Ours Is The Winter by @LaurieEllingham #PublicationDayPush with @rararesources #BookBoost

I am delighted to be joining in with Laurie Ellingham’s Publication Day Push for Ours Is The Winter 🙂

Ours Is The Winter Publication Day push

Many thanks to Rachel at Rach RandomResources @rararesources for the opportunity.

Ours Is The Winter cover

Ours Is The Winter

Journeying across the Arctic, their pasts are about to catch up with them. Erica, Molly and Noah are embarking on the challenge of a lifetime, driving Siberian huskies across the frozen wilderness of the Arctic. Cut off from the world and their loved ones and thrown together under gruelling conditions, it isn’t long before the cracks start to show.

Erica has it all. A loving husband, a successful career and the most adorable baby daughter. But Erica has been living a double life, and as she nears her fortieth birthday her lies threaten to come crashing down.

Molly was on her way to stardom. But when her brother died, so did her dreams of becoming an Olympic champion. Consumed by rage and grief, she has shut out everyone around her, but now she’s about to learn that comfort can come from the most unexpected places.

Noah has a darkness inside him and is hounded by nightmares from his past. Tortured, trapped and struggling to save his fractured relationship, he knows this journey is not going to help, but try telling his girlfriend that.

As their lives and lies become ever more entwined, it becomes clear that in the frozen wilds there is nowhere to hide.

Trailer for Ours Is The Winter –

http://www.facebook.com/LaurieEllinghamAuthor/videos/764727783715328

BUY
Author Bio

Laurie Ellingham

Laurie Ellingham lives on the Suffolk/Essex border with her two children, husband, and cockerpoo Rodney. She has a First Class honours degree in Psychology and a background in Public relations, but her main love is writing and disappearing into the fictional world of her characters, preferably with a large coffee and a Twix (or two) to hand.

Follow Laurie Ellingham on..
Twitter – https://twitter.com/LaurieEllingham
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/LaurieEllinghamAuthor

 

The Gift by Louise Jensen @Fab_fiction @bookouture #BlogTour #BookReview

As The Gift has been published in paperback today, I thought I would re-share my review. Congratulations Louise Jensen & Bookouture 🙂

Chat About Books's avatarChat About Books

Today I am over the moon to be taking part in Louise Jensen’s blog tour for The Gift! This book is amazing! I hope you will all be ordering your copy, if you haven’t already.

The Gift: The gripping psychological thriller everyone is talking about by [Jensen, Louise]

Publisher: Bookouture (16th December 2016)

The perfect daughter is dead. And a secret is eating her family alive…

Jenna is given another shot at life when she receives a donor heart from a girl called Callie. Eternally grateful to Callie and her family, Jenna gets closer to them, but she soon discovers that Callie’s perfect family is hiding some very dark secrets …

Callie’s parents are grieving, yet Jenna knows they’re only telling her half the story. Where is Callie’s sister Sophie? She’s been ‘abroad’ since her sister’s death but something about her absence doesn’t add up. And when Jenna meets Callie’s boyfriend Nathan, she makes a shocking discovery.

Jenna knows that…

View original post 846 more words

Christmas at the Candied Apple Café #BlogBlitz #AuthorInterview with @katheringarbera @HarperImpulse @rararesources #Giveaway

I have the pleasure of joining in with another Christmas book blog blitz today, including an interview with the author herself and a giveaway 🙂

Christmas at the Candied Apple Cafe blog blitz

Katherine Garbera

For those who don’t know already, could you tell us about yourself and your book(s) please?

I am the USA Today bestselling author Katherine Garbera is a two-time Maggie winner who has written more than 90 books since making her first sale to Harlequin (Silhouette) Desire. Katherine is known for her sexy heroes, feisty heroines and sensual stories. A Florida native who grew up to travel the globe, Katherine now makes her home in the Midlands of the UK with her husband, two children and a very spoiled miniature dachshund.

My latest release from HarperImpulse is CHRISTMAS AT THE CANDIED APPLE CAFÉ. A seasonal story of love, chocolate and miralces!

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

The ideas for my stories come from everywhere. Usually from a combination of interesting news stories I’ve read, conversations with my hubby and kids, movies I watch, TV shows…pretty much everywhere. I have written a lot of books and so sometimes people are surprised I still have stories to tell, but I don’t think I’ve even come close to telling them all.

I’m also really nosey about people so I will watch them from behind my dark sunglasses and try to figure out why they are doing whatever they are doing. I have spent hours just watching people and being inspired by my version of their lives.

Are any of your characters based (however loosely) on anyone you know?

No they aren’t.

How do you pick your characters names?

