. Jack turned to the final page of the file and wrote the date at the top of the blank piece of paper, then pressed the record button on the small digital voice recorder sitting between them. “Session sixty-four, Wesley Carter, inmate number 081056,” Jack began in a monotone. “How are you today?” “Peachy keen,” Carter replied, stubbing out his cigarette while lighting another. “Good.” Jack wrote a small note on the paper in front of him. “So, I attended a meeting yesterday regarding your enrollment in a couple of classes here at the facility.” Carter rolled his eyes. Jack ignored it. “I know you have strong views on the subject, but it’s important that you do things to challenge yourself while you’re in here.” Carter dropped his head back and frowned at the ceiling. Challenge? The whole place was a damned challenge. It was a challenge to get through each day without blowing his freakin’ gasket at some of the dumb fucks in the place. “There are a few options,” Jack continued. “English literature, philosophy, sociology. I explained to Mr. Ward and the education specialists that although you’d had problems with your previous tutors, you’ve changed from the seventeen-year-old high school dropout you used to be. Right?” Carter cast him a skeptical glance. Jack placed the tips of his fingers under his chin. “What would you like to study?” “I don’t care.” Carter shrugged. “I just wish they’d leave me the fuck alone.” “It’s all part of the conditions for the chance of early parole. You need to show progression in your rehabilitation. And if taking a couple of classes while you’re here does that, then you have to play the game.” Carter knew that, and it infuriated him. Since the age of fifteen, he’d been passed from one lawyer, parole officer, and counselor to the next, with no thought about how or if he would ever do something more meaningful with his life. Though what meaningful meant, Carter had no fucking idea. Nevertheless, after nineteen months at Kill, he was starting to think spending the rest of his days locked up wasn’t the attractive prospect he’d initially perceived it to be. As a wayward, arrogant, angry teenager, he’d enjoyed having a revered reputation. Now the excitement and thrill had waned. Court, detention centers, and prison were old news, and he was getting bored with the law institution as a whole. If he didn’t change his shit, he’d be on the wrong side of thirty wondering what the fuck happened to his life. Jack cleared his throat. “Have you had any visitors recently?” “Paul came last week. Max is coming Monday.” “Wes.” Jack sighed, pulling off his glasses. “You need to be careful. Max—he’s not good for you.” Incensed, Carter slammed his palm on the table. “You think you have the right to say shit like that?” Carter knew that Jack considered Max O’Hare a disease, infecting everyone around him with his drug issues, long criminal history, and his ability to land his friends in deep shit—Carter’s being in Kill a case in point. But Carter had owed Max big-time. Being in prison was simply squaring a debt, and he’d do it again in a heartbeat. “No,” Jack soothed. “That’s not what I think at all—” “Well, good,” Carter interrupted. “Because you have no idea what Max has been through, what he’s still going through. None.” He took a long pull on his smoke, staring at Jack over the burning embers. “I know he’s your best friend,” Jack said after a moment of tense silence. “Yeah,” Carter agreed with a sharp nod. “He is.” And from what he’d heard from the guys who’d visited, Max needed him now more than ever. ·  ·  · Even when Kat Lane was asleep, the world around her was shadowed and oppressive, riddling her dreams with fear. Her small hands gripped the sheets, twisting in desperation. Her closed eyes clenched and her jaw tightened while her head pressed into the pillows beneath it. Her spine was rigid and her feet moved in her sleep as she found herself running, panicked and terrified, down a shadowed alley. A sob rose from her throat, trapped in a never-ending slide show of the night that had happened almost sixteen years before. “Please,” she whimpered into the darkness. But no one would come to save her from the five faceless men who chased her. She shot up into a sitting position with a scream, sweating and breathless. Her eyes darted around her pitch-black room before, realizing where she was, she closed them and cupped her hands to her face. She exhaled through a rough throat and brushed the tears away, trying to calm herself with slow, deep breaths. She’d woken this way every day for the past two weeks, and the grief that hit her every time she opened her eyes was all too familiar. She shook her head, exhausted. Her doctor had told her not to stop taking her sleeping pills all at once, but to lower the dose gradually. Kat had dismissed her advice, determined to make it through one night without the aid of chemicals. It seemed her determination was wasted. She beat her fist on the mattress in frustration, then flicked on the bedside table lamp. But the light didn’t ease the fear and utter helplessness her nightmares brought her. With a defeated sigh, she got up and went toward her bathroom, flinching at the bright lights. She glanced at her reflection in the mirror and frowned. Christ, she looked a lot older than twenty-four. Her face appeared drawn, her green eyes dull and lifeless. She traced the dark shadows under them, then ran her hand through her hair. Instead of being its usual voluminous chestnut red, it hung lank and dry past her shoulders. Her mother had told her that she’d lost weight, but Kat had dismissed her words. She always had to comment on something. Kat was in no way skinny—having always been more curvaceous than skin and bone—but her size-ten jeans had become a little loose recently. She opened the cabinet and pulled out a bottle of sleeping pills. She desperately wished for the night when she wouldn’t have to rely on medicine to sleep. It wasn’t like the pills helped all that much anyway; they simply numbed a pain that would never disappear. After taking two blue capsules, she padded back across the bare wood floor to bed. Kat had realized a long time ago that there was no sleep deep enough to escape her nightmares. They were ingrained, part of who she was, and she’d never be rid of them. She knew no pill or therapy would ever erase the darkness and grief within her. Subsequently, she’d grown into a woman who was fiery and strong-minded. It was a safe way of keeping other people at arm’s length, hiding her despair and fear behind a quick wit and sharp tongue. She sank against her feather pillows. Would it ever get easier? She didn’t know. All she could focus on was the fact that sunrise would mean a new day, another day away from her past.


