Release Day Launch: The Witch of Painted Sorrows by M.J. Rose
Synopsis
Possession. Power. Passion. New York Times bestselling novelist M. J. Rose creates her most provocative and magical spellbinder yet in this gothic novel set against the lavish spectacle of 1890s Belle Ćpoque Paris. Sandrine Salome flees New York for her grandmother's Paris mansion to escape her dangerous husband, but what she finds there is even more menacing. The house, famous for its lavish art collection and elegant salons, is mysteriously closed up. Although her grandmother insists it's dangerous for Sandrine to visit, she defies her and meets Julien Duplessi, a mesmerizing young architect. Together they explore the hidden night world of Paris, the forbidden occult underground and Sandrine's deepest desires. Among the bohemians and the demi-monde, Sandrine discovers her erotic nature as a lover and painter. Then darker influences threaten--her cold and cruel husband is tracking her down and something sinister is taking hold, changing Sandrine, altering her. She's become possessed by La Lune: A witch, a legend, and a sixteenth-century courtesan, who opens up her life to a darkness that may become a gift or a curse This is Sandrine's "wild night of the soul," her odyssey in the magnificent city of Paris, of art, love, and witchery
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ExcerptFour months ago I snuck into Paris on a wet, chilly January night like a criminal, hiding my face in my shawl, taking extra care to be sure I wasnāt followed. I stood on the stoop of my grandmotherās house and lifted the hand-shaped bronze door knocker and let it drop. The sound of the metal echoed inside. Her home was on a lane blocked off from rue des Saints-PeĢres by wide wooden double doors. Maison de la Lune, as it was called, was one of a half dozen four-story mid-eighteenth- century stone houses that shared a courtyard that backed up onto rue du Dragon. I let the door knocker fall again. Light from a street lamp glinted off the golden metal. It was a strange object. Usually on these things the bronze handās palm faced the door. But this one was palm out, almost warning the visitor to reconsider requesting entrance. The knocker had obsessed me ten years before when Iād visited as a fifteen-year-old. The engravings on the finely modeled female palm included etched stars, phases of the moon, planets, and other archaic symbols. When Iād asked about it once, my grandmother had said it was older than the house, but she didnāt know how old exactly or what the ciphers meant. Where was the maid? Grand-meĢre, one of Parisās celebrated courtesans, hosted lavish salons on Tuesday, Thursday, and many Saturday evenings, and at this time of day was usually upstairs, preparing her toilette: dusting poudre de riz on her face and deĢcolletage, screwing in her opale de feu earrings, and wrapping her signature rope of the same blazing orange stones around her neck. The strand of opal beads was famous. It had belonged to a Russian empress and was known as Les Incendies. The stones were the same color as my grandmotherās hair and the high- lights in her topaz eyes. She was known by that nameāLāIncendie, they called her, The Fire. We had the same color eyes, but mine almost never flashed like hers. When I was growing up, I kept checking in the mirror, hoping the opal sparks that I only saw occasionally would intensify. I wanted to be just like her, but my father said it was just as well my eyes werenāt on fire because it wasnāt only her coloring that had inspired her name but also her temper, and that wasnāt a thing to covet. It wasnāt until I was fifteen years old and witnessed it myself that I understood what heād meant. I let the hand of fate fall again. Even if Grand-meĢre was upstairs and couldnāt hear the knocking, the maid would be downstairs, organizing the refreshments for the evening. Iād seen her so many nights, polishing away last smudges on the silver, holding the Baccarat glasses over a pot of steaming water and then wiping them clean to make sure they gleamed. Dusk had descended. The air had grown cold, and now it was beginning to rain. Fat, heavy drops dripped onto my hat and into my eyes. And I had no umbrella. Thatās when I did what I should have done from the startāI stepped back and looked up at the house. The darkened windows set into the limestone facade indicated there were no fires burning and no lamps lit inside. My grandmother was not in residence. And neither, it appeared, was her staff. I almost wished the concierge had needed to open the porte cocheĢre for me; he might have been able to tell me where my grandmother was. For days now I had managed to keep my sanity only by thinking of this moment. All I had to do, I kept telling myself, was find my way here, and then together, my grandmother and I could mourn my father and her son, and she would help me figure out what I should do now that I had run away from New York City. If she wasnāt here, where was I to go? I had other family in Paris, but I had no idea where they lived. Iād only met them here, at my grandmotherās house, when Iād visited ten years previously. I had no friends in the city. The rain was soaking through my clothes. I needed to find shelter. But where? A restaurant or cafeĢ? Was there one nearby? Or should I try and find a hotel? Which way should I go to get a carriage? Was it even safe to walk alone here at night? What choice did I have? Picking up my suitcase, I turned, but before I could even step into the courtyard, I saw an advancing figure. A bedraggled-looking man, wearing torn and filthy brown pants and an overcoat that had huge, bulging pockets, staggered toward me. Every step he took rang out on the stones. Heās just a beggar who intends no harm, I told myself. Heās just look- ing for scraps of food, for a treasure in the garbage heād be able to sell. But what if I was wrong? Alone with him in the darkening court- yard, where could I go? In my skirt and heeled boots, could I even outrun him?
"Haunting tale of possession." āPublishers Weekly
"Rose's
new series offers her specialty, a unique and captivating supernatural
angle, set in an intriguing belle epoque Paris ā lush descriptions,
intricate plot and mesmerizing storytelling. Sensual, evocative,
mysterious and haunting." āKirkus
"Mixes
reality and illusion, darkness and light, mystery and romance into an
adult fairy tale. [Rose] stirs her readers curiosities and imaginations,
opening their eyes to the cultural, intellectual and artistic
excitement that marked the Belle Epoque period. Unforgettable,
full-bodied characters and richly detailed narrative result in an
entrancing read that will be long savored."āLibrary Journal (Starred Review)
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