I usually have an idea of the character in my head and then do a search for baby names that will fit. If I’m writing a hero like Mads I start with an image and then go and look for names that match. I can never start writing until I have the perfect name for the character. Sometimes if I’m stuck and can’t find it, I’ll use xxhero in place of the name and write some scenes in that characters point-ofview until his/her name is revealed to me.

Can you share your writing process with us, in a nutshell?

I have always had to make money from writing since I was working before I got published and so I treated writing like a job—the most awesome job in the world! So I work every Monday – Friday. When my kids were little I wrote after I took them to school and when they were infants after I put them to bed (I had a strict 7pm bedtime for them). But now that they are grown I usually start writing at 8 a.m. I write in sprints of 10-15 minutes where I try to get 500 words down on the page. And then I take a 10-15 minute break where I either get up and walk around, dance to songs from Time To Dance playlist or play a computer game usually backgammon against the computer. Then I repeat this pattern until I’ve finished a chapter usually around 3000 words. I tend to finish up around 1. And then I take the rest of the day for social media or shopping or crafts (I love making cards and art journaling) or playing with my dog!

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

There are really too many to name. ☺ But I love and will pick up anything written by Jayne Ann Krentz, Susan Elizabeth Phillips, Lori Foster, Christne Feehan, Raeanne Thayne, Jill Shalvis and Sarah Morgan.

If you could meet any author, who would it be and what would you ask them?

I would love to meet Judy Blume because her books had a huge influence on me as a girl. I’d just want to talk to her about life and writing.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Yes. In fact one year for Lent my mom challenged me to give up reading. I used to spend all of my free time on my bed reading. It was hard to do and the longest 40 days of my life, I’d rather give up chocolate or French fries than reading!!!

When did you start to write?

I started writing in 1992 when my daughter was six months old. At the time her father had a job he loved and I had a job that I really didn’t like and when I looked at my baby I thought I don’t want her growing up in a house where men get to do something they love and women have to just do whatever brings home the bacon. So I asked myself what I loved and there were two things being a mom and reading. And I had been starting and not finishing writing projects for several years (since I was 21, I was 23 at the time) and I decided that I would finish everything I started since I always didn’t want my daughter to be a quitter and that I would try writing.

If you could re-write the ending to any book what would it be and what would you change?

My Sister’s Keeper by Jodi Picoult. I hate the ending. I felt like everything Anna has fought for was lost in the ending. I would give her the ending she deserves in my mind.

Is there a book you wish you had written?

Not really. I love the books I am writing and have written and have so many ideas for other stories that I don’t think I’d want to write someone else stories. ☺

If you wrote an autobiography, what would your title be?

They said she couldn’t so she did it.

If you could invite any fictional character for coffee who would it be and where would you take them?

I think I’d invite Santa Claus out for coffee and I’d take him to Starbucks. ☺

What are you working on right now?

I’m working on Ethan Caruthers story from my Harlequin Desire series The Wild Caruthers Bachelors.

Do you have a new release due?

I believe it will be out in August of next year. ☺

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

I’d like to say I do something glamorous and fun but usually I just have a glass of champagne with my husband at dinner.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

You can visit me on the web at http://www.katherinegarbera.com or follow me on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/katherinegarberaauthor or instagram https://www.instagram.com/katherinegarbera/ or twitter https://twitter.com/katheringarbera

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Katherine 🙂 and to Rachel at Rachel’s Random Resources for arranging the interview.

Christmas at the Candied Apple Cafe cover

Christmas at the Candied Apple Café

There’s nothing so magical as Christmas in New York… Santa is coming to New York!
Snow is falling, excitement is high and the delicious scent of chocolate drifts along Fifth Avenue – the Candied Apple Café is ready for Christmas! And no one is busier than publicist Iona Summerlin. With so much to do, she doesn’t have time to think about men, dating, or the fact her last boyfriend ditched her for her brother… Relationships are off the menu!
Hotel boss Mads Eriksson is not looking forward to the first Christmas since losing his wife. His six-year-old daughter Sofia has lost her belief in Christmas magic along with her mother, and he has no idea what to do. But an unusually festive business meeting at the Candied Apple – and meeting the beautiful Iona – starts to defrost Mads’ frozen heart, and suddenly life seems full of light and sparkle again.
If only they dare to believe, maybe all their Christmas dreams will come true!

Amazon UK: http://amzn.to/2zAvDah

Amazon US: http://amzn.to/2gKF5QQ

Don’t forget to enter this fab giveaway…..

Giveaway –

Win 5 x Signed Copies of Summer in Manhattan

Summer In Manhattan

5 lucky winners will win a copy of Summer in Manhattan, Katherine Garbera’s previous book for Harper Impulse.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Good luck!

