Happy Boxing Day!  I hope everyone had a wonderful Christmas or holiday season.   This week's edition of Mailbox Monday includes books and book-related items I received as Christmas gifts :-) 
Mailbox Monday is a weekly 
travelling meme that is being hosted for the month of December by 
Jenny Q over at 
Let Them Read Books.
Received for Review:
 
 The Book of Lost Fragrances by M.J. Rose
 A sweeping and suspenseful tale of 
secrets, intrigue, and  lovers separated by time, all connected through 
the mystical  qualities of a perfume created in the days of 
Cleopatra-and lost  for 2,000 years. Jac L'Etoile has always 
been haunted by  the past, her memories infused with the exotic scents  
that she grew up surrounded by as the heir to a storied French  perfume 
company. In order to flee the pain of those  remembrances-and of her 
mother's suicide-she moves to America,  leaving the company in the hands
 of her brother Robbie. But when  Robbie hints at an earth-shattering 
discovery in the family  archives and then suddenly goes missing-leaving
 a dead body in his  wake-Jac is plunged into a world she thought she'd 
left behind.
A sweeping and suspenseful tale of 
secrets, intrigue, and  lovers separated by time, all connected through 
the mystical  qualities of a perfume created in the days of 
Cleopatra-and lost  for 2,000 years. Jac L'Etoile has always 
been haunted by  the past, her memories infused with the exotic scents  
that she grew up surrounded by as the heir to a storied French  perfume 
company. In order to flee the pain of those  remembrances-and of her 
mother's suicide-she moves to America,  leaving the company in the hands
 of her brother Robbie. But when  Robbie hints at an earth-shattering 
discovery in the family  archives and then suddenly goes missing-leaving
 a dead body in his  wake-Jac is plunged into a world she thought she'd 
left behind. 
 Back in Paris to investigate her brother's 
disappearance, Jac  discovers a secret the House of L'Etoile has been 
hiding since  1799: a scent that unlocks the mysteries of reincarnation.
 
The  Book of Lost Fragrances fuses history, passion, and 
suspense,  moving from Cleopatra's Egypt and the terrors of 
revolutionary  France to Tibet's battle with China and the glamour of 
modern-day  Paris. Jac's quest for the ancient perfume someone is 
willing to  kill for becomes the key to understanding her own troubled  
past.
Won (from Historical Fiction Connection)
Queen Hereafter by Susan Fraser King
 Refugee. Queen. Saint. In eleventh-century Scotland, a young woman  strives to fulfill her destiny despite the risks . . .
Refugee. Queen. Saint. In eleventh-century Scotland, a young woman  strives to fulfill her destiny despite the risks . . .
  
  Shipwrecked on the Scottish coast, a young Saxon princess and her  
family-including the outlawed Edgar of England-ask sanctuary of the  
warrior-king Malcolm Canmore, who shrewdly sees the political  
advantage. He promises to aid Edgar and the Saxon cause in return  for 
the hand of Edgar's sister, Margaret, in marriage.
  
  A foreign 
queen in a strange land, Margaret adapts to life among  the barbarian 
Scots, bears princes, and shapes the fierce warrior  Malcolm into a 
sophisticated ruler. Yet even as the king and queen  build a passionate 
and tempestuous partnership, the Scots  distrust her. When her husband 
brings Eva, a Celtic bard, to court  as a hostage for the good behavior 
of the formidable Lady Macbeth,  Margaret expects trouble. Instead, an 
unlikely friendship grows  between the queen and her bard, though one 
has a wild Celtic nature  and the other follows the demanding path of 
obligation. 
  Torn between old and new loyalties, Eva is bound by a 
vow to betray  the king and his Saxon queen. Soon imprisoned and charged
 with  witchcraft and treason, Eva learns that Queen Margaret-counseled 
by  the furious king and his powerful priests-will decide her fate and  
that of her kinswoman Lady Macbeth. But can the proud queen forgive  
such deep treachery?
  
