Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Review Tour & Giveaway: A Celtic Yuletide Carol (Christmas in the Castle) by Jennifer Ivy Walker


A CELTIC YULETIDE CAROL
A Christmas in the Castle book
by
Jennifer Ivy Walker

This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions.
Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Historical Holiday Romance
Publisher: The Wild Rose Press, Inc.
Publication Date: November 6, 2024
Page count: 187 pages

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SYNOPSIS:

Once a royal Breton knight, Sir Cardin is now infamously known as Basati, the Basque Wolf. Savage and sullen, he drowns his guilt in raucous taverns, accruing enormous debt and acquiring vengeful enemies.
 
Ulla, widowed daughter of a Viking chieftain, is a skilled archer who lives as a recluse in a secluded woodland cottage. Rendered mute by trauma, she avoids humans, preferring the company of her wild wolf and falcon as she hunts in the Forest of Brocéliande.

When his mother’s dying wish calls Basati home, he finally meets the son he abandoned at birth and Ulla, the enigmatic priestess who is teaching the boy to hunt. As the holidays approach, Basati finds himself smitten with the beguiling beauty as he bonds with his once forsaken child.
 
But past enemies plot against him, and Basati is ensnared in darkness. 

Can music lure the savage wolf into the light of love?

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ENJOY AN EXCERPT:

He tenderly traced her bottom lip with the tip of his thumb. “You and I are the same.  Broken. Damaged. Alone.”
 
He lifted her quivering chin. Her sorrowful eyes mirrored the endless mourning of his own empty soul. “You’re a healer, Ulla..” Lowering his lips to brush softly against hers, he whispered into her open mouth. “Heal us.”


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Enthralled with legends of medieval knights and ladies, dark fairy tales, and fantasies about Druids, wizards and magic, Jennifer Ivy Walker always dreamed of becoming a writer. She fell in love with French in junior high school, continuing her study of the language throughout college, eventually becoming a high school teacher and college professor of French. 

Her latest release, A Celtic Yuletide Carol, is a steamy medieval romance between a broken, battered royal knight and a solitary, mute healer and huntress who prefers the company of her wolf and falcon to humans. Both protagonists are shattered souls who slowly find solace in each other.
 
Readers who enjoyed Winter Solstice in the Crystal Castle and The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven trilogy—a fated mates paranormal fantasy adaptation of the medieval legend of Tristan and Isolde, interwoven with Arthurian myth, Avalon, Elves, Druids, forest fairies, Vikings, and dark magic—will recognize several of the main characters in this new novel as well.
 
Explore her realm of Medieval French Fantasy. She hopes her novels will enchant you.

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REVIEW:

5 stars!

A satisfying holiday-set tale of love and loss, healing and redemption. 

A Celtic Yuletide Carol by Jennifer Ivy Walker is an excellent addition to the ongoing Christmas in the Castle collection and even features characters from some of the author’s previous works. I enjoyed seeing familiar faces and learning how their lives had progressed since their stories were first told, and I loved getting to know the new personalities. However, the book is absolutely a standalone novel. 

Laudine, the matriarch of the de Landuc clan, is a renowned healer and knows that some members of her own family are in desperate need of her more subtle skills. Her middle son, Cardin, suffered an emotional crisis when his beloved wife died giving birth to their son, and in his anguish, he blames his own lust for Charlotte and, consequently, the child Lukaz for her death. Refusing to even look at the baby, he tries to outrun his grief by posting to far off Aquitaine in the service of his king, leaving his son to be raised by his older brother and his wife. Although in excellent and loving hands, as Lukaz grows, he’s subjected to the scorn and bullying of the older boys serving as squires in his uncle’s household, who taunt him with accusations of being a bastard or abandoned or unwanted. After six long years, Laudine knows that if she can just get father and son reunited, love will heal them both. 

With the help of her most skilled student, Ulla, she plans to fake a fatal illness and sends for Cardin and his older brother, Gaultier, to return home to Brittany, claiming it is her dying wish to see them for her final Yuletide season. Ulla, although an accomplished healer, is also suffering emotionally from the loss of her husband and young sons a couple of years earlier. Formerly a talented singer, the horror of their deaths left her mute, and she had returned to Laudine and the one place she knew she could find safety and, hopefully, solace. She spends her days preparing herbal medicines and hunting with her wolf, Vill, and falcon, Finn. However, she avoids the presence of babies and children because of the intense pain and sorrow seeing them now causes her. Still, when young Lukaz needs someone to teach him archery, Laudine asks her to take on the task in hopes their close contact will help repair the damage in Ulla’s heart. 

The author does an amazing job developing these characters’ histories and establishing their states of mind, and I was completely invested in their journeys toward healing, love, and redemption. The women are strong and capable characters despite the tragedies they’ve endured in their lives, and the sons de Landuc are the strong, responsible, yet caring products of their decent, loving parents. Cardin has a rough start initially, trying to assuage his grief with drink, dicing, and brawling. He’s become irresponsible and selfish in his pain, and Gaultier has carried him for six long years. His weak starting point makes his redemption that much more of an emotional journey for us all. 

The author employs multiple points of view to tell the story, and her writing style is compelling yet easy to read. She doesn’t waste a single sentence, though, as each one is full of atmosphere, vivid description, and action: almost full stories themselves. The settings of Aquitaine and Brittany are interesting and well-developed, and they include a subplot dealing with the political events of the time with historical figures mentioned throughout. This storyline is where much of the conflict and suspense of the book resides, as Cardin is targeted as a patsy for an evil man’s ambitious plans for his own gains. The political machinations are a fascinating part of the story and beckoned me to read more about the history involved.

I recommend A CELTIC YULETIDE CAROL to readers of historical romance, especially those who like a holiday setting in their stories.



GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY!

The author will be awarding a $25 Amazon/BN gift card to a randomly drawn winner.

5 comments:

  1. We appreciate you featuring and reviewing this book.

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  2. The blurb sounds interesting.

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  3. Thank you so very much for this fabulous review! I am honored by your eloquent praise and thrilled that you loved my novel!!!

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  4. Sounds like a book I will enjoy reading.

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  5. The blurb sounds really interesting.

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