Author Bio USA Today bestselling author Katherine Garbera is a two-time Maggie winner who has written more than 60 books. A Florida native who grew up to travel the globe, Katherine now makes her home in the Midlands of the UK with her husband, two children and a very spoiled miniature dachshund. Social Media Links Fb: http://www.facebook.com/katherinegarberaauthor Twitter @katheringarbera Instagram http://www.instagram.com/katherinegarbera

The Puppet Master #BlogBlitz #GuestPost with Abigail Osborne @Abigail_Author @Bloodhoundbook

Today I have the pleasure of sharing a lovely guest post from Abigail Osborne as part of her blog blitz for The Puppet Master!

Many thanks to Sarah Hardy, at Bloodhound Books, for the opportunity to join in.

Make sure you check out all of the fabulous book bloggers taking part…..

The Puppet Master blog tour

5 Things You Didn’t Know About Abigail Osborne

 1.      I have a deep-seated love affair with Porridge. When I was younger, my Mum said that for years I would only ever eat Porridge for breakfast. In fact, she was questioned as to my diet when a school project where everyone drew their favourite foods led to me telling everyone I only ever ate porridge whilst drawing a lovely bowl of it on the poster. I still love porridge and will happily eat it three times a day. I’m not allowed to buy it anymore as my husband gets so fed up of it. Not that he could ever come between me and my oats!

2. When I was a teenager I harboured a daft dream that I could be a singer, my voice is decent but nothing mind-blowing. But my very supportive Mum took me along to the X-Factor auditions. Not only was it the coldest day of my life, it cured me of any notion that I was in anyway cut out for singing. So much time was spent queuing outside. It is not as fun as the 3 second glimpse you get in the show. It was at a football stadium and we sat on the freezing cold stands for hours. I was horrified to learn that where the bottom of the stands met the pitch there were cardboard walls that all the singers went behind to audition. They lined the rim of the football pitch which was absolutely packed. The cardboard cut outs were utterly redundant as you could hear every audition and saw that person go around to audition. Soon it was my turn and I made the walk of terror down the steps, rather slowly given my frozen limbs and appeared in front of a very disinterested man sat on a chair. All I remember about him was his massive yellow puffer jacket and his clipboard. He looked me up and down and then said, ‘off  you go’. I was so nervous and terrified I ended up singing as quietly as possible in hopes no one could hear me behind the so called ‘cardboard wall of protection’. At the end of my song, he simply said ‘you are far too nervous, we don’t need nervous people.’ Surprisingly I wasn’t devastated. I had realised as soon as I sat down on that plastic seat in the stadium that this wasn’t for me. You could feel everyone’s hopes and dreams bearing down on you. I felt like an imposter as I slowly realised that my churlish dream of being a singer was actually more of a fanciful whim. I was completely out of place around these people who evidently had music in their blood, to whom this meant everything. They had been dreaming of this opportunity whereas I was actually more excited about finishing the book I had started on the journey. I only went ahead with it as I’d dragged my mum and my grandma out for almost six hours queuing so I felt I may as well give it a go. I did get an X-factor jumper with my audition number on it though. Nothing like a six-hour freezing cold wait to make you realise what you don’t want to do with your life.

 

3. I am a secret violin player. I started learning the violin when I was around 5 or 6. I loved it straight away. I had lessons for many years and even took part in my school orchestra. I had to be coerced into the orchestra by my form tutor because I hate playing my violin in front of people. Hate it, hate it, hate it! When I play my violin, it’s like the music enters my body and takes over my mind. I am mentally lost in the moment. But if there is someone else in the room or a chance someone may hear me then I can’t reach that stage and I will make so many mistakes the sound is more like a cat being strangled. I play beautifully on my own or with my trusted violin teacher, but it’s like I lose my knowledge of how to play when there are others around. Being part of an orchestra was amazing and I really wish I had someone to convince me I’m brave enough to do it again. But alas, I’m sure my form teacher is retired now and wouldn’t fancy dragging me to another orchestra so I had no choice but to play. I’m pretty sure my husband thinks I don’t know how to play the violin as I’ve never used it in front of him and always put it back in its hiding place so he won’t ask me to play.

4.      I absolutely detest sand. Going to the beach is like a really awful game of don’t touch the sand. Remember when you used to be a child and you’d jump around the furniture trying not to touch the ground because it was lava – no? Just me? – ah well you get the idea. That is me on a beach. I hate sand and will walk over craggy rocks and stone beaches just to avoid the sandy beaches. You see glowing sand, gently caressing your feet as you walk. I see evil particles of dirt just waiting to jump into every nook and cranny meaning you have to shower at least twenty times to be sand free!

