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Overview"For the first time in her life, Karen Williams is out from under her parents' watchful eyes. Now a goal-driven pre-med freshman who tends to put her own desires ahead of the feelings of those who love her, she is pursued by two men. Well-bred and wealthy, Martin aligns with her upward ambitions. Peter, her virtuous but poor blue-collar study partner, is loyal and kind but socially inept. After a series of relationship stumbles, an accidental pregnancy forces vacillating Karen to choose Peter. She tries to commit to him, however, after a decade of marriage, dissatisfied nurse practitioner Karen is depressed. Convinced her blue-collar trailer park life has become a mausoleum of mediocrity, she makes some bad decisions. One of those bad decisions is Lamont, a well-to-do attorney. With the lurking presence of a serial killer, her choices place her in grave danger. Mariken awakens with amnesia in 1572 Antwerp during the early stages of the Eighty Years' War. Taken in by kind Mennists, she discovers she has a physician's gift for healing. She meets and falls in love with Pieter, an injured blacksmith with a mysterious past of his own. Unfortunately, her haunting history, inability to remain quietly obscure, and the rising violence against Mennists combine to threaten her safety. Soon, Mariken and her friends, Maeyken Wens, Lijsken, and Janneken van Munstdorp are suspected of heresy and witchcraft. What are the consequences of these two women's decisions? Will either survive? '""She had a suitcase?"" ""Yeah, she pulled one out of the car when she arrived. I was paying so much attention to her dress, I didn't see much else."" Peter could barely breathe on his drive home. He headed straight to the bedroom closet. The suitcase was gone. The cocktail dress was gone. Her new erotic lingerie was not in the drawer. There wasn't a note laying in the usual place on the kitchen counter. His wife was gone. He collapsed on the bed holding her satin nightgown to his face, smelling her essence, broken. Unrelenting images of the love of his life in another man's bed, willingly sharing her body in the most intimate ways, torturing him. ""Where are you? What have you done?""' ""A drunken soldier stumbled out of the alley, buttoning his cod sack after urinating. He grabbed Mariken around the waist from behind and tried to kiss her. ""You're a comely wench. Let's step into the alley and get acquainted."" Mariken shrieked. Her fight or flight reflexes erupted. It was all over in a few seconds. She spun and drove his chin up with the heel of her hand, half severing his tongue. With the speed of lightning, she punched his throat with her other fist then kneed him in the groin. In the span of a single gasp, the soldier lay on the cobblestones struggling to breathe, choking on his own blood. Maeyken grabbed her arm and pulled her down the street before the soldier's startled comrades could react. When Mariken turned back, Maeyken saw a look of fear and ferocity in her eyes only a trapped animal would have. ""Of all the women on the street, why did he single me out to grab?"" ""I suppose it is your hair. Because of your wound, we have not tied it up properly. Usually, only women advertising loose morality wear unbound hair in public."" Remembering the indoor jousting, Maeyken thought to herself, Surrounded by ruffians, indeed.""" Full Product DetailsAuthor: Herbert WiensPublisher: H.P. Waterhouse Publishing Imprint: H.P. Waterhouse Publishing Edition: 2nd ed. Volume: 1 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.481kg ISBN: 9798987879603Pages: 326 Publication Date: 24 April 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsWiens simplifies his dual plot narrative by focusing on one story at a time before tying them together in the present day. The swiftly paced novel fluidly moves through years with the married couple as well as Mariken's fraught, centuries-old medical procedures. The tale also features real-life historical figures and events. The book is often grim, with the imprisoned women's horrid treatment and a minor present-day serial-killer subplot that pays off by the end. The love stories, meanwhile, are enthralling and realistic; for example, Karen and Peter's mutual fondness doesn't mean they don't bicker. While the plot-linking final act satisfies, the author drops enough hints throughout Mariken's tale that many readers will have already made the connections. Kirkus Reviews The first part of the book (excepting the prologue) was focused on Karen. I'll admit I had some difficulty relating to her character and her decisions. There were several times while reading those early chapters I almost set the book aside - but I am SO glad that I didn't. After getting to the end, she definitely redeemed herself. As a note to other readers, if you're struggling with the first half of the book, stick with it-the second half makes up for it. The second half of the book focused on Mariken's story. It becomes clear pretty quickly that the two stories are somehow related, although how that is takes a while to explain. I liked Mariken's character so much more than I did Karen's. Her story was tragic, but the final few chapters explained her connection with Karen, and also helped to redeem Karen in my eyes. A. J. Calvin Psychological twister So, yeah! This novel was different than I expected. I would love to go into detail, but it would contain spoilers. But I can say this, Love, Loss, and Honor puts a different spin on what happily ever after means. Cleverly intertwines history with modern day. M. Templin Love Loss & Honor considers human strengths in 1570's Antwerp To burn the witch is an act of fear and ignorance, the closest admission that a higher force exists. That force isn't magic, it's rare unwavering integrity, loyalty. If someone told me you could combine thriller & historical fiction I would have said please don't. The writer successfully straddles both genres equally well. A book that thrusts you quite violently into another world but leaves you satisfied yet still curious. I have since read more about Mennonite history & traditions. I'd place my trust in this writer & read anything he writes. Rachel L Author Information"Born into a large blue collar family, Herbert Wiens was raised to value the rewards gained from hard work. Starting the summer after first grade, he tagged along with his older sisters as they boarded the ""Bean Bus"" at dawn to pick berries and string beans in Oregon's Willamette Valley. From then on, he never failed to have an after (or before) school job to help with family expenses. In high school, he started working on North Idaho ranches. In college, he fought forest fires in the summer and started working nights in a sawmill to pay tuition. His college experience was interrupted by a non-negotiable invitation from Uncle Sam, requesting his presence for the next few years in an all expenses paid, Vietnam era, tour of the world. Upon discharge, not having anything else better to do until he decided upon a future, he returned to the sawmill. Life got in the way for the next twenty years. Then, he became a small businessman for the next twenty. Now, he is spending his time using a keyboard to torture editors." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |