logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
back to top
Search tags: Belle-Cora
Load new posts () and activity
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2015-12-01 06:18
Belle Cora, by Phillip Margulies
Belle Cora - Phillip Margulies

Philip Margulies’ novel, Belle Cora, is about a woman who loves so fiercely, so loyally, that she spends most of her first 33 years of life trying to save them from themselves. Belle Cora is based on a real woman who popped up a couple of times in the history of early San Francisco; Margulies took these mentions and created an entire biography for her. Belle is not an easy woman to like, but she inspires admiration in spite of her willingness to bribe and blackmail for her men...

 

Read the rest of my review at A Bookish Type.

Like Reblog Comment
review 2014-11-16 00:00
Belle Cora
Belle Cora - Phillip Margulies Goodreads giveaway Firstreads. Thank you very much!

Delicious. But not in a lurid way.

Historical fiction inspired by a San Francisco madam during the gold rush.

Fans of Victorian period literature and historical fiction should eat this up, just as I did. Plenty of historical references and research.
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2014-09-18 18:37
Belle Cora - Phillip Margulies
Read from August 13 to September 14, 2014

 

Wow!!! Perfect!! I absolutely adored this book! It's going on my All time Faves shelf right now. Do I recommend it? Yes! READ. THIS. BOOK. It's historical fiction at its very best. 
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2014-03-01 06:27
Belle Cora
Belle Cora - Phillip Margulies

This was honestly one of the best books that I have read in a long time. The funny thing is that I almost stopped reading it about a third of the way through. I didn't almost stop reading it because I thought it was badly written or that it was boring. I almost stopped reading it because I felt so connected with the main character and she kept having bad things happen to her and I just didn't know if I could take more of that. I am so happy that I decided to continue reading it.

 

I can't recall feeling this connected to a character in a long time as I felt with the main character Arabella. She goes by many names throughout this book but I am just going to call her Arabella. This is written as though Arabella has written a book about her life (and this book is actually based on a real woman named Belle Cora, which is a name that Arabella goes by in this book). I really liked getting to read everything from her point-of-view and the fact that it was written as though it was an autobiography really enhanced the story for me.

 

Throughout her adulthood Arabella does some pretty unsavory things: prostitution, becomes a famous madame, and much more. You would think that because of those things that she wouldn't be a character that you would sympathize with or even like. I loved Arabella and while reading this book it felt like I was Arabella (well maybe not with the prostitution parts). Whenever she was wronged, I wanted vengeance; whenever she was sad, I was sad. I think that most of the reasons why she ends up the way she does is because of the way she was treated by her family when she was sent to live with her aunt and uncle. No matter what she ended up doing I still rooted for her.

 

The one thing that Arabella wants most throughout this book is Jeptha Talbot's love. She originally fell in love with Jeptha while she was living with her aunt and uncle and spends her life trying to gain Jeptha's love. For most of the book I thought that Jeptha just wasn't the right man for her. They were so different that I felt like he would never make her happy and she could never really make him happy either. As I neared the end of the book I realized that I was wrong. Jeptha's love could have been the one thing to truly save her.

 

This was such a beautifully written book that highlighted what life was like in San Francisco during the gold rush. Through Arabella's story you get to see the corruption in politics during those times, what life in a parlor house was like, and all the rebuilding of the city after fires and a major earthquake.

 

I would highly recommend this book to someone looking for a fascinating historical fiction novel.

Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
text 2014-02-28 04:24
Reading progress update: I've read 60% of Belle Cora by Phillip Margulies.
Belle Cora - Phillip Margulies

So in my last reading update for this book I said that I'd probably be reading this slowly because I just felt too emotionally connected to the main character and bad things had just happened to her and I didn't think I could take more of that. Well I think that got thrown out the window because once I started reading this again I got hooked in the story and the pages kept flying by.

 

I still feel overly connected to Arabella (although in some circles she is now known as Harriet). She has been through a lot and the blame for why she is the way she is can mostly be put on the way her family has treated her. I can't really say that Arabella is happy with where she is in her life right now but she is in control and isn't struggling to get by each day.

 

Right now Jeptha is back in her life. He doesn't know the truth about who she really is and I'm worried about where their relationship appears to be headed. It looks like Arabella is finally going to get the one thing she thinks she wants, Jeptha's love, but I wonder if it really is the thing she still wants or needs. Arabella has changed since she was that little girl on her aunt and uncle's farm and I don't think Jeptha is the right man for her anymore. Her love for Jeptha kind of reminds me of Scartlett's love of Ashley Wilkes in Gone With the Wind.

 

This is probably one of the most thought out and longest reading update I have done (it is about the size of my normal reviews) but that is because the author has created such a complex character that no matter what she does I still find myself rooting for her.

More posts
Your Dashboard view:
Need help?