A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

Where to Download A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

Most helpful customer reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful. 5 "That's one for the spank bank." Stars! By Miss Claire L. Robinson 5 "That's one for the spank bank." Stars!Pound of Flesh is one of those books that grabs you, shakes you up, turns you upside down and slaps you upside the head, but all in a good way. I believe this is a re-publish of something that was originally Fan-fic, if so, sign me up for more.I love a good forbidden romance, and although Carter and Kat’s meeting and initial getting to know each other begins while he is incarcerated in Arthur Kill Correctional facility the bulk of the book and their story takes place while he is on parole, but she is still his tutor as part of his release conditions and there is a non-fraternization rule firmly in place, so that breaking the rules aspect is still very apparent.What begins is a story that you think is initially rich girl/guy from the wrong side of the tracks story, gradually flips as Carter’s life and family background are revealed, as well as a sixteen year long connection between the pair of them that took this story to a whole other level of excellent. It was a total revelation, in relation to the depth and breadth the author went in respect of building this couple up, in bringing them together, and the obstacles they faced in continuing their relationship.”Do you know I’d do anything for you?Do you know I think about you constantly?Sometimes I think I’m crazy.You make me crazy.I’m insane when I’m not with you.Jesus, I ache.I need you so badly, I need us.I need to feel us like this, because swear to god, my heart, it beats only for you.”Wes Carter; arrogant, cocky, a bit of a tool and I absolutely loved him. This guy…gah! Behind that overly confident façade is a vulnerable, nervous and so, so sweet man. I loved his nervous waffling when trying to explain how he was feeling to Kat, the author captured it perfectly.”I might not have the flowery f****** words or anything, but I’m… I’m serious about you.”I cannot recommend this book, highly enough, everything about it worked for me. The writing, the characters, the drama/angst levels, the overall development and storyline, everything ticked all of my boxes. Sophie Jackson has gotten herself a new admirer with Pound of Flesh and I cannot wait for Love and Always due August, and Max O’Hare’s book An Ounce of Hope which is due January 2016.ARC generously provided via Netgalley, and it was an absolute pleasure to provide the above honest review.

