Helpful Score: 3
This book is a follow-on to her two earlier books: The Shadowy Horses and The Winter Sea. You really do not need to read the earlier works to enjoy this story line because Kearsley inserts suffient page space to introduce the historical players in the necessary context. But it was satisfying to see what happens after the earlier stories and continue the overall story arc with a few of the secondary characters.
The majority of the story is spent in the past, tracking the path of how Anna ends up with the Firebird of the title. The secondary story shows how and why Nicola s following that path, along with some personal developments with her past love interest.
Once I started the book, I stayed glued barring meal preps and a couple hours of sleep. I also liked the educational sojourn into the beginning of Russia's golden period and the English politics that played out in the northern European landscape with the last phase of the Jacobite movement.
The majority of the story is spent in the past, tracking the path of how Anna ends up with the Firebird of the title. The secondary story shows how and why Nicola s following that path, along with some personal developments with her past love interest.
Once I started the book, I stayed glued barring meal preps and a couple hours of sleep. I also liked the educational sojourn into the beginning of Russia's golden period and the English politics that played out in the northern European landscape with the last phase of the Jacobite movement.
I have enjoyed every novel of Susanna Kearsley's that I've read. She has a talent for writing romantic suspense set in two different timelines. In The Firebird, we have Nicola and Rob traveling first to Belgium and then to Russia in the present day in an attempt to authenticate Margaret Ross's heirloom. The second timeline involves the little girl that the wooden bird was given to-- a time shortly after the death of Peter the Great, a time when a Stuart was trying to retake the throne of England, a time when the English were doing everything in their power to prevent that from happening.
The present day timeline is a good one. Nicola and Rob are two strong, fascinating characters whom you want to see getting together. Nicola has always been afraid of her gift and hasn't really explored how far she can go with it. Rob on the other hand is the "old hand" (and the old soul) whose patience and steadiness are exactly what Nicola needs. But as strong as their story is, it's not the heart of this book.
No, the heart of the book belongs to young Anna Logan, who spent the first years of her life unaware that she was living with a foster family. When the political situation takes a deadly turn, Anna is told a portion of the truth of her heritage, and she's spirited away to a convent in Belgium before finding herself in St. Petersburg. This girl will steal your heart. She's smart, she's observant, and she's incredibly brave. She may be old beyond her years, but she's still a little girl whose naivete has dire consequences. After all she's been through, you just want things to go right for Anna.
Kearsley put me right smack in the middle of that Belgian convent and before I knew it, I found myself in Russia. Anna Logan's story is compelling, and Kearsley does an excellent job of showing what happened to so many of the Jacobites who fought on the losing side. If I have any quibble about The Firebird it's that this historical storyline is so strong that the one in the present day pales by comparison. I really liked the characters of Nicola and Rob, so I do wish their story had been beefed up a bit. But that is a very small quibble indeed because each time I picked up this book, I lost myself in Kearsley's marvelous story.
The present day timeline is a good one. Nicola and Rob are two strong, fascinating characters whom you want to see getting together. Nicola has always been afraid of her gift and hasn't really explored how far she can go with it. Rob on the other hand is the "old hand" (and the old soul) whose patience and steadiness are exactly what Nicola needs. But as strong as their story is, it's not the heart of this book.
No, the heart of the book belongs to young Anna Logan, who spent the first years of her life unaware that she was living with a foster family. When the political situation takes a deadly turn, Anna is told a portion of the truth of her heritage, and she's spirited away to a convent in Belgium before finding herself in St. Petersburg. This girl will steal your heart. She's smart, she's observant, and she's incredibly brave. She may be old beyond her years, but she's still a little girl whose naivete has dire consequences. After all she's been through, you just want things to go right for Anna.
Kearsley put me right smack in the middle of that Belgian convent and before I knew it, I found myself in Russia. Anna Logan's story is compelling, and Kearsley does an excellent job of showing what happened to so many of the Jacobites who fought on the losing side. If I have any quibble about The Firebird it's that this historical storyline is so strong that the one in the present day pales by comparison. I really liked the characters of Nicola and Rob, so I do wish their story had been beefed up a bit. But that is a very small quibble indeed because each time I picked up this book, I lost myself in Kearsley's marvelous story.
I couldn't get past the Scottish accents, found them very hard to follow. It distracted me from the story line. Gave up on it.
The male character was in Winter sea by the same author. It is mentioned that it was time for Rob McMorran to get his own book.
I love books with ghosts, magical powers, time travel, and digging into a past history or secret. I did not like this book.
Many books have a contemporary story and an ancient history story. I have no problem with that, I love those kinds of books. What I have a real hard time with is that the 2 main characters are just seeing the past because they have these powers. His powers are stronger than hers. So instead of just telling the old story, the characters are standing in a ruined castle seeing the story. I just find this ludicrous.
I have read other books by Susana Kearsley and I enjoyed them. This one I struggled to get through.
I love books with ghosts, magical powers, time travel, and digging into a past history or secret. I did not like this book.
Many books have a contemporary story and an ancient history story. I have no problem with that, I love those kinds of books. What I have a real hard time with is that the 2 main characters are just seeing the past because they have these powers. His powers are stronger than hers. So instead of just telling the old story, the characters are standing in a ruined castle seeing the story. I just find this ludicrous.
I have read other books by Susana Kearsley and I enjoyed them. This one I struggled to get through.