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review 2019-01-26 08:26
Book Blitz: North Star by Posy Roberts with Giveaway

North Star
Posy Roberts
(North Star #1-3)
Publication date: January 22nd 2019
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, LGBTQ+, Romance

A romance with a seventeen-year intermission. Love that’s worth the wait, and now a family to fight for.

Hugo and Kevin were best friends and secret lovers back in high school, but love came too early for them to make a solid commitment. College, other relationships, kids for Kevin, and years got in the way, but a chance meeting at a lake in the middle of nowhere proves the spark that first drew them together remains. Seventeen years later, life is a lot more complex, but falling in love again is easy.

In Spark, Hugo and Kevin attempt to rekindle their relationship while overcoming the obstacles of coming out, divorce, and parenting. Second chances at lost love are rare but worth it. In Fusion, Kevin and Hugo make plans to blend their lives, but bleak news changes everything. Building a future together is still a priority, but only if their relationship can survive. And in Flare, Hugo and Kevin seek stability for themselves and the kids after tremendous loss. They never expected family and friends to toss obstacles in their way, but they are determined to fight for their happily ever after.

 
 
EXCERPT
 
Seventeen years after their last kiss, a second chance…
 
They’d been good together, Kevin and Hugo. Not just back in high school, but also last night. It was as if their bodies knew exactly where to pick up, like they’d only left each other a day or two before rather than years ago.
 
Their kisses alone . . .
 
Hugo pressed his fingers to his mouth, but a knock at the door startled him.
 
“Do you need a toothbrush?”
 
“If you have a spare, sure,” he said as he opened the door.
 
“This is the only one I could find.”
 
“Thanks.” Hugo tore into the package, unwilling to take his eyes off Kevin. He looked more rested than Hugo. Kevin smiled.
 
“Toothpaste is in . . .” Kevin gestured but then walked in and retrieved it from a drawer. “Here.”
 
Hugo loaded the bristles, nodded, and turned to brush his teeth. Kevin stood in the doorway for a few extra seconds but then slipped away.
 
He spent a few minutes brushing, lost again in thoughts of the previous night before spitting and rinsing his mouth. When he looked down, he saw a redheaded princess on the handle.
 
No wonder it felt so small in my mouth. It’s a kid’s toothbrush.
 
Hugo turned off the faucet.
 
“Kevin,” he called out, “where should I put this? Maybe take it with me?”
 
“No, you can leave it on the counter.” Kevin appeared in the doorway with a teasing smile. “It can be yours. I’ll label it so you can use it the next time you come to the lake.”
 
Hugo gave a small snort of laughter, liking the sound of a next time.
 
“Do you have kids?” he asked warily.
 
Kevin looked to his bare feet, then back to Hugo’s eyes.
 
“Yep. Two. Brooke and Finn. Brooke, she’s ten and just finished fourth grade, and Finn is five. He’ll start kindergarten this fall.”
 
“Oh.” That’s all Hugo managed, not sure what the hell happened to his tongue, let alone his brain. It was as if his brain flipped to a television station with only static.
 
“That’s why I’m going to Fargo today. They’ve been spending time with my ex at her parents’ house.”
 
“So you’re a dad?” Hugo’s brain barely took in a few images beyond the static.
 
“Yep,” Kevin said with a cocky smile. “That’s generally the title you take on when you’ve fathered children. Does that surprise you?”
 
Hugo blinked several times, looking into the familiar midnight-ringed gray of Kevin’s eyes as if that would bring back feeling in his fingers and clarify things in his head. Did it surprise Hugo that Kevin was a father?
 
“No. No, I suppose not. You always had your life pretty well laid out. Or your parents did.”
 
“And I did everything they wanted. I went to the college they wanted me to, got the degree Dad said was worth something, found a job in a field he approved of, married a smart, beautiful woman who was my best friend, and had a couple of great kids with her. Unfortunately, the marriage didn’t last, but I got two amazing children out of the deal. I’d like for you to meet them. My kids, that is.”
 
“Me? Why me?” Hugo stammered.
 
