Read Online Think of England By KJ Charles
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Ebook About Lie back and think of England...England, 1904. Two years ago, Captain Archie Curtis lost his friends, fingers, and future to a terrible military accident. Alone, purposeless and angry, Curtis is determined to discover if he and his comrades were the victims of fate, or of sabotage.Curtis’s search takes him to an isolated, ultra-modern country house, where he meets and instantly clashes with fellow guest Daniel da Silva. Effete, decadent, foreign, and all-too-obviously queer, the sophisticated poet is everything the straightforward British officer fears and distrusts.As events unfold, Curtis realizes that Daniel has his own secret intentions. And there’s something else they share—a mounting sexual tension that leaves Curtis reeling.As the house party’s elegant facade cracks to reveal treachery, blackmail and murder, Curtis finds himself needing clever, dark-eyed Daniel as he has never needed a man before…Book Think of England Review :
Stars: 4 StarsFormat: PrintSteam Level: SteamyCW: suicide and a anti-Semitism, homophobia, violenceI picked this up after reading Proper English because I enjoyed that book a whole lot. And this definitely didn’t disappoint! Tons of fun.Quick Thoughts:- Huzzah a disabled main character! And it talked about learning to do things himself after loosing his fingers. Really liked that line as someone who has had to learn do things differently also- Pat and Fen make an appearance! After reading Proper English it was nice to see them again, I liked that this book takes place a couple of years after that one and we see that they are still together. This is actually their first appearance the the Proper English is a prequel written after this- Good mystery. Even when I had and idea who was behind things, how it was all going to play out and the details kept me on the edge of my seat- It was interesting (even fun?) to read Curtis’ evolution of not being out to even himself to coming out and wanting to be with da Silva- Even though Curtis is fictional part of a fictional family tree of King Solomon’s Mines by H. Rider Haggard and I have not read it, I did not feel like I was missing anything in this story by not knowing that- I ended up really liking the main couple though I wasn’t sure I would at first. I was kind of irritated at both guys but they grew on me- It was interesting that the diverse characters were the heroes in this when traditionally they would have been coded (and known instantly to be) the villains in this sort of storyOverall, super enjoyed this book. I will have to read more. K. J. Charles is such a great writer! I’m glad I have it in print so I can push I mean lend it to friends. Another winner. Charles nails the Christie-esque "mystery/house party" set up, though this is an oddly dark story about some truly ugly people. I loved both leads--I want to say especially Daniel, who felt both recognizable and also really original, but I thought Archie was wonderful too. To an unusual degree, each man illuminates the other on a fundamental level. They are very different but neither is as fully realized, romantically or thematically, without the other.You see this in Archie's very funny but also poignant attempts at confronting Daniel's "Fragmentalist" verse (which doesn't even rhyme properly!) Everything to do with Daniel's poetry was surprisingly multilayered and revealing."There were vivid images, but they were extraordinary ones, not poetic at all in the way Curtis vaguely felt poetry should be, with trumpets or mountains or daffodils. These poems were full of broken glass and water-which was not clean water-and scaly things that moved in the dark."The contrast between the Wordsworthian daffodils and scaly things in (not clean!) water was priceless. The part where Archie stops the other men from mocking Daniel's verse was one of those quiet moments of true heroism that really defines Archie's character. And in truth, his attempts to make sense of modern verse like Daniel's can serve as a stand-in for the experiences of a generation of people who could no longer exist within the comforting moral certitudes of the previous century.And then of course, there's Daniel, whose religion, class background, and sexuality mean that he saw through those illusions and empty certitudes--probably starting when he was about four years old. (It's a brilliant, potent touch that he's the son of a locksmith). He's a great picture of the kind of mind and perspective that brought us Modernism, but the frequent references to suicide in the story remind us how lonely and wretched that alienation could sometimes be. It's refreshing and heartening to find that character occupying the main role in an old-fashioned romance, with heroic rescues, love and, of course, happy-ever-afters.I'm teasing out a few of these themes because I used to teach this subject, but I don't want to imply that there is anything ponderous or pretentious in the literary allusions. They're built into the characters and plot in the most natural, understated way.There's plenty more I would like to praise here, but I'll ring off. Bottom line: this is a home run. Read it. It's great. Read Online Think of England Download Think of England Think of England PDF Think of England Mobi Free Reading Think of England Download Free Pdf Think of England PDF Online Think of England Mobi Online Think of England Reading Online Think of England Read Online KJ Charles Download KJ Charles KJ Charles PDF KJ Charles Mobi Free Reading KJ Charles Download Free Pdf KJ Charles PDF Online KJ Charles Mobi Online KJ Charles Reading Online KJ CharlesDownload Mobi The Capt. Mark Smith Collection: (The Capt. Mark Smith Series Boxset) By Dan Stratman
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