Mystery of Nan Madol and The Castle Blues Quake on sale for Halloween

Halloween Kids' Books on sale

Halloween Kids’ Books on sale

My kids’ book THE MYSTERY OF NAN MADOL and Linda Covella’s THE CASTLE BLUES QUAKE (both for ages 8-13) are great reads for Halloween. They’re on sale at CROSSROADS BOOKS in Watsonville, CA, VILLAGE HOUSE OF BOOKS in Los Gatos CA and BOOKSHOP SANTA CRUZ in Santa Cruz CA, as well as online. The Castle Blues Quake features a ghost, earthquakes, haunted house rides, poltergeist activity, and crystal ball readings. The Mystery of Nan Madol involves an ancient stone city inhabited by the spirits of the giants who built it, a medicine man with magical powers, the ghosts of the Little People who once lived on the island, and an astounding discovery during a dangerous trek through the jungles of Pohnpei in Micronesia.

 

 

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Another Review: Boundaries: A Love Story

BoundariesALoveStory cover

Here is a wonderful, in-depth new review of my new novel, BOUNDARIES: A LOVE  STORY:

Lloyd Russell, reviewer,  http://booksage.blogspot.com/

“Saturday, October 11, 2014

Boundaries, A Love Story, by Christine Z. Mason, ANOTHER Local Author

I want to start this post by saying something pretty emphatically:  I LOVE BEING A BOOK BLOGGER IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA!!!!!  Okay, now that I’ve calmed down a bit, I will say the same thing more quietly.  We simply have an enormous amount of talented authors here that I get to meet and read and support.  Don’t get me wrong.  I still enjoy the national giants – Silva, Baldacci (I’m reading The Target, Will Robie #3, now), Picoult, Griffin, Iles, Coben, etc.  But I continually get introduced to local authors who can really write.  The latest is Christine Z. Mason.

How did I even meet Christine?  Funny you should ask.  She came to our VHOB Book Club (now Recycle Book Club) meeting in August to support Ellen Sussman.  I met her there, and we struck up an email conversation.  She offered to send me her book, and, because I’m very cheap, I jumped at the opportunity.  I am so glad I did!

I can never synopsize a book as well as Goodreads does.  Here’s what they say about Boundaries, A Love Story.

A novel about abandonment and passion, chronicling an imprudent but profound love, a maelstrom of family secrets, and a tragedy . . . This East Coast-West Coast tale tracks the conflicts between individual desire and societal expectations, weaving together the secrets, tragedies, and clandestine affairs of two families, one living in Maine, the other in California.

 This book started right out making me feel at home.  On page 6, the characters talk about Boston University, where my youngest, Lauren, went to school (and found her husband, Joe), and Boalt Hall, the law school on the University of California, Berkeley campus. Although I didn’t go to law school there (I went to Santa Clara University – are you surprised?  Shocked, even?), I did do my undergraduate there (I majored in history – not too useful in the job market, methinks).  It was fun to see those references.  Later in the book, there’s even a mention of Solano Avenue, in Berkeley, which is right around the corner from where I grew up in Albany (from ages 5 to 14).  I don’t need to be able to relate to geographical landmarks to enjoy a book, but I don’t dislike that either.

I like the title of this book a lot; because it’s about 1st cousins who start spending time together when he’s 22, and she’s only 16.  And it actually is about their love story.  Of course the title speaks for itself.  But this is about a lot more than just the 2 main characters, Kaia and Mark.  It’s also about Mark’s parents and Kaia’s parents and their “interactions.”  There are a couple of ancillary people, like Chandi, Kaia’s dad’s girlfriend, and Sig, Kaia’s best friend, both in the Bay Area.  But, really, it’s the 2 central figures and their 4 parents.

You know, I would think some plots are easier to write than others.  Christine writes about a very sensitive theme.  And she does it in such a way that it’s not creepy.  In fact, she paints some pictures that do have creepy elements to them.  But they do not extend to Mark and Kaia.  That relationship seems very natural.  I applaud her for that.

Here’s another news flash.  Boundaries is a 439-page book.  I did not tear up until page 384.  So, obviously, I didn’t emotionally connect with the characters.  WRONG!  I actually teared up quite a bit in the last 55 pages.  But even prior to that, I was very caught up with all of the principals.  In this case (don’t get used to it!), the tearing up did not reflect my emotional commitment.  Why is that?  Beats me. It just is what it is.  The only thing I can figure out is that some books take longer to build up to the waterworks than others!

