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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Online Book Tour & Review - Sterling Redmond by Kim Nathan





Welcome to my stop on Kim Nathan's Online Book Tour for Sterling Redmond.  Please make sure to leave a comment or question below to let Kim know you stopped by.



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Guest Self Interview - Kim Nathan 


Who I am: an emerging novelist

What I wanted to be when I grew up: an angel, then later – a writer.  As a child, whenever some kind stranger would remark on my dimples, my mother told me to say, “that’s where the angels kissed me when I was born.” Seriously.

What I ended up doing for a living: business analyst for Corporate America. Wow – big disconnect, huh? I left that career in December 2010.

City I was born in: Baltimore, Maryland

City where I live now: Seattle, Washington

Education:

Catholic school: kindergarten – 6th grade

Public school: 7th grade – high school graduation

University: 1 year, then…

School of Life: ongoing

What’s most important to me: my family, my friends, my freedom to create, and my ability to serve and contribute

Favorite personality traits (in myself and others): courage, honesty, compassion

People I admire: Oprah, Sting, Louise L. Hay, Marc Allen, Jonathan Fields, and anyone who follows their dreams

Writers who influenced me: Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, Victoria Holt, Anya Seton, Mary Stewart, Susan Howatch, Milan Kundera, Margaret Atwood, Jane Roberts, Marc Allen, Jonathan Fields, Steven Pressfield

Best Novel I’ve ever read: The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Favorite things to do when I’m not writing: dining out with my husband, reading in my garden with my cats near by, leisurely walks in nature, Nia dancing, sharing time with my girlfriends, vacationing in Europe…

Favorite vacation spots: Amsterdam, Italy, Germany

Intention: To inspire and entertain my readers and to live a life of courage, purpose and connection.


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Sterling Redmond
by Kim Nathan

Publisher: Kim Nathan
Release Date: December 31, 2011

Length: 346 Pages 


ASIN: B006RYC7VS

Buy Links:


Blurb:  


Set in Gilded Age America, a young woman must choose between circumstance and destiny. When orphaned as small children, Sterling Redmond and her older sister Charlotte are raised by their grandfather at the family’s Maryland country estate of Northampton. Charlotte blossoms into a famed Baltimore beauty, but Sterling is more interested in books and horseback riding than feminine pursuits. 

Concerned that her niece will never find a suitable husband among the local Baltimore gentry, Madame De Chant whisks Sterling away to Belle Époque Paris in search of a gentleman who can understand her. In their absence, Nicholas Pembroke, the son of an English earl, takes up residence in the manor bordering Northampton.

When Sterling and her aunt return to America for Charlotte’s wedding, Sterling finds that her perfect husband is living right next door. But there is a problem: he is already engaged to marry Charlotte.


Excerpt: 


PROLOGUE 

Here I am. I stand before a house from my past on the edge of a small Parisian park. Across the lane and up a few stairs, the front door stares back and gives me nothing. I know this place. Shivering in the cold violet light of dusk that surrounds me, here I am, at the end of my journey to find him. I am stunned it did not occur to me sooner, the idea that he might come here, this place from our past. It occurs to me now that while I thought he was running away from me in the present; he was actually running back towards me in the past. And yet I am frozen on this boulevard, unable to move.

There is the flicker of firelight above stairs. Reassured my travel has not been for naught, I wait for a carriage to pass by over the cobble stones, and then I cross the lane. My body compels me up the steps and rings the bell. Twice. Beyond the glass windows I see lamps being lit. A noisy lock turns and the door opens. I expect a hall-porter, but I get the valet. Wolffe stares back at me with his stoic face, but I see the flash of shocked recognition cross his angular features before he regains complete control. His presence confirms my hope that Nicholas is here.

“Madame,” he says, blinking at me.

“Wolffe,” I reply, pushing my way past him and into the hall.

We stare at each other for a moment, saying nothing. The foyer where we stand has clearly not seen callers for some time. No fire warms the chill damp and stale air. I glance furtively at the bare fireplace. Wolffe, having now regained his composure, breaks our silence. “We were not expecting any callers this evening, ma’am.”

