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![Skye O'Malley: A Novel (O'Malley Saga Book 1) by [Bertrice Small]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51PLtlhjXjL._SY346_.jpg)
Skye O'Malley: A Novel (O'Malley Saga Book 1) Kindle Edition
Bertrice Small (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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Indomitable and bold in an era of royalty and rogues, Skye O’Malley is a woman who embraces her unbridled sensuality as valiantly as she fights for her children, her lovers, her empire. A woman of justice and honor, she will match wits with and challenge the most dangerous and powerful woman of her time: Queen Elizabeth I.
Though Skye is the object of every man’s fantasy, only a handful have had the thrill of tasting her enticing passions–men whose own daring adventures match her exotic forays into a world of lust, longing, and remarkable destiny. Skye’s is a stunning tale that reaches from the emerald hills of Ireland to the lush palaces of Algiers to the helm of a shipping empire, where she will wage her greatest battle for love and vengeance against the crown itself.
Praise for Skye O'Malley
“Small creates cover-to-cover passion, a keen sense of history, and suspense.”—Publishers Weekly
“Small continues to prove herself worthy of the title queen of sensuality!”—Literary Times
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBallantine Books
- Publication dateMay 25, 2011
- File size2429 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Small continues to prove herself worthy of the title queen of sensuality!”—Literary Times
From the Inside Flap
About the Author
Bertrice Small is a New York Times bestselling author and the recipient of numerous awards. In keeping with her profession, she lives in the oldest English-speaking town in the state of New York, founded in 1640. Her light-filled studio includes the paintings of her favorite cover artist, Elaine Duillo, and a large library. Because she believes in happy endings, Bertrice Small has been married to the same man, her hero, George, for well over forty years. They have a son, Thomas, and several wonderful grandchildren. Longtime readers will be happy to know that Finnegan, the long-haired bad black kitty, and Sylvester, the black-and-white tuxedo cat who is the official family bed cat, are thriving.
--This text refers to the audioCD edition.Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
It was a perfect early summer day in the year 1555. Innisfana Island, its great green cliffs tumbling into the deep and sparkling blue sea, shone clear at the mouth of O’Malley Bay. English weather, the Irish inhabitants of the region called it, and it was nearly the only English thing they approved of. There was a slight breeze, and in the skies above the island the gulls and terns soared and swooped, their eerie skrees the only counterpoint to the breaking surf.
Standing tall against the horizon was O’Malley Castle, a typical tower house of dark gray stone. Rising several stories high, it commanded a view of the sea from all its windows. It had a wide moat, and beyond that moat was—of all things—a rose garden, planted by the late Lady O’Malley. After her death, now four years past, the new Lady O’Malley kept the garden up. Now in full bloom, it was a riot of yellows, pinks, reds, and whites, a perfect background for the wedding of the youngest daughter.
Inside the tower house, in the main hall, the five older daughters of the O’Malley family sat happily gossiping with their pretty stepmother while they sewed and embroidered the bride’s trousseau. It had been a long time since they had all been together. Now, each had her own home, and they all met only on special occasions.
They were as similar now as they had been as children. Medium-tall, they all ran to partridge plump. It was the kind of comfortable figure that kept a man warm on a cold night. Each was fair-skinned with soft peach-colored cheeks, serious gray eyes, and long, straight, light-brown hair. None was beautiful, but none was ugly, either.
The eldest, Moire, was twenty-five, and had been married for twelve years. She was mother to nine living children, seven sons. Moire stood high in her father’s favor. Peigi, at twenty-three, had been married ten years and was mother to nine sons. Peigi stood even higher in her father’s favor. Bride, twenty-one, had been married eight years, and had only four children, two of whom were boys. Dubhdara tolerated Bride, and constantly exhorted her to greater productivity. “You’re more like your mother than the others,” he would say ominously.
Eibhlin, eighteen, was the only one with a religious calling. She had been such a quiet little thing that they hadn’t even suspected her piety until the boy to whom she was to be wed succumbed to an attack of measles the year Eibhlin was twelve. As O’Malley considered a possible replacement bridegroom for his fourth daughter, Eibhlin begged to be allowed to enter a convent. She genuinely desired that life. Because her uncle Seamus, now bishop of Murrisk, was present for the talk, Dubhdara O’Malley was forced to give his consent. Eibhlin entered her convent at thirteen, and had just recently taken final vows.
Sine O’Malley Butler was sixteen, wed three years, and the mother of one boy. She was eight months pregnant but she would not have missed Skye’s wedding.
The married sisters were dressed in simply cut, full-skirted silk dresses with bell sleeves and low, scooped necklines. Moire was in a deep, rich blue, Peigi in scarlet, Bride in violet, and Sine in golden yellow. The lacy frill of their chemises peeked elegantly up through the low bodices.