The last piece of the book that I would like to mention is that I thoroughly enjoyed how Christine spoke in different voices.  Every time she did that, I was able to put myself in the shoes/person of the speaker.  And with all of the stuff that was going down, it gave me greater insight into what happened in each case.  Again, bravo, Christine.

Did I like Boundaries, A Love Story?  I most certainly did.  Would I recommend it? Absolutely.  Is there anybody I would suggest not read it?  Definitely not.  Pick it up and enjoy the high-end product of another Bay Area artist.  They’re all over the place, and Christine is one more to add to the group.  We are blessed, people.

 

PERSONAL NOTE:  There is a ton of excessive drinking in this book by various parents. My parents were like that.  They never were officially classified “alcoholics,” but I have no doubt that is exactly what they were.  I think that might be why I quit drinking in my early ’30’s.  So, the point of this little personal note is that I had more trouble reading about the drinking than I did any of the other goings-on. ”

 

 

 

 

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Joint Book Tour Planned

I’m happy to announce that my colleague and friend, G. Elizabeth Kretchmer, will be doing a book tour in northern California with me at the end of October. Gail Kretchmer’s debut novel, The Damnable Legacy of A Minister’s Wife, has just been released, and my new novel, Boundaries: A Love Story, has just come out in paperback. Both novels are about strong women characters, family secrets and controversial choices. More information on Gail’s book can be found at www.gekretchmer.com . We will be appearing together for book events at the following locations:

Saturday, October 25, 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. at Crossroads Books in Watsonville, CA

Saturday, October 25, 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. at The Village House of Books in Los Gatos, CA

Monday, October 27, 7:00 p.m. at Books Inc. in Palo Alto, CA

Other locations pending, including bookstores in Seattle in November.

Mark your calendars and join us for these fun events!

 

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New Review for Boundaries: A Love Story

A new review of Boundaries: A Love Story has just been published by the Times Publishing Group, Inc. (July 15, 2014). Please note that the novel is also available now in paperback and ebook from Amazon.com,  http://tinyurl.com/omwhsuh Barnes and Noble,http://tinyurl.com/p5yxdty    Here’s the review:

Boundaries: A Love Story

By Christine Mason
Robertson Publishing. $26.95

BB_Boundaries-A-Love-Story This ‘n That Times Publishing Group Inc tpgonlinedaily.comScotts Valley writer Christine Zilius Mason moves this romance from coast to coast as a young woman falls in love with her cousin. Meeting when she is just a teenager in the early 1980s, Kaia and Mark discover their initial attraction grows into something far more complex as they get older.

Not only will they will have to make some difficult decisions but some intriguing family secrets about their pasts will also emerge in this unforgettable love story.

A talented author, Mason sets the hook early in this remarkable book and once she has you on the line she’ll hold you there until you’ve finished this tale of forbidden love. This is perfect summer reading!

http://www.tpgonlinedaily.com/little-bit-n-reading-tastes/

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Jane Austen Novels and Cousins Marrying

In many of Jane Austen’s novels (Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Persuasion, etc.) there are often plots or subplots involving cousins considering marriage to cousins, often to keep property within the family. My recently published novel, Boundaries: A Love Story, also involves cousins who fall in love. My favorite movie version of Pride and Prejudice is the BBC series with Colin Firth and Jennifer Ehle. Do you know of any novels or movies that deal with cousins in love or cousins marrying? Which are your favorites?

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“Downton Abbey”: kissing cousins

Washington Post columnist George F. Will has hit it on the head, as far as Downton Abbey goes! A few discerning viewers, he says, cheered when Lord Grantham lost his fortune in Canadian railway stock. Why doesn’t he just get a job? As Will pointed out, Grantham’s money came from his American heiress wife played by Elizabeth McGovern in this series glorifying noblesse oblige and upper-class paternalism.

Nevertheless, Julian Fellowes  knows how to tell a good story, especially when it was focused on the love story of cousins Matthew and Mary, perhaps getting too melodramatic though, at times, for instance when Matthew suddenly stands and walks although his legs were paralyzed in a war injury, and more recently the sensational rape subplot which, unfortunately, seems to be carrying the downstairs story forward.

In any event, I liked the cousins-in-love story while it lasted, especially since it’s the main plotline of my new novel Boundaries: A Love Story.