Kevin laughed. “Why not? They’d love you. Not to mention, I think I’d like them to meet the man who changed my life.”
 
Hugo took a step back. “What are you talking about? I didn’t change your life.”
 
“The hell you didn’t. Before I met you, I was my dad’s pawn in everything. It wasn’t until I told you how angry I was that I stood up to him. Only on little things at first, but I rebelled in my own way. I never would’ve done that without you. After he died, I finally made the changes I needed to make.”
 
Kevin pressed a kiss between Hugo’s brows, causing the creases there to melt away. Kevin whispered as his hands warmed Hugo’s back. “You were so much more significant in my life than I ever let you know. Probably more than I even knew at the time. I took you for granted, but you changed me. When I was with you, I was just Kevin. I wasn’t Kevin Magnus, son of the great Peder and Linda Magnus. I was just plain ol’ Kevin, and you liked me for who I was.”
 
“Of course I did.” Hugo pressed a kiss in the slight cleft of Kevin’s chin. It felt natural to kiss him like this, uninhibited. “You were easy to like, most of the time.”
 
“That was different for me, you realize, someone liking just me.”
 
Hugo nodded, enjoying the sensation of Kevin’s freshly shaved skin smoothing over his lips.
 
“If it weren’t for you, I would’ve never known I was bisexual. Or I would’ve never been brave enough to see what those feelings were even about.”
 
“You probably would’ve experimented in college.”
 
Kevin shook his head and drew Hugo closer, pressing a kiss in front of his ear. “No. No, Hugo. Don’t you see? I already knew I was bisexual in college, and not once was I with another guy. You were it. You were the only one who made me feel brave enough to go against my father. No one else in my life even knows about this. Not even my ex.”
 
Hugo pulled away as he asked, “Then why on earth would you want your kids to meet me? If this is still such a secret, why risk that? We barely know each other.”
 
Kevin reached for Hugo’s hand and held his fingers tight. “I didn’t say I wanted to introduce you as my ex-boyfriend . . . as anything more than my friend. Geez. Wow. That sounded bad, didn’t it?”
 
Hugo barked out a nervous laugh. “A bit rushed. Yeah. I’m glad we ran into each other and all, but . . . I’m still trying to wrap my head around that. But dating . . . ? And meeting your kids . . . ?” He mimed his head exploding.
 
“God.” Kevin chuckled, flustered. “No. I guess what I meant to say is I’d like to spend more time with you.”
 
“I can’t believe I let things get away from me last night. I rarely hook up like that.”
 
Kevin gave a short nod.
 
“It’s not a bad thing . . . what happened, I mean. But I’m more of a relationship guy.”
 
“So am I.” A frown marred Kevin’s gorgeous face.
 
“It’s certainly not unappealing seeing you again.” Hugo stepped in close and played with the button in the center of Kevin’s chest. “Let’s not go so fast though.”
 
“I got carried away last night. I’ve never done anything like that before, but it was you. It was Hugo Thorson.” Kevin smiled and ran a thumb down Hugo’s temple, tracing his jaw until his fingers pressed below Hugo’s chin. Kevin directed Hugo’s mouth to his own and whispered, “Hugo Thorson,” again.
 
They kissed slow and sweet, velvet tongues licking into open mouths and sliding against each other, but it didn’t deepen or turn desperate.
 
“I can’t believe I ever walked away from this,” Kevin said as he rested his forehead against Hugo’s and closed his eyes.
 
 
Author Bio:
Posy Roberts started reading romance when she was young, sneaking peeks at adult books long before she should've. Textbooks eventually replaced the novels, and for years she existed without reading for fun. When she finally picked up a romance two decades later, it was like slipping on a soft hoodie . . . that didn't quite fit like it used to. She wanted something more.

She wanted to read about men falling in love with each other. She wanted to explore beyond the happily ever after and see characters navigate the unpredictability of life. So Posy sat down at her keyboard to write the books she wanted to read.

Her stories have been USA Today's "Happily Ever After" Must-Reads and Rainbow Award finalists. When she's not writing, she's spending time with her family and friends and doing anything possible to get out of grocery shopping and cooking.