5. Young Adult Romance and Fantasy books are my guilty pleasure. I don’t know what it is about this genre but the relationships and that intense, all-consuming love just gets me every time. I think with adult romance, it doesn’t grip me the same way because Adults are sensible (sometimes) and the love can’t be all consuming because we have jobs and lives that get in the way. But in these books, the girl and boy are just each other’s world and the guy regularly puts his life on the line to save her and who can resist that. When would you get to experience that in real life? I try not to read them too much as I tend to get depressed that my husband isn’t an all-powerful assassin that stops being evil because of my love.

🙂

The Pupper Master

 Book Description:

 

Billie is hiding from the world in fear of a man who nearly destroyed her. But a chance meeting with budding journalist, Adam, sparks a relationship that could free her from her life of isolation and fear.

Unbeknown to Billie, Adam knows exactly who Billie is and is determined to expose her and get justice for the lives he believes she has ruined. But first, he needs to convince her to open up to him. As an unwanted attraction blossoms between them, Adam comes to realise that all is not as it seems.

Who is really pulling the strings? And are Adam and Billie both being played?

One thing is for sure, The Master wants his puppets back – and he’ll do anything to keep them.

Author Bio:

Abigail Osbourne
Abigail is originally from the Lake District but moved to the West Midlands for University where she completed an English Literature & History degree and also met her husband. She is a passionate reader and has an unsustainable collection of books. This obsession with books has led to her creating her own Dewey decimal system and she has been known to issue fines to family and friends if her book is not returned on time. ‘The Puppet Master’ is Abigail’s debut novel and has unleashed a passion for writing. When not writing or reading Abigail is usually playing her violin or hiding from her much too energetic cats. She also works as a Needs Assessor for disabled university students in the West Midlands.
 

Links:

Dark Chapter #BlogTour Winnie M Li @winniemli @Legend_Press #BookReview

Firstly, my sincere apologies to Winnie M Li and Legend Press for this post being a day late, but I am thrilled to be joining in with this blog tour.

Dark Chapter blog tour

My review…..

In Dark Chapter we meet Vivian. She’s a successful 29 year old woman who, in her spare time, enjoys her own company, taking hikes in places she visits for work. On one such hike in Belfast she is violently assaulted and raped by a teenage traveller.

This is technically fiction, but it is based on the author’s personal experience of rape and I think this shows in the story as it is a brutally honest account of the attack, the trial and how it affects her life from that day on. I can’t even imagine how I would begin to move on from such a horrific ordeal.

The story alternates in perspective between Vivian and her 15 year old attacker, Johnny. Reading the story from Johnny’s perspective is quite an eye opener as he shows no real remorse and only seems to be sorry that he was caught. It’s scary to think how many men there are like him in this world and who show such violence and disrespect for women at such a young age.

This is obviously not an easy read, but one I was completely immersed in. Vivian and Johnny live very different lives, but a chance meeting on a day in April changed both of their lives forever.

A difficult storyline, brilliantly written. I’m sure it will go some way in encouraging other women and girls to report these attacks and seek the justice deserved.

Many thanks to Imogen, at Legend Press, for my ARC.

Dark Chapter cover

Vivian is a cosmopolitan Taiwanese-American tourist who often escapes her busy life in London through adventure and travel. Johnny is a 15-year-old Irish teenager, living a neglected life on the margins of society. On a bright spring afternoon in West Belfast, their paths collide during a horrifying act of violence. In the aftermath, each is forced to confront the chain of events that led to the attack. Inspired by true events, this is a story of the dark chapters and chance encounters that can irrevocably determine the shape of our lives.

Winner of Not the Booker Prize 2017

A Bit About the Author:

Winnie M Li

Winnie M Li is a writer and producer. A Harvard graduate, she has written for travel guide books, produced independent feature films, programmed for film festivals and developed ecotourism projects. After graduating with Distinction in Creative Writing at Goldsmiths, she now writes across a range of media (including the Huffington Post), runs arts festivals, and is a PhD researcher at LSE. Winnie lives in London, yet is somewhat addicted to travel

Follow Winnie on Twitter @winniemli

#FlashbackFriday with @grahnort @JessikahHope @KatCroft @Caroline_writes

Welcome to my #FlashbackFriday feature 🙂

On the first Friday of each month I like to have a little look back at what I was reading during the same month in previous years, since starting my blog.

Now, as you will have realised, this is actually the second Friday of November! I realised on Sunday that I had forgotten to post on the 3rd, but better late than never!!

Here’s what I was reading in November 2016 & 2015…..

2016…..