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Feb. 4 radio talk with Christine Z. Mason: building an author’s platform

On February 4, 2014, I will be interviewed on KSCO 1080AM during two radio shows: at 7:45 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. (two separate interviews). I will be talking about my new novel, Boundaries: A Love Story with David Harken, SCORE advisor, and discussing ways in which an author can build a platform using small business practices. David has greatly assisted me in finding local as well as national avenues for promotion of my writing business. Listen in and let me know your thoughts!

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KIRKUS REVIEWS LIKES BOUNDARIES: A LOVE STORY


I’m thrilled that KIRKUS REVIEWS has just published a review of BOUNDARIES: A LOVE STORY ! Here it is in part; read the rest on the Kirkus website and let me know if you think it fits the story. (But beware of spoiler in the full review!)

“Forbidden love flourishes in Mason’s debut novel as Kaia and Mark, first cousins, fall in love.

The two meet the summer that Kaia is 16. Devastated by her parents’ recent divorce, Kaia is finally ready to confront her mother for leaving her with her controlling father in Berkeley, Calif. When Kaia and her mother spend two weeks together with Kaia’s aunt and uncle on an island off of Cape Cod, instead of contending with her anger toward her mother, Kaia finds herself fiercely attracted to Mark, her older cousin who is about to start law school. Their connection intensifies, and . . .  [as] the story shifts from Maine to California, Kaia and Mark will have to make decisions that will affect them and their families. The characters and their choices come alive as dynamic and complicated in this involving story about desire and the intricate secrets of families. The issues of Kaia’s finding herself, despite her father’s iron fist and Mark’s at times suffocating love, speak to the tricky navigations of the heart as well as the delicate balance of individuality and interdependence. Kaia shines as a growing girl who changes over the course of the novel, and the tension of her conflict will keep readers intrigued.

A feast of romantic entanglements that tests the odds.”—Kirkus Reviews https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/christine-z-mason/boundaries-a-love-story/

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BOUNDARIES: A LOVE STORY OUT ON EBOOK

My new novel, Boundaries: A Love Story, is now available on ebook from www.Amazon.com !

 

Take a look at the new cover design and let me know what you think. Boundaries_kindlecover01B

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Psychological Fiction and Intra-Family Relationships

Are you interested in psychological fiction involving boundaries in relationships between people, especially intra-family relationships? In my new novel, Boundaries: A Love Story, the subject of boundaries between people and those imposed by society is explored.

DSC_0011

This fence photograph is representative of an area of northern Maine where some of the novel scenes take place. While the fence does somewhat separate the two fields of vegetation, it is definitely ambiguous. The way this fence is displayed in this image is symbolic for the idea of guidelines, or lack there of, in my novel Boundaries: A Love Story;  there are also vague or absent boundaries in the family members’ relationship dynamics. One example is the relationship between the main male character, Mark, and his mother, Elisa, who suffers from bipolar disorder (referred to as manic depression at the time the story takes place). Between Mark’s heartfelt compassion and adoration for his vivacious and delicate mother and Elisa’s mental instability, there are no insurmountable barriers in their relationship. Mark, however, does have a hard time balancing his role as son and caregiver, and Elisa struggles with not allowing her mental disorder to take over their relationship. Boundaries are certainly essential in order to have healthy relationships and live a happy and healthy life. However, as many already know, it is a skill that takes practice and oftentimes a lot of thought. Mark’s family is no different from many others who struggle to find the balance between loving, and taking care of one another but also knowing when to take a step back.

This photograph, taken during a recent trip to the Cape Cod area (where Part I of the novel takes place), represents the idea of boundaries which are sometimes open, sometimes more restrictive, a theme reflected in the novel. For instance, with respect to the father-daughter relationship, the protagonist Kaia and her father share a very close relationship, but it is one that certainly lacks boundaries. Although Kaia is extremely bright and mature for her age, her father often suffocates her with too many adult responsibilities. The departure of Kaia’s emotionally unavailable mother from Berkeley for a new job and life in Manhattan blurs the father-daughter boundary line even more. The absence of a mother and wife figure leaves Kaia as the only remaining woman of the house and results in Kaia’s father relying too heavily on his daughter for emotional support. The lines are obscured even more when Kaia’s secretive relationship with her cousin Mark is exposed, and when her father’s drinking habit dangerously increases. While there is certainly a lot of love and caring between Kaia and her father, the two struggle to find a happy, and most importantly a healthy, dynamic amidst all of their life complications and personal emotions.

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