I began this Romantic Reading Rollercoaster with Anna Campbell's steamy - but fun and satisfying - Sons of Sin series. Then I read Annie Gracie's Marriage of Convenience series, followed by her Devil's Riders series. Those were richer, deeper reads than Campbell's, but it's only from now reading Mary Balogh's Web series that I've encountered a book that is emotionally difficult to get through.
I never imagined I'd read one of these and it would be set somewhere I once lived (in this life), and about which I've previously pondered a past-life connection. I'm talking about Web of Love, which - unlike other books in which 'the wars against Boney' are background context - takes place at the time of the Battle of Waterloo and is largely set in Brussels.
I was intrigued so I've been reading up on the history of the Battle of Waterloo and using Google Maps to check locations/events mentioned by Balogh. She indeed got all the details correct - specific battlefields, military balls, street and place names, and even the weather at the time.
In the course of doing this, I discovered - or remembered, I can't tell which - that the first house I lived in when my family moved to the area (and I was age 9), was about a mile from the scene of the main battle. I remember feeling sad, anxious and homesick there, though I suppose I later attributed that to the trauma of moving to a foreign country.
Maybe it was 'the energy of the place', given its proximity to the main battlefield, and/or maybe there's a past-life connection, but in any event the coincidence of details, combined with the harrowing struggles of the characters in the book who survive the final battle against Napoleon's army, makes this book a whole different read for me than any other I've read.
I never imagined I'd read one of these and it would be set somewhere I once lived (in this life), and about which I've previously pondered a past-life connection. I'm talking about Web of Love, which - unlike other books in which 'the wars against Boney' are background context - takes place at the time of the Battle of Waterloo and is largely set in Brussels.
I was intrigued so I've been reading up on the history of the Battle of Waterloo and using Google Maps to check locations/events mentioned by Balogh. She indeed got all the details correct - specific battlefields, military balls, street and place names, and even the weather at the time.
In the course of doing this, I discovered - or remembered, I can't tell which - that the first house I lived in when my family moved to the area (and I was age 9), was about a mile from the scene of the main battle. I remember feeling sad, anxious and homesick there, though I suppose I later attributed that to the trauma of moving to a foreign country.
Maybe it was 'the energy of the place', given its proximity to the main battlefield, and/or maybe there's a past-life connection, but in any event the coincidence of details, combined with the harrowing struggles of the characters in the book who survive the final battle against Napoleon's army, makes this book a whole different read for me than any other I've read.
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