 
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review 2016-06-11 03:19
Chasing the North Star
Chasing the North Star: A Novel - Robert Morgan

Chasing the North Star by Robert Morgan is the story of two runaway slaves trying to make their way to the north. The story is one of slaves but not really one of slavery. Please note that the book does have graphic descriptions of violence and “adult” encounters. However, the book seems to lack the intensity and the emotional impact that a story such as this could have.

 

Please read my complete review at Memories From Books - Chasing the North Star

 

Reviewed for the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program.

 

Source: www.memoriesfrombooks.com/2016/06/chasing-north-star.html
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review 2016-05-26 13:29
from FictionZeal.com re: Chasing the North Star by Robert Morgan
Chasing the North Star: A Novel - Robert Morgan

Johah Williams is a slave on a plantation in South Carolina.  It’s 1850; well before the Civil War and Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation.  He’s Mrs. William’s house slave serving her two children.  When the children are taught their lessons, Jonah listens.  From those lessons, he teaches himself to read … it was illegal for a slave to read.  Mrs. Williams catches him with a book he’d borrowed from their massive library.  He thought he’d be beaten.  Instead, she arranged for Jonah to read to her from the Bible every day.  It was their secret.  She even gave him a Bible of his own.  This Bible “had letters the size of gnats and hairs.  But it was the prettiest book he’d ever seen ….”  While Mrs. Williams was away visiting her sister, Jonah was reading in the barn loft.  Mr. Williams caught him, accused him of stealing the books, and beat him.  It was then that Jonah decided he would seek freedom.  That night, he took the jar of coins his mama had collected; a knife from the kitchen; and a hat and headed northward.

 

When he could, he’d travel by night.  When men with guns and dogs were after him, he’d seek water to throw off his scent.  After a few nights, he happened onto a ‘Jubilee’.  He saw a fire blazing and other Negroes dancing and chanting.  It’s there he met Angel.  She was also a house slave.  The master was using her as his bed warmer.  She decided if Jonah could run away, she could run, too.  He tried a few times to leave her behind, but she always managed to reappear back in his life.

 

The character of Jonah was so well-crafted that I could believe he was real as opposed to fictional.  He literally traveled by foot, boat, wagon, and train on his journey seeking freedom.  The trip was hard not only because he’d be beaten and possibly killed if he were captured and returned to Master Williams, but also because the terrain was perilous and the weather unforgiving.  Angel added something very special to this story.  As much as Jonah was ‘book smart’, she was ‘street smart’.  They complimented each other in ways that Jonah refused to acknowledge.  When the synopsis tells us that Angel manages to find Jonah even though he tried to leave her behind, I thought this would be too coincidental to be believable.  But it was all very convincing.  If you like books in which you can emotionally immerse yourself, you’ll love this story of Jonah’s arduous pursuit of freedom.  Rating: 5 out of 5.

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review 2016-04-12 09:00
Chasing the North Star
Chasing the North Star: A Novel - Robert Morgan
ISBN: 9781565126275
Publisher: Algonquin Books
Publication Date: 4/5/2016 
Format: Hardcover
My Rating: 5 Stars 
 
A special thank you to Algonquin Books and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Storyteller, Robert Morgan, delivers a lively coming-of-age historical fiction of humanity, CHASING THE NORTH STAR an entertaining, and poignant heartfelt journey of two Southern runaway slaves in the 1850s, forced to leave their families behind for survival--a better life.

A remarkable adventure through the wilderness with newfound courage to hope and freedom, as they follow the North Star. From loss, and tragedy to joy and love—rich in character and history, assured to captivate readers of all ages.

Jonah was born during a terrible storm, of slaves in a cabin behind The Williams Plantation in the foothills of South Carolina, north of Greenville, just below the cotton line. He arrived on the full moon. His granny always said as a full moon baby, he would be “darting away” running from one thing, and then to another. No more dependable than Jonah in the Holy Bible.

