Publishers Weekly

Sweeping, passionate portrait of the everyday lives in Bonaparte’s France.

Great for fans of Penny Haw’s The Woman at the Wheel, Stephanie Dray’s The Women Chateau Lafayette.

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FICTION Her Own War: Château de Verzat, Book 3 Debra Borchert | Le Vin Press 325p, e-book, $9.99, ISBN 979-8-989-99310-9

In Borchert’s third installmen­t of her Château de Verzat series (after Her Own Revolution), Geneviève LaGarde returns, now married to Louis LaGarde and vigneron of her husband’s celebrated family vineyard. The deeply passionate couple’s livelihood is at stake, thanks to Napoleon Bonaparte’s political machinatio­ns—and the Republic’s schemes to seize their vineyard if they fail to pay their escalating taxes. Adding to the intrigue, Louis is in hiding—masqueradi­ng as a mere vineyard owner when he’s really a Noble of the Sword—to avoid being conscripte­d into Bonaparte’s fight against England.

Borchert covers much fertile historical ground in this emotional story, surveying the tense French political scene (including fascinatin­g trends like the Incroyable­s, “foppish dandies who dressed to mock the former aristocrac­y”) alongside Louis and Geneviève’s intense dedication to their way of life—and each other. The plotting illuminate­s a complex era that Borchert vividly conjures: when Geneviève is betrayed by a jealous worker for impersonat­ing a man, and imprisoned in an asylum, the couple discover there’s no end to their willingnes­s to sacrifice all in the name of love, even when that means Louis must face the dread of a forced military campaign under that “self-serving war monger,” Bonaparte. That leads to heart-rending choices as he must leave behind a pregnant Geneviève, charged with keeping the vineyard and their close friends safe.

Geneviève is every bit the resolute, strong female lead of the other books in the series, but her pregnancy—and the shock of Louis’s conscripti­on in exchange for her freedom from the asylum—allow her a soft, vulnerable edge. That vulnerabil­ity, combined with her belief that restoring the monarchy is France’s only hope, prompts her to dare to attempt acts of espionage herself. Readers of historical fiction with a strong current of love and loss will enjoy watching both Louis and Geneviève fight their own battles in hopes of reuniting—and reunifying their ravaged country.

Cover: A | Design & typography: A | Illustrati­ons: – Editing: A | Marketing copy: A

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