Holding

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2016/11/27/holding-by-graham-norton-bookreview-grahnort-hodderbooks/

trace-this-scar

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2016/11/26/trace-this-scar-by-jessikah-hope-stenson-jessikahhope-excaliburpress-blogtour-bookreview/

While You Were Sleeping cover

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2016/11/19/while-you-were-sleeping-by-kathryn-croft-review-katcroft-bookouture-blogtour/

Love You To Death

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2016/11/04/love-you-to-death-detective-ruby-preston-crime-thriller-series-book-1-by-caroline-mitchell-review-caroline_writes-bookouture/

2015…..

Paranormal Intruder

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2015/11/15/caroline-mitchell-paranormal-intruder-the-true-story-of-a-family-in-fear/

Have you read any of the above?

#CoverReveal #JustOneTime by @Author_KSHunter with @rararesources

Just One Time cover

Today I have the pleasure of sharing a cover reveal for Just One Time by K.S. Hunter! 

Many thanks to Rachel at Rachel’s Random Resources for the opportunity to join in 🙂

Just One Time

The first novel by K.S. Hunter, the alter ego of an international bestselling author, whose identity will remain a secret.

Desire can have dire consequences
Two years ago, David Madden made a mistake that almost cost him his marriage. His wife, Alison, gave him another chance, but she has not forgotten, nor has she forgiven.

She is irresistible
Then David meets the alluring Nina at a theatre in London. When he loses his phone in the dark, she helps him find it, and by giving her his number he unwittingly invites her into his life.
What David initially views as an innocent flirt turns into a dangerous game of deception. His increasingly suspicious wife thinks something is up, and each lie he tells pushes them further apart.

She is insatiable
Nina pursues David relentlessly, following him to New York where she gives him an ultimatum: sleep with her, just one time, and then she’ll get out of his life forever; or she’ll ruin everything he holds dear.

She is unstoppable
Of course, once won’t be enough for Nina, and what David hoped would be the end is merely the beginning.

A modern-day Fatal Attraction, Just One Time is a steamy psychological thriller that will have you hooked from the first page and holding your breath until its shocking conclusion.

Praise for K.S. Hunter

‘An author to watch out for – always interesting and unpredictable’ Sophie Hannah

Is your book part of a series / standalone? Standalone

Are there any possible trigger warnings that bloggers/readers need to be aware of? Some graphic sexual content

Publication Date – 7th December 2017

Author Bio –

K.S. Hunter is the pseudonym of an international bestselling author. The identity of the author, who lives in the United Kingdom, will remain a mystery.

Social Media Links –

https://www.facebook.com/author.kshunter

And here it is…..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Just One Time cover.png

Enjoy!

The Other Daughter @SaraAlexi #BlogTour #AuthorInterview

Today I have the pleasure of sharing an interview with Sara Alexi as part of her blog tour for The Other Daughter 🙂

Many thanks to Twinkle Troughton for the opportunity to join in.

The Other Daughter blog tour

Sara Alexi

For those who don’t know already, could you tell us about yourself and your book(s) please?

My name is Sara Alexi and I write The Greek Village series, The Greek Island Series and The Yorkshire Village Series. Before I started writing I worked as a psychotherapist and this reflects in my books which are all character driven. Each book visits a new character and, through their story, we learn what emotional demons they are battling. As we accompany the protagonist we witness how they try to cope with life and their inner struggles and how they ultimately manage to work through these issues, often with help from an unexpected source.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

I am constantly inspired by the ‘normal’ people and issues I see around me. We tolerate so much in our lives without batting an eyelid, accepting all that is thrown at us without an issue, but so often life is very unfair. If I experience or witness something that seems touched with that unfairness I feel compelled to speak out. It is passion that sets the story off within me, and interesting characters that drive the ideas forward.

Are any of your characters based (however loosely) on anyone you know?

All my characters are based on observing people I know. I will see something small, just an idyosyncracatic way of moving, or a way of phrasing something, it may just be in passing, possibly by someone I have never met and then I extrapolate that into a whole character, adding in bits of the people I know where they fit to create a new human being.

How do you pick your characters’ names?

I struggle with character names, and often use the first names of my readers. Some names of course fit better than others, some feel more comic, some more serious, some feminine and some very masculine. On several occasions a character has had one name right up until the last round of edits and then I feel it no longer fits and I change it. One rule I do have for the Greek character names is that I try to make the protagonist’s and the major players names as short as possible. The incidental characters tend to have longer names. This is probably because I am dyslexic and when I read other peoples’ books it really helps if the names are quickly readable and memorable.

Can you share your writing process with us, in a nutshell?

I plot quite heavily, work out the arc and the story and the sub-story. Then I write down all the events that have to happen and all the things the reader must know to make the whole idea believable. I write each of these on squares of paper and then I arrange them in the order that they need to be shown. This allows me to ensure that the pieces of the sub-plot and any minor characters that are needed near the end are mentioned often enough not to lose them. Once that is done I have a ‘chat’ with the protagonist to get the ‘mood’ of the book before I start writing.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Thomas Hardy, Anthony Trollope, The Brontes, ( Is that cheating?) John Steinbeck, Kazuo Ishiguro, John Cooper Clark. That is six I know but I am allowing myself the last one as he is a poet.

