What makes Valentine’s Day special? There’s a simple answer: personal relationships and connections with others.
Valentine’s Day is a favorite holiday for me. In fact, the entire month of February makes me smile. One reason is because it’s the shortest winter month; another reason is because we are getting more daylight again. A third reason is that my older son Andrew was born in February and also married in February.
Point of fact, Andrew and his wife Anna were married on Valentine’s Day. It was a joyful wedding, loving and romantic. No big fancy affair, just the bride and groom, my husband and myself, the bride’s best friend, and a judge happy to officiate, followed by a wedding breakfast at a local hotel. Afterwards the bride and groom had to take a long drive so that my son could represent in court a couple accused of white-collar crime.
Andy and Anna are still happily married and have a wonderful daughter to help them celebrate their anniversary. This love story is one of many worldwide celebrated on the most romantic day of the year.
Love stories have always been an important part of history
and literature. Cleopatra and Mark Anthony. Cleopatra and Julius Caesar (Cleopatra
did get around). As Shakespeare said, “she was a woman of infinite variety.” Then
there is the story of Napoleon and Josephine, another passionate love affair.
In the Bible, we also find some of the world’s greatest and unforgettable love
stories. What can be more romantic than the story of Ruth or Solomon and the
Queen of Sheba? And there is the story of Esther which is celebrated on Purim.
A lot of the
world’s most famous, classical love stories, of course, did not end happily:
Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, Helen of Troy and Paris, Lancelot, Arthur and
Guinevere (a legendary triangle). These are tragedies.
Some of the literary characters I consider
unforgettable are those of the Bronte sisters: Heathcliff and Catherine, the
tormented lovers in Emily’s
DARK MOON RISING, published by Luminosity.
https://luminositypublishing.com/en/book/dark-moon-rising/
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00Z7824A4/
https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/dark-moon-rising/id1020852100?mt=1
Thomas Hardy wrote several tragic love stories. For something lighter, I prefer Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Elizabeth and Darcy are memorable. I’ve read and reread that novel numerous times.
Luminosity has now published four of my own romance novels.
Besides, DARK MOON RISING, they are the historical novels:
TEA LEAVES AND TAROT CARDS,
SINFUL SEDUCTION,
HIGHLAND HEART.
If you’re of a mind to
read some short romance fiction to celebrate Valentine’s Day consider my collection BEYOND THE BO TREE, a book that combines
romance, mystery, fantasy and the paranormal. The first story in the collection
is a free read:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DTV0750
Regardless, I hope you enjoy February’s fun holiday.
Are there any romance novels you would like to
recommend to fellow readers?
A great story is either a love story or a murder mystery. Fun post.
ReplyDeleteNot anonymous--Susan Oleksiw
DeleteFor me, I like to write and read stories and novels that combine a love story with a mystery--romantic suspense. I often write my work in that genre.
DeleteAgree that books are better Valentine's Day gifts than flowers or candy. They fill your mind and heart with emotion that endures beyond a single day's celebration, and at the heart of every book is love.
ReplyDeleteSaralyn,
DeleteI adore your statement: The heart of every book truly is love! Thanks for taking the time to comment.
Thank you for the lovely Valentine’s Day post, Jacquie. Two of my favorites are Laura and Rebecca—the books and the movies. Both stories have wonderful intrigue and great surprise twists.
ReplyDeleteRebecca is such a great gothic romance and mystery! Laura is another outstanding one.
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