“He is here?” I ask, gazing up the stairs.

“He is,” Wolffe replies.

“I will see him.”

Wolffe nods his head and leads me up the steps. I feel every intake of breath as I climb. Memories from years before crowd all around me, but this place feels lifeless now. When we reach the top of the stairs, Wolffe pauses and says, in a voice barely above a whisper, “May I say…ma’am…what a comfort it is to see you here.”

The light from the drawing room is brighter now. It is good that I am here. Wolffe has told me so, and Wolffe knows everything there is to know about this house, about me, about Nicholas. Wolffe holds his hand up to stop me and then he walks into the bright flickering drawing room. He waits a moment to be acknowledged.

Finally, I hear him say, “Sir.”

“What is it, Wolffe? You know I don’t see callers,” an impatient voice says. Nicholas’ voice.

I hear Wolffe announce “Sterling Redmond, sir.” And I step into the light. 




ONE 

Three Years Earlier 

Maryland, August 1889 


Sterling Redmond walked into the room, and Nicholas saw her for the first time. Actually, it was not the first time. He had seen her earlier that day, from a distance, rolling along in an open carriage with her great-aunt, arriving back at Northampton after two years abroad, but she was only a blur of auburn hair in the distance. He had not yet met her, but Charlotte had told him this about her: she was dull. She lacked the vivaciousness of other young women. Her disposition was too serious. Some called her a bluestocking. In short, she was a problem. A young woman of such a prominent and influential Baltimore family was expected to secure a marriage worthy of her social status. After two seasons in Paris, where her great-aunt Madame De Chant maintained a household, she had yet to win a firm offer of marriage. There was a growing impatience among her closest family members, who wondered if her education and forthright manner prevented any positive momentum in this direction, and to make matters worse, Charlotte complained, the young woman seemed not the slightest bit interested in abandoning her independence.

Sterling was home now at the request of her grandfather and guardian, Andrew Redmond, who was busy arranging Charlotte’s own wedding, scheduled to occur in just a month’s time. These upcoming nuptials only served to accent the problem with her younger sister. Charlotte thought her sister’s willful manner and plain looks were to blame for her unclaimed state. It certainly wasn’t due to her lack of a dowry. Charlotte, on the other hand, was a famed Baltimore beauty, whose looks and accomplishments were universally admired. She was immensely popular in society, and it was no surprise to anyone that she had secured the engagement of the season to the son of an English earl. Her exquisite beauty, her delicate manners and gentle ways, her sensitive disposition, all were upheld as an ideal role model among the young ladies in the county. Other young women fashioned themselves after Charlotte in their manner of dress, in the way they wore their hair. Charlotte painted her own sister’s prospects in such a dim light that Nicholas was astonished when the supposedly awkward and plain sister walked into the drawing room, and he saw a creature quite unlike the one described to him.

Sterling was late, so she appeared slightly flustered. Madame De Chant was already established on the settee, holding court with her family around her. Sterling paused in the doorway, and Nicholas watched her eyes quickly scan the room. Her gaze finally reached him, the only person in the room with whom she wasn’t acquainted, and this prompted her to smile. She swept into the drawing room, her shoulders squared and her back perfectly straight. She was a simple beauty, not beautiful the way her sister was, but with a quiet, thoughtful face of porcelain skin and intelligent dark eyes full of natural curiosity and easy humor. Her strawberry blonde hair was pulled back in a soft chignon, held in place with a tortoise-shell comb. She wore a gown of cream faille with purple satin stripes that was impeccably tailored to her figure, and the lack of frills, bows and flounces only served to enhance the luminous effect the fashion had upon her. In her right hand, she held an embroidered black silk fan which she opened mischievously as she approached her grandfather, beaming a smile at him. Two years spent in Europe had clearly transformed the younger Miss Redmond into something unrecognizable to her sister Charlotte.

Nicholas glanced over at Charlotte now. She had told him the reunion of her family was a joyous occasion, but it was clear from her expression that it was not. In all her resplendent beauty, she sat beside her aunt, her hand tightly gripping the carved swan-necked armrest of the red Finley sofa, her lips pinched primly together as her eyes followed her sister across the room.