If you could meet any author, who would it be and what would you ask them?

She is not everybody’s cup of tea but I think a day with Barbara Cartland would be such fun. We could groom her dogs, write a book before lunch time, and then we could discuss etiquette, romance, and how she remained so energetic all her life. I would also ask her what she thought her greatest learning and her greatest achievements were in her lifetime because, somehow, I doubt the answer would be the 723 novels that she wrote. I think she would be fascinating and fun and, maybe, rather intimidating. Obviously I would dress as a man for this wonderful day, paint on a moustache and wear britches as Barabara Cartland once infamously said she would rather have lunch with a stupid man than a clever woman, and I would hate to disappoint.

Were you a big reader as a child?

My father suspected I was dyslexic as a child but decided not to have me tested as he thought I would use it as an excuse not to try at school! Consequently school was a disturbing mystery and the world was a struggle. Reading was the last thought in my head and the least of my battles; first I had to work out what was going on in situations such as English lessons and why no-one else seemed as perplexed as I. To some degree I still have difficulty and go through periods of not reading at all and then I find a book that flows and my dyslexia does not seem like a fight and then I become an avid reader until a character with lots of vowels in their name (they are the tricky things) scares me off again.

When did you start to write?

I started writing five years ago, and it seems I have a lot to say as I have published 29 books to date.

If you could re-write the ending to any book what would it be and what would you change?

If you are talking about the books I have written a book, once they are published I no longer consider them to be mine. The process has had its cathartic effect on me and so it moves on and becomes the reader’s journey. So perhaps it might be best to ask them? If you are talking about any book in that has ever been written then I would change the ending of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and scribble out the bit where it says that it was all just a dream and leave it to the imagination of the reader as to what had actually happened.

Is there a book you wish you had written?

I am often very impressed by other peoples writing and when I have finished a good book I so wish I had been the author. It would be difficult to pick one out but two come to mind as I think; Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro and A Day in The Life of Ivan Denisovich. Stunning character observations, so human.

If you wrote an autobiography, what would your title be?

This is a most interesting question, and one that I sometimes used to put to my clients when I ran my psychotherapy practice. Strange how I have never pondered this question myself! Of course the answer would probably change over the years but right now, it would be along the lines of: ’I am what I choose to be‘ or ‘Living Hopefully Ever After‘ if it was about the whole of my life. Or if it was only about my writing it could be ‘Dyslexics Are Toeple Poo’ or maybe ’Adding to Positive‘ as that is the purpose of the books. I thought over this question longer than it took me to answer all the others and I am still only fumbling about with half baked ideas.

If you could invite any fictional character for coffee who would it be and where would you take them?

I would want to go to tea at the Ritz with Mr Slope from the Barchester Chronicles by Anthony Trollope. He would be overwhelmed by where he was but would not want it to show and he would want to ingratiate himself into his surroundings. I think this would amuse me greatly and I would be sure to play along. Although I think I would be laughing ‘at’ him and myself rather than with him, which isn’t kind, but then he is only a fictitious character and I would laughing at myself too.

What are you working on right now?

For the first time in five years I have managed to get ahead of myself and have two books written but as yet unpublished. So I feel I have some time in which I can do some extensive research for my next novel. This will take me to most of the major capitals of Europe which will be very exciting if somewhat cold at this time of year. (I am writing this in October and so probably wouldn’t go until November.) The idea is that whilst I travel I will make some notes about locations and ambiances but knowing how I am I feel sure I will not be able to wait to start writing and I would not be surprised if I came back with the bulk of the novel written.

Do you have a new release due?

There are two new releases over the next two months:

The Other Daughter is due out on November 1st. My mother died a few months ago, and to try and come to terms with this momentous event I used the process of writing to help process all I was feeling and what her death meant to me. Obviously this means there is much of me in this book but the storyline is purely fiction as are the characters. I think this book, of the ones I have written, had the propensity to become grim but, because of what I tend to focus on when I write, I think it has escaped the darkness and has become an uplifting read. I hope so anyway.

Then there will be a seasonal book around December 1st. This is a light read pulling together a lot of the best loved characters from other books on a seasonal trip to a Greek island where two characters, a mother and son, find their lives unexpectedly changing. All the seasonal elements are included and it is a read that is full of joy. A real heart warming story that can be read independently of the series.