Eibhlin struck the only somber note. Her all-covering black linen gown was relieved only by a severe white starched rectangular bib, in which was centered an ebony, silver-banded crucifix. About her waist the nun wore a twisted silk rope, also black, which hung in two plaits to the hem of her gown. One plait, knotted into three knots, symbolized the Trinity. The other, knotted in the same manner, symbolized the estates of poverty, chastity, and obedience. By way of vivid contrast, her sisters wore chains of wrought gold or silver about their waists, and each woman had attached to her chain a rosary, a needlecase, a mirror, or simply a set of household keys.
Because this was an informal home gathering, the married sisters wore their hair loose, parted in the center. Sine and Peigi had added pretty arched linen caps. And of course Eibhlin, whose hair had been cut when she took her vows, wore starched and pleated white wings over her white wimple.
Presiding over this gathering was Dubhdara O’Malley’s second wife. Anne was the same age as her stepdaughter, Eibhlin, and as pregnant with her fourth child as was her stepdaughter, Sine. Anne was a pretty woman, with chestnut-brown curls, merry brown eyes, and a sweet, sensible nature. Anne’s silk gown was of a deep wine shade, and fashioned identically to her stepdaughters’ gowns. But over her ruffled bodice Anne wore a double strand of creamy baroque pearls. None of the O’Malley daughters had resented their father’s marriage to Anne and everyone liked her enormously. One could not help liking Anne.
For nine years after Skye’s birth Dubhdara O’Malley had obeyed his priest brother’s edict, and stayed out of his wife’s bed. He really did not wish to kill Peigi. Free of yearly pregnancies, Peigi regained her strength and even began to bloom. Then, one night, Dubhdara O’Malley had arrived home from a long voyage. It was late. He had no current mistress, and there wasn’t a servant girl in sight. He had gotten drunk and sought his wife’s bed. Nine months later, Peigi O’Malley died giving birth to the long-awaited son, born September 29th and baptized Michael. The little boy was now almost six.
Within an almost indecently short time O’Malley had taken his second wife, a girl of thirteen. Nine months from their wedding day Anne had birthed Brian; a year later, Shane; and in another year, Shamus. Unlike her meek predecessor, Anne O’Malley possessed good health and high spirits. This child she carried was to be the last, she told her husband firmly. It would also, she assured him, be a boy. Five sons should give him the immortality he craved.
O’Malley had laughed and slapped her playfully on the backside. His daughters took this to mean that he was either in his dotage or growing mellow with age. Had their own mother ever made such a statement she would have been beaten black and blue. But then, Anne O’Malley was the mother of sons.
Moire looked up from her embroidery to gaze with pleasure about the hall. It had never looked so nice in their mother’s time for she, poor soul, had spent much of her life in her own rooms.
The stone floors were always well swept now, the rushes changed weekly. The oak trestles were polished to a mellow golden hue, reflecting the great silver candlesticks with their pure beeswax tapers. The big brass andirons were filled with enormous oak logs, ready to be lit when the evening arrived. Behind the high board, prominently displayed, hung a large new tapestry depicting Saint Brendan the Monk on a sky-blue background, guiding his ship across the western seas. Anne had designed it, and had been working on it almost every evening of her married life. It had been a labor of love, for the second Lady O’Malley adored not only her bluff, big husband, but their sons and their home as well.
Moire’s eyes lit upon several big colorful porcelain bowls filled with roses. Their pungent, spicy scent gave the room a wonderful exotic smell. Moire wrinkled her nose with pleasure and said to Anne, “The bowls are new?”
“Aye,” came the reply. “Your father brought them back from his last voyage. He is so good to me, Moire.”
“And why not?” demanded Moire. “You are good to him, Anne.”
“Where is Skye?” interrupted Peigi.
“Out riding with young Dom. I am surprised at your father in pursuing this betrothal. They do not suit at all.”
“They were promised in the cradle,” explained Moire. “It wasn’t easy for Da to find husbands for us all, for we’ve none of us large dowries. Skye’s marrying the heir to the Ballyhennessey O’Flahertys is the best match of us all.”
Anne shook her head. “I fear this match. Your sister is a very independent girl.”
“And it’s all Da’s fault for he has spoiled her terribly,” said Peigi. “She should have been married off two years ago at thirteen, like the rest of us. But no, Skye did not want it. He lets her have her way all the time!”
“That’s not so, Peigi,” Eibhlin chided her sister. “Anne is correct when she says that Skye and Dom do not suit. Skye is not like us in temperament. We favor our mother while she favors Da. Dom is simply neither strong enough nor sensitive enough to be Skye’s husband.”
“Hoity-toity, sister,” said Peigi sourly. “It amazes me how much the wee nun knows about human nature.”
“Indeed and I do,” replied Eibhlin calmly, “for whom do you think the poor women of my district pour out their unhappiness to, Peigi? Certainly not the priest! He tells them it is their Christian duty to be abused by their menfolk! And then he adds to their guilt by giving them a penance.”