  Impeccably researched, a dramatic page-turner, Queen  Hereafter
 is an unforgettable story of shifting alliances and  the tension 
between fear and trust as a young woman finds her way  in a dangerous 
world. 
Received as Christmas Gifts
11/22/63 by Stephen King
 ON NOVEMBER 22, 1963, THREE SHOTS RANG OUT IN
 DALLAS, PRESIDENT  KENNEDY DIED, AND THE WORLD CHANGED. WHAT IF YOU 
COULD CHANGE IT  BACK?
ON NOVEMBER 22, 1963, THREE SHOTS RANG OUT IN
 DALLAS, PRESIDENT  KENNEDY DIED, AND THE WORLD CHANGED. WHAT IF YOU 
COULD CHANGE IT  BACK? 
In this brilliantly conceived tour de 
force, Stephen King-who  has absorbed the social, political, and popular
 culture of his  generation more imaginatively and thoroughly than any 
other  writer-takes readers on an incredible journey into the past and 
the  possibility of altering it.
It begins with Jake Epping, a
 thirty-five-year-old English  teacher in Lisbon Falls, Maine, who makes
 extra money teaching GED  classes. He asks his students to write about 
an event that changed  their lives, and one essay blows him away-a 
gruesome, harrowing  story about the night more than fifty years ago 
when Harry  Dunning's father came home and killed his mother, his 
sister, and  his brother with a sledgehammer. Reading the essay is a 
watershed  moment for Jake, his life-like Harry's, like America's in  
1963-turning on a dime. Not much later his friend Al, who owns the  
local diner, divulges a secret: his storeroom is a portal to the  past, a
 particular day in 1958. And Al enlists Jake to take over  the mission 
that has become his obsession-to prevent the Kennedy  assassination.
        So
 begins Jake's new life as George Amberson, in a different  world of Ike
 and JFK and Elvis, of big American cars and sock hops  and cigarette 
smoke everywhere. From the dank little city of Derry,  Maine (where 
there's Dunning business to conduct), to the  warmhearted small town of 
Jodie, Texas, where Jake falls  dangerously in love, every turn is 
leading eventually, of course,  to a troubled loner named Lee Harvey 
Oswald and to Dallas, where  the past becomes heart-stoppingly 
suspenseful, and where history  might not be history anymore. 
Time-travel has never been so  believable. Or so terrifying.
Songs of Love and Death Edited by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois
 
In 
this star-studded cross-genre anthology, 
seventeen of the  greatest modern authors of fantasy, science fiction, 
and romance  explore the borderlands of their genres with brand-new 
tales of  ill-fated love. From zombie-infested woods in a 
post-apocalyptic  America to faery-haunted rural fields in eighteenth- 
century  England, from the kingdoms of high fantasy to the alien world 
of a  galaxy-spanning empire, these are stories of lovers who must  
struggle against the forces of magic and fate. 
Award-winning, 
bestselling author Neil Gaiman demonstrates why  he's one of the hottest
 stars in literature today with "The Thing  About Cassandra," a subtle 
but chilling story of a man who meets an  old girlfriend he had never 
expected to see.
    International blockbuster bestselling author 
Diana Gabaldon  sends a World War II RAF pilot through a stone circle to
 the time  of her Outlander series in "A Leaf on the Winds of All 
Hallows."  Torn from all he knows, Jerry MacKenzie determinedly survives
  hardship and danger, intent on his goal of returning home to his  wife
 and baby-no matter the cost.
    New York Times bestselling 
author Jim Butcher presents "Love  Hurts," in which Harry Dresden takes 
on one of his deadliest  adversaries and in the process is forced to 
confront the secret  desires of his own heart.
    Just the 
smallest sampling promises unearthly delights, but look  also for 
stories by New York Times bestselling romance authors Jo  Beverley and 
Mary Jo Putney, and by such legends of the fantasy  genre as Peter S. 
Beagle and Tanith Lee, as well as many other  popular and beloved 
writers, including Marjorie M. Liu, Jacqueline  Carey, Carrie Vaughn, 
and Robin Hobb. This exquisite anthology,  crafted by the peerless 
editing team of George R. R. Martin and  Gardner Dozois, is sure to 
leave you under its spell.
Towers of Midnight by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson

 
The Last Battle has started. The seals on the
 Dark One's prison  are crumbling. The Pattern itself is unraveling, and
 the armies of  the Shadow have begun to boil out of the Blight.
  
  The sun has begun to set upon the Third Age.
  
  Perrin Aybara is now hunted by specters from his past: Whitecloaks,  a
 slayer of wolves, and the responsibilities of leadership. All the  
while, an unseen foe is slowly pulling a noose tight around his  neck. 
To prevail, he must seek answers in Tel'aran'rhiod  and find a way--at long last--to master the wolf within him or lose  himself to it forever.
  
  Meanwhile, Matrim Cauthon prepares for the most difficult challenge  
of his life. The creatures beyond the stone gateways--the Aelfinn  and 
the Eelfinn--have confused him, taunted him, and left him  hanged, his 
memory stuffed with bits and pieces of other men's  lives. He had hoped 
that his last confrontation with them would be  the end of it, but the 
Wheel weaves as the Wheel wills. The time is  coming when he will again 
have to dance with the Snakes and the  Foxes, playing a game that cannot
 be won. The Tower of Ghenjei  awaits, and its secrets will reveal the 
fate of a friend long  lost.
  
  This latest novel of Robert Jordan's #1 New York Times
  bestselling series--the second based on materials he left behind  when
 he died in 2007--brings dramatic and compelling developments  to many 
threads in the Pattern. The end draws near. 
Other Book-Related Gifts:
Gift cards to Chapters Indigo, my favourite book store
Lord of the Rings Trilogy, Blu Ray Extended Edition
House Stark Stein, Game of Thrones
Night's Watch Mug, Game of Thrones
That's it for me.  What did you get in your mailbox or under the Christmas tree?