Then in the New Year I hope to have the one I said I would be doing research on that is set in the capitals of Europe. I am aiming for the beginning of February, if not before – fingers crossed.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

Start a new book. Which doesn’t sound like much of a celebration but towards the end of writing a book a new story will come into my head and the new characters will start plaguing my imagination and, in short, I just cannot wait to start their book. So sitting down and working on the first chapter of that new book is exactly how I celebrate.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I am very active on Facebook where I encourage readers to friend me and post on my page. There is a good community there now and they chat with each other too. It is strange how small the world is as friends have unexpectedly reunited through my Facebook page and new friends have been made. I also tweet and use Intragram and my email address is Saraalexi@me.com for anyone who wants to write.

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

Just a big thank you to my readers.

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Sara. I’m so sorry to hear you lost your mother recently. x

The Other Daughter cover

The Other Daughter by Sara Alexi is a compelling and gritty tale, set amongst the wild moors and crooked streets of a Yorkshire Village, following one woman who finally untangles herself from the clutches of a painful past and a self-centred mother.

More than a decade after leaving home Dawn finds herself stuck in a dead-end job, in a rundown flat, while her sister has it all – the husband, children and prestigious job in sunny Australia. Their mum’s favouritism is palpable, and even as she has a terrible fall leaving Dawn to pick up the pieces, nothing Dawn does can live up to her perfect, absent sister.

But still Dawn persists with taking care of her aging and fragile mum, until one day it begins to feel like the only thing standing between Dawn and her happiness is her mother’s continued, pitiful existence…

http://www.saraalexi.com

Sara Alexi is one of the top 150 most successful, self-published authors of all time; a prolific writer, she has written 15 books (and counting) in just four years, with book sales reaching well over half a million copies.

Remarkably, Sara is dyslexic. At school English lessons were a time of confusion, she found that books were indecipherable hieroglyphics and she was unable to enjoy reading and writing; growing up in a time when at a time when dyslexia was not well understood and little or no support was available. And so her artistic nature was confined to painting, an art form that she loved and would take her travelling around the world.

Despite her dyslexia Sara qualified as a psychotherapist and ran her own practice in Yorkshire for many years. In a casual conversation with a client, she discovered that Agatha Christie, Jules Verne and Hans Christian Andersen were all dyslexic, and Sara’s perspective changed. The world of fiction opened to her with this shift in perception.

Sara now spends much of her time in a tiny rural village in the Peloponnese, in Greece, where she is (very slowly) renovating a ruined stone farmhouse, whilst observing the Greek way of life and absorbing the culture, enriching her vision for both writing and painting.

Sara’s ‘Greek Village Series’ is inspired by the people she has met travelling, her time spent in Greece alongside her career as a psychotherapist; her writing provides a keenly observed, compassionate insight into people, culture, and the human condition, and is set around a charming rural Greek village

Predating the current refugee crisis in Greece by some three years, Sara’s debut novel, The Illegal Gardener, focuses on the immigration problems in Greece, and the clash of cultures that accompanies those seeking a better life in the West.

Sara Alexi’s Amazon Author Page

 

December Girl by Nicola Cassidy @ladynicci @bombshellpub #blogtour #BookReview

Firstly, my apologies to Nicola Cassidy and Bombshell Books for publishing my review so late in the day, but I am thrilled to be joining in with the blog tour for December Girl

Many thanks to Sarah Hardy, at Bombshell Books, for the opportunity to take part and for the honour of sharing the same day of the tour with her 🙂

December Girl blog tour

My review…..

December Girl has to be one of the saddest stories I’ve ever read, but one which had me totally gripped.

The pain and devastation Molly endures during her life is just heart-breaking. When we first meet her she is a girl at home with her parents and younger brothers, about to be evicted from their home at Christmastime, by a selfish and uncaring landlord. There was a massive divide between the rich and poor in 1895, although I’m not sure if things are too much different these days in some cases.

The stress of the situation causes her beloved father to have a fatal heart-attack and their lives are changed for ever. Molly never gets over the death of her father and her life is more than difficult, especially when she makes the decision to avenge her fathers death, leaving her looking over her shoulder for the rest of her life.

The story is set between 1895 and 1921 and such a lot happens during these years, more than any one person should ever endure during their lifetime. There are some happy times, of course, but mostly an all consuming sadness which drew me to Molly, willing everything to turn out well for her.

I can’t believe this is a debut. It’s the most captivating, character driven story which is so beautifully written I could feel the emotion pouring off the page.

Many thanks to Bombshell Books for my ARC and to Nicola Cassidy for her most thoughtful gift.

December Girl cover

An unmissable family saga perfect for cold winter nights!

Molly Thomas is a feisty, independent soul, born on the Winter Solstice. At every stage of her life, she has faced troubles.