The sisters look shocked, and Anne broke the tension by laughing, “You’re more a rebel than a holy woman, stepdaughter.”
Eibhlin sighed. “You speak the truth, Anne, and it troubles me greatly. But though I try I cannot seem to change.”
Anne O’Malley leaned over and fondly patted her stepdaughter on the hand. “Being a woman is never, ever easy,” she said wisely, “no matter what role we choose to play in life.” --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
From the Publisher
Product details
- ASIN : B004ZZFPB0
- Publisher : Ballantine Books; Reissue edition (May 25, 2011)
- Publication date : May 25, 2011
- Language : English
- File size : 2429 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 498 pages
- Lending : Not Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #166,609 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #2,349 in Action & Adventure Romance (Books)
- #2,758 in Action & Adventure Romance (Kindle Store)
- #3,276 in Saga Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Bertrice Small is a New York Times bestselling author with more than 34 novels in print. She lives in the oldest English-speaking town in New York state. Her website is bertricesmall.com.
Photo by Natalie [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.
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THE STORY: This is the story of Skye O'Malley and the men she loves and hates and has sex with. The story begins with her as an innocent forced into marriage by her father. By the end of the book she has had multiple husbands and children and many adventures around the world.
OPINION: This book was one that I might have otherwise read thirty years ago when I was snatching my mom's romances and reading them furtively in my room at night. What was surprising to me was how current and graphic the depictions of sex were. Skye O'Malley was clearly a groundbreaking book in the depiction of sex and a woman who takes control of her sexuality. Skye is a woman who likes sex and has no problem being in love with several different men. More an epic novel than a romance, I found the first 150 pages difficult to get through. At times I felt that it was sex act after sex act. At times it felt like it was more girl porn than romance. Eventually, however, Skye's story becomes more about the men she loves and I liked it more. By the time the story ended, I reluctantly had to admit that I enjoyed the book overall. It is different from current romance novels and definitely not for everyone. A groundbreaking book of its time, this book is clearly an influence upon today's erotic romances.
WORTH MENTIONING: This book has a lot of sex in it. Good sex, bad sex, forced sex. One of the themes of the book is how Skye takes control of her life and accepts herself as a sexual being.
FINAL DECISION: This was a difficult book for me to get into. The first part of the book was slow and I wondered how so much could happen to one woman and how much more was going to happen in the remaining 400 pages. Eventually, however, I began to acclimate to the pacing and tone of the book. By the end I liked it.
CONNECTED BOOKS: SKY O'MALLEY is the first book in the O'Malley Saga.
STAR RATING: I give this book 4 stars.
Being that it had been a minimum of 12 years since I originally read the book, my memory was a bit foggy, and I didn't remember some parts while other parts I remember having happened differently. It was nice to be able to read the full story, as I missed a large chunk my first read due to the missing pages.
One theme that I've noticed in several of Small's books that I don't quite agree with is that "proper" sex is only man-on-top, penis-in-vagina penetration, and that if the encounter proceeds any other way, it's "wrong", as indicated by lines like "The stallion should mount the mare, not the mare mount the stallion" (may not be an exact quote, but close) and descriptions of orgasm by manual or oral stimulation not being "satisfying" enough. Such opinions bother my fairly-feminist mind, and tend to kill the mood just a bit when they come about, though others may not have an issue.
I tend to describe Small's books as "not smut, but porn - the plot between the sex is often about as bad as the acting between the sex in films". Some parts seem absolutely stilted, and a product of trying to fight through writer's block - understandable, but it could have been revised later so it would flow better. There are a few parts of this book that are almost painful between-the-sex filler, while other parts flow nicely and don't feel forced.
Then there's the "food-porn". The descriptions of meals tend to be down to details that even the characters probably wouldn't be aware of. If done in moderation it's not bad, letting the reader know "this is what the food is like in this area", but when meals are described in such detail that almost an entire page is taken up describing the food, it's a bit boring and feels like overkill.
I've seen other reviews complaining that the sex is "too graphic". That's almost the entire reason that I read Small's work - I like a good descriptive sex scene. I've come across far too many romance novels that gloss over the sex, barely giving detail, or even worse, just say something like "they spent a restless night". Come on, that's not erotic at all! We're mature adults (I hope) I think we can handle some sex in a romance novel.
I will admit that there is a lot of drama in this book, to the point of feeling as if I'm in the Castle Anthrax scene in Holy Grail - "Get on with it!!!" There are points where it does feel as if there's just too damn much drama - whose life is THAT intense? - however, it does lead to (some) character development - wait, that's my husband's reason for watching Yu-Gi-Oh.
Overall, my main reason for reading this book as an adult is for the sex, and if I put aside any issues I have with the book, it's fairly interesting. I would recommend it to anyone fond of period romance novels and who enjoys some detail in their sex scenes. If you prefer the romance side over the sex side, this may not be the book, or author, for you.
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