He had been lucky because Mrs. Williams picked him out as a boy to serve her and her children. He was young enough to be Mr. Williams’ own child. She was from Columbia and liked to wear fancy dresses and gives parties. Her children were Betsy and Johnny and she liked for young slaves to serve at parties, and even made him special clothes to act as butler.

Jonah was always around when the tutor came for the children’s lessons. Back then, nobody but white folk were supposed to read. But every chance he got he listened to the lessons and he learned the letters and numbers. It was Mrs. Williams who caught him taking a book from the master’s library—Robinson Crusoe.

He was just borrowing it, not stealing. He found it so interesting. He wanted to read everything. She promised she would not tell anyone he could read. He was afraid he might be sold and sent away to live with strangers. She said she would tell no one if he returned the book to the library, and read to her from the Bible, from time to time.

Mrs. Williams encouraged him to read from the Good Book-- she was going to give him his very own Bible, so he could study it and learn. She said it would make him wise and useful. She even gave him newspapers to read, where he learned about the Fugitive Slave Law, and the Great Compromise. He also read about Northern states—a place beyond North Carolina where no one was a slave.

However, an escaped slave could be arrested and returned to his owner. They had no slaves in the North. He was intrigued with foreign countries, wars, and places he had never heard of. He loved the newspapers—he thought this was Mrs. Williams greatest gift.

The day he did decide to run away from Mr. Williams’ plantation was the day he turned eighteen in 1850. A hot day in the cotton and corn fields in the middle of the summer. The day his secret was discovered.

It was the week Mrs. Williams was away visiting her sister in the mountains- Flat Rock, NC. He had kept the Bible in the loft of the barn (a good hiding place). He would read in the mornings—his secret pleasure, savoring the words and stories. He had gotten careless, and sneaked out a volume of a new story called David Copperfield.

He did not hear the footsteps due to the rain on the ladder in the loft. Mr. Williams saw him reading. He recognized as belonging to his wife. He accused him of stealing and lying. Mr. Williams wanted everyone to live and work in Christian harmony. Stolen books, not knowing he could even read. It was bad. Whipping, and lashing. Now mama was mad, she had warned him about the reading. Nothing would ever be the same.

Jonah had read enough to know about slaves running away to the North. Most got caught …. BUT some made it to the North, and people there would help. He had read about the Underground Railroad and abolitionists and he knew the song “Follow the Drinking Gourd” which meant follow the Big Dipper and the North Star. He had studied maps and wondered how hard it would be to travel through the mountains—he could always follow the North Star.

The problem would be finding something to eat, and to keep from being eaten. Survival. However, he would take the risk, rather than to stay where he had been whipped and shamed—even if it took months. His fate had been sealed. He had to get ready for the journey. He needed money, good shoes, clothes, a map, a knife. He was ashamed to steal from his Mama, but it was the only way he knew to get the funds. He was so afraid, he almost turned back.

Slaves that ran away could be branded with a red hot iron and sometimes had to wear leg irons or a neck collar with spikes, and some had an ear cut off. He needed matches. He could not turn back. He had to be gone before morning. He even forgot food.

He starts his journey toward North Carolina. He would never see his mama or Mrs. Williams again. It was more than a thousand miles to the North, and he could travel ten miles a day—it would take months. He would be noticed, and captured, punished. He could have been born rich and in the North. Instead he’d been born Jonah, a slave- whipped for stealing a book that was already his.

This poor scared naive boy makes his way through the wilderness by foot. Along the way he meets some colorful people and has to be creative in order to survive. Jonah could not understand why God would allow some people to be slaves, and some crippled or afflicted in their minds? No transportation but his feet—he started second guessing his decision. Foolish. Hiding out during the day as best possible gathering what food he could along the way, trying to stay away from people—fearing he would be captured.

Then he meets Angel Also, a black slave, working in her Master’s home and keeping his bed warm at night as well, among other things . . she was intrigued by this boy. She also wanted to escape.

Jonah: An escape from the Williams Place---his strength and hope. His pilgrimage. His freedom. He knows how to read and knows what he wants—just how to get there.