20 of 25 people found the following review helpful. like other reviewers said By NLLesn I was really excited for this book to come out, as I thought the plot had a lot of potential. However, like other reviewers said, it really missed the mark. There was a complete lack of character development especially when it came to Carter. There also seemed to be a complete contradiction. The author wanted us to believe he was a bad boy, but I just didn't see it. He was a really nice guy (saving young Kat, and going to jail for his friend) with a bad temper. That's it. He was literally a millionaire who grew up rich, attending boarding schools as a child. Also, I don't work in law enforcement, but the terms of his parole seemed ridiculous...associating with a known drug user/dealer..drinking..crossing state lines...It's been my understanding that behavior like that is usually forbidden on parole.Finally the love scenes were way too long and drawn out. I actually found myself skipping ahead right through them by the end of the book. They had the potential to be hot, but this author didn't know when to quit, and the scenes ended up becoming boring. It's not the worst debut novel I've read, but it's certainly not worth $7.99. I feel ripped off. Save your money on this one!

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Common & Underwhelming By The Lusty Literate 2.5 Stars | Hot SteamExcited and hopeful for a steamy and wickedly taboo student/teacher romance with a dark criminal bent, I eagerly dove into A POUND OF FLESH ready to devour. Unfortunately, and despite my best efforts to love this novel, Kat and Carter’s uneventful tale simply failed to enthrall. With its mundane characters, long build up to passion (140+ pages until the first kiss!) and its anticlimactic/not so forbidden plot, I found myself struggling to finish.The second half of A POUND OF FLESH is indisputably sexier than the first. However, what was building up to an expectantly secret and forbidden affair swiftly downgrades to an openly discussed and “frowned upon” relationship. Yawn. They do share some nicely passionate and angsty sex but their story outside of the bedroom remained underwhelming.Borrow or Pass.Complimentary copy provided in exchange for an honest review.

See all 148 customer reviews... A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson


A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson PDF
A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson iBooks
A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson ePub
A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson rtf
A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson AZW
A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson Kindle

A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson
A Pound of Flesh, by Sophie Jackson

Senin, 21 Mei 2012

Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project vide

Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Exactly how if your day is started by reviewing a publication Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow Of Dazzling Beaded Designs For Bracelets, Accessories, And More - Interactive! Includes QR Codes To Project Videos!, By Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman However, it remains in your gadget? Everyone will consistently touch and also us their device when awakening as well as in morning tasks. This is why, we mean you to likewise check out a book Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow Of Dazzling Beaded Designs For Bracelets, Accessories, And More - Interactive! Includes QR Codes To Project Videos!, By Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman If you still puzzled ways to get guide for your gadget, you can follow the means here. As right here, we offer Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow Of Dazzling Beaded Designs For Bracelets, Accessories, And More - Interactive! Includes QR Codes To Project Videos!, By Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman in this site.

Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman



Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Free Ebook Online Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Rubber band looming is entertaining kids and adults everywhere. Bright colors, awesome patterns, and step-by-step tutorials make for an easy and fun jewelry crafting activity that everyone will love. Add crystals, beads, and other embellishments, and you have the recipes for some seriously glamorous accessories.Rubber Band Glam features projects by the three creators of the extremely popular Rainbow Loom website and YouTube channel LoomLove.com - mom Christina Friedrichsen-Truman and her daughters Emily and Maddie Truman. With step-by-step illustrated instructions, rubber band loom jewelry gets a new twist by incorporating beads, crystals, and other sparkling embellishments into 30 bracelets, rings, charms, necklaces, and other accessories for beginner to advanced loomers. Rubber Band Glam also includes an overview of tools, supplies, and essential techniques and QR codes that link to project videos on LoomLove.com's YouTube channel. For teachers and parents, there's also helpful guidance for working with kids in groups and on fundraising and community service projects.Enjoy hours of crafting with this fun and engaging book full of projects that everyone will love!

Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1183456 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-06-01
  • Released on: 2015-06-01
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Review

"The rubber band trend shows no signs of slowing down, so it's a good thing there are books like Rubber Band Glam to provide new approaches to the basics of rubber band bracelets and accessories, including a change purse and backpack charms. The projects in this book are intricate and beautiful, elevating the elementary rubber band bracelet into a much more sophisticated creation." - Parent Society

About the Author

Mom Christina Friedrichsen-Truman and her elementary aged daughters Emily Truman and Madeline Truman are the creators of LoomLove.com, a website devoted to Rainbow Loom tutorials and patterns that are "video-tested" through their LoomLove.com YouTube channel posts. The Truman family began working with the Rainbow Loom in September 2013, when Maddie received one for her birthday, and within a couple of weeks she and sister Emily were inventing their own impressive designs. Inspired to share the girls' creations with other loomers, Christina launched the site in October 2013. LA former newspaper editor and freelance journalist, Christina is also the founder/owner of IntimateWeddings.com, and the author of Intimate Weddings: Planning a Small Wedding That Fits Your Budget and Style (North Light, 2004).


Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Where to Download Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Super-band Bling! By Stefanie G. The designs in this book are really interesting and diverse. I look forward to trying all the different ways to incorporate beads into rubber band jewelry. The projects range from elegant single rows to multiple rows and my favorite the pendants. The designs use both the loom and a hook tool. The photos of the step by step directions cover the necessary information to make all the different patterns. Also included are links to videos so you can make everything with ease.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Great inspiration and instructions! By K. Milani Wow, wow, wow! I have never used a rubber band loom, but reading this book inspired me to go out and get one! The instructions are clear with nice diagrams of each step in the process. It also includes scannable QR codes that take you directly to a YouTube video showing the technique. Very nice!The book includes 11 easy designs, 9 intermediate designs, and 6 challenging designs. It's great because they tell you exactly which kinds of bands and specific kinds of beads to use in order to attain the design they present. No guesswork! Nineteen of the patterns are for bracelets, all are lovely, but especially the Jane Austen bracelet. Several bracelet patterns have included variations. This is particularly nice for a beginner, like me, because it helps to visualize what a small change in band color or size of beads can make in the overall appearance of the finished bracelet. It's amazing the difference changing just one color can make in a bracelet!To be honest, the earrings, pendant and key fob designs don't turn my crank, but the bracelet patterns more than make up for this and it also sparks ideas for more projects. I also like the hair clip design, but can't help but wonder if it would snag my daughters' hair.My 10-yr-old daughter begged me to let her show the books to her friends and let them get started making some bracelets.All in all, if you like rubber band bracelets, or are looking for a great craft for your kids, this would be a great addition to your library. Highly recommended.I received my copy from the publisher in return for my honest review.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Fantastic introduction to rubber band looming! By Mysticseer Okay, I'm going to preface this by saying that I have never been interested in those rubber band bracelets that seem to be all the rage. However, after seeing all of the really cool stuff you can make with them, I'm changing my tune!The book starts with a great chapter on getting started and gives information on everything from the rubber bands, to how to use the loom, to adding beads for that special touch. (And believe me, the beads add a completely different dimension to the projects; even making the bracelets look pretty funky).Within the different projects, there are step by step pictured instructions on how to make each project, which would lay an excellent foundation for branching out and trying your own designs. Plus, within each design is a scanner code to take you to tutorial videos, for people who find videos easier to follow along to!I also appreciate the blurb at the end of the book that shares ways that kids can help their community, or people in need by making, selling or giving away loom creations. Making kids more aware of other people in the world is always a bonus. There's also a list of resources, which is always a bonus.This really is a terrific book, which acts as a great introduction to the world of rubber band looming.

See all 4 customer reviews... Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman


Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman PDF
Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman iBooks
Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman ePub
Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman rtf
Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman AZW
Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman Kindle

Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman

Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman
Rubber Band Glam: A Rainbow of Dazzling Beaded Designs for Bracelets, Accessories, and More - Interactive! Includes QR codes to project videos!, by Christina Friedrichsen-Truman, Emily Truman