Sterling went first to her grandfather, who gave her a warm kiss on the cheek. He was visibly delighted to see her and there was easy affection between them. Next she turned to acknowledge her great-aunt, who was like a mother to her, and then to her sister Charlotte, to whom she expressed sincere happiness in seeing again after such a long absence. Then she looked back to her grandfather, and turned her body slightly towards her sister’s fiancé, signaling that Andrew Redmond should introduce them. Nicholas watched her command the room with a sophistication of etiquette and manners that he had not seen since taking up residence in Baltimore. Her eyes smiled enthusiastically at him as Redmond introduced them.

“Sterling, this is Mr. Nicholas Pembroke. Pembroke, may I present my granddaughter, Miss Sterling Redmond?” The smile now touched her lips and she gave him a slight bow. Her eyes stared back at him steadily, and in them, he saw the eyes of Europe, the place he had come here to escape.


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BIO:

Kim Nathan is an American author of romance fiction, including Sterling Redmond, a historical romance, and Dreaming Montana, a paranormal romance. Born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, she relocated to Seattle, Washington in 1994, where she lives with her husband and cats.



ONLINE LINKS:

· Website http://kimnathanauthor.com/

· Facebook http://www.facebook.com/kimnathanauthor

· Twitter @KimNathanAuthor  


· Goodreads http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5753888.Kim_Nathan


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Review

Sterling Redmond, a historical romance penned by Kim Nathan, takes us back to the Gilded Age in America, where wealthy American businessmen and their wives tried to marry their wealthy daughters to either titled gentlemen in Europe or their rich counterparts on the East Coast.  A period of time when women still had little to no legal rights to determine their own lives, Ms. Nathan's tale centers on two wealthy sisters, their husbands and the passing people in their lives.  While many in America were struggling financially after the civil war, this story focuses on the wealthy and a woman whose character and personality would be at home in the modern world.

A wealthy, young debutante, Sterling Redmond has just returned to America from a 2 year trip to Europe.  While both her wealthy grandfather and her older sister, Charlotte, had hoped she would come back a bride.  Sterling comes back a more refined person but still enjoys the challenge of riding horses, reading scholarly works and being physically active.  While she knows it's inevitable that she'll eventually have to marry, she never planned on falling in love with her sister's gentleman fiancee.

Nicholas Pembroke, the third son of a titled English gentleman, has settled in America to make a new life.  A wealthy man, due to marrying money, he struggles to get over the death of his wife in childbirth.  Knowing it's time to move on, he finds himself drawn to the country area in the Baltimore area and meets wealthy businessman Andrew Redmond, who naturally introduces him to his beautiful granddaughter Charlotte.  While Nicholas really isn't interested in a new wife, he knows Charlotte would be a good match due to her breeding, her position in society and her own need for a wealthy husband.  He never expected to fall in love with her younger sister, a woman he couldn't have.

It was clear to me from the very beginning that Sterling and Nicholas belonged together; unfortunately they were both promised to marry others.  While each gives in to the inevitability of their circumstances, it's the fact their love and attraction for each other doesn't fade which makes this a somewhat sorrowful romance to read.  Ms. Nathan does an excellent job touching on the fact that society at the time was more concerned with appearances and outward behavior - acting honorably and all that - and wasn't concerned with the moral or emotional problems the behavior created.  Infidelity was not only the norm, it was almost expected.

As time moves forward we see Sterling, Nicholas, Charlotte and all of the others involved in their lives, suffering the effects of their actions and their consequences.  While I enjoyed getting to know some of the viewpoints of the others, i will admit that the "head bopping" occasionally made it difficult to follow the story.  I would have preferred if we had simply gotten the story from the viewpoint of Sterling or Nicholas or even Sterling and Nicholas but not everyone else too.

Do Sterling and Nicholas ever have a chance to act on their love?  You'll have to read Sterling Redmond to find out.


My Rating: 3.5 out of 5 Crowns





FTC Disclosure:  I received a complimentary copy of this book as a part of a book tour in exchange for a fair and honest review.



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