Angel: An escape from the Thomas Place. She did not know how to read or write. She also has her dreams.

Her master was in Raleigh and she had the night free. She knows she is no Angel. There was something about this boy she liked. Maybe it was his gumption and craziness to run away. She had never seen a runaway before. He was foolish enough to escape from wherever he came from, which meant he had more courage, than anyone else she knew…plus she liked his looks. She knew how to make a man happy.

Of course now Jonah’s knife and money, gone--starting over. Guess who is now following him? He did not need someone dragging him down, especially someone with a sharp tongue, an attitude, and a big butt. He had made it this far solo, and he did not need a traveling partner. She thought she was just as brave. They would have to get over the mountains to Tennessee, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New York, before they reached Canada.

He would probably never make it, and with her along, he did not have a shadow of a chance.

Fun, mischief, frustration, romance ----cat and mouse; an adventure with these two which will make you laugh out loud. Angel is strong, stubborn, and overbearing. She is “street smart”, and Jonah, “book smart." She knows creative ways to get things. Jonah is not afraid to take chances. Two halves that together complete wholeness. Yin/ Yang

Even though Jonah leaves Angel many times, and they go their separate ways; they seem to make their way to Ithaca and there they run into one another, once again. A town which was only supposed to be temporary on the way to Canada. Now, they both have new names, and new jobs. Will they be caught or pretend they do not know one another?

Angel’s dream on the road in Virginia-- Houses with pretty flower gardens, a marriage, a home, apple and cherry trees, and chicken houses with big brown eggs. Flowers on the porch. Angel was always at the back of Jonah’s mind. He tried to ignore her after arriving in Ithaca. She had followed him all the way from North Carolina. She had comforted him and helped him survive--she was the only person in Ithaca who could make him happy. Can he ignore her now—with her men folk?

Richly drawn, what a delightful and gripping Southern tale! Angel and Jonah are fun characters and the author did an exceptional job with character development, as well as the secondary characters which became integral parts of their journey. It wouldn’t be a Southern novel without mentions of the Bible, and a minister somewhere along the way.

A North Carolina native, enjoyed visiting familiar places (Flat Rock, and the NC mountain area). This coming-of-age tale, told from a slave’s point of view, in a time when unfortunately, they had no voice or rights-- A nice mix of wit, grit, and humor to balance the injustice of slavery.

In addition to the digital copy, I also listened to the audiobook, narrated by Kevin R. Free and Carra Patterson with nice voices for both Jonah and Angel.

Slavery in the South The lives of black people under slavery in the South were controlled by all sorts of laws from state to their own masters--cruel beyond comprehension. No constitutional rights. Forbidden to learn how to read and write. The most effective way that a slave could retaliate against an owner was to run away. Approximately 100,000 slaves escaped from bondage in the South between 1810 and 1850. No issue has scarred our country with long term effects than slavery. When we celebrate American freedom, we must also be mindful of the long and painful struggle to share in those freedoms that faced, and continue to face generations of African Americans.
 
 

 

Source: www.judithdcollinsconsulting.com/#!Chasing-the-North-Star/cmoa/570024c80cf2f28d5dd5cd03
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review 2015-12-08 00:45
A Perilous Journey
Chasing the North Star: A Novel - Robert Morgan
The Invention of Wings: A Novel - Sue Monk Kidd
The Last Runaway - Tracy Chevalier

Chasing the North Star is the story of a slave named Jonah who learns to read as he serves his master’s children, listening in on their lessons. He is whipped when he is found reading in the hayloft, accused of stealing a book he was given by the mistress. Humiliated and hurt, Jonah decides impulsively to leave with a few coins, a knife, and little else but his wits—which are a considerable asset. Along the way, Jonah is joined by a young woman named Angel, who believes that following a mostly unwilling Jonah will take her north as surely as following the star or the list of names Jonah treasures. The perilous journey of these two young people winds and twists along, tossing them together and pulling them apart again and again.

 

Compelling and nail-biting, this historical novel will keep you reading long after the north star appears. Those who enjoyed The Invention of Wings and The Last Runaway would also like this book.

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