As a young woman, her family are evicted from their home at Christmas. Molly swears vengeance on the jealous neighbour and land agent responsible, Flann Montgomery.

Then in 1896, her baby son is taken from his pram. While Molly searches the streets for little Oliver, the police are called but her baby is gone.

Why does trouble seem to follow Molly? And will she ever find out what happened to her child?

December Girl is a tale of family bonds, love, revenge and murder.

About the author…..

Nicola Cassidy

Nicola Cassidy is a writer and blogger from Co. Louth, Ireland. She started
her writing career early, entering short story competitions, penning protest
letters to magazines and making up characters in her head. These
scribblings saw her place in a number of competitions as a child and
encouraged by her English teachers, she chose to study journalism at
Dublin City University.
While working in political PR and marketing, Nicola studied a series of
advanced creative writing courses at the Irish Writers’ Centre and set up a
lifestyle and literary blog at http://www.LadyNicci.com, which was nominated in
the Ireland Blog Awards in 2015 and 2016.
During her maternity leave for her first daughter, Nicola set about
researching and writing a historical fiction novel, December Girl, inspired
by true events and set in the mystical and ancient Boyne Valley, famed for
its stone age passage tombs, near to where she grew up.
Nicola  signed with US based Trace Literary Agency in 2016. December Girl
was picked up by Betsy Reavley at UK digital publisher Bombshell Books
in June 2017 and will be published 26 October 2017.
She is an avid reader, inspired by the likes of Anais Nin, Joan Didion and
Jessie Burton and is currently working on her second novel, also inspired
by true events. She lives with her husband and two young daughters in
Termonfeckin, Co. Louth.

Writing awards…..

Finalist Short Story Competition Junefest Literary Festival 2017
Finalist Writer Wexford Literary Festival (live performance) One Act Play Competition 2017
Shortlisted Celtic Imbas Short Story Competition 2016
Finalist Southport Writers’ Circle Short Story Competition 2016
Placed for Date with an Agent at International Literature Festival Dublin 2016
Shortlisted Fish Publishing Flash Fiction Competition 2016
Longlisted Fish Publishing Short Memoir Competition 2016
Finalist & published author Ernest Hemingway Flash Fiction Prize 2015
Shortlisted Celtic Imbas Short Story Competition 2015
Longlisted in Irish Times Amateur Travel Writer Competition 2015
Winning published author in Original Writing.ie’s 2015 Anthology

Nicola Cassidy’s Amazon Author Page

Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse by Lilly Bartlett AKA @MicheleGormanUK #BlogTour #BookReview

Get ready to meet Britain’s Worst Innkeeper…..

Lily Bartlett gif

I am delighted to be joining in with Lilly Bartlett’s (AKA Michele Gorman) Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse blog tour and to be sharing my day with the lovely Kaisha at The Writing Garnet. 🙂

Many thanks to Michele Gorman for the opportunity.

Check out the fabulous book bloggers taking part…..

Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse blog tour

My review…..

Christmas At The Falling-Down Guesthouse is such a lovely read! It’s my first Christmas book this year, so far, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. If you fancy a feel good Christmas romance which is really sweet and quite amusing at times, then this is the perfect read for you.

Lottie is a software developer who lives in London with her wiser than her years 7 year old daughter, Mable, who is the most adorable character. I absolutely loved her!

When Lottie’s Aunt is involved in an accident she rushes to Wales to her bedside and vows to keep her Guesthouse going over Christmas as she has an important reviewer and his family due to stay. Little does she know what she is letting herself in for.

Lottie’s efforts are often quite hilarious. As are Danny’s cooking skills. Danny is a taxi driver who Lottie persuades to help run the guesthouse with her (for a sizeable fee). He claimed to be a good cook, but he was obviously stretching the truth to say the least! The relationship they develop throughout their challenging Christmas is heart-warming though and I love a happy ending.

A beautifully written romantic comedy. I highly recommend!

Many thanks to Michele Gorman (AKA Lilly Bartlett) for my ARC and for inviting me to join in with her blog tour.

How beautiful is this cover!

Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse cover

“A deliciously festive novella with the perfect happy ending”

Put your feet up and tuck into the mince pies, because you won’t have to lift a finger to enjoy this Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse!

Too bad the same can’t be said for single mother and extremely undomestic goddess, Lottie. When her beloved Aunt Kate ends up in hospital just before Christmas, Lottie and her seven-year-old daughter rush to rural Wales to take over her B&B. A picky hotel reviewer and his mad family are coming to stay, and without the rating only he can give them, Aunt Kate will lose her livelihood.

But Lottie can barely run her own life, let alone a hotel. How will she manage to turn the falling-down guesthouse into the luxurious wonderland the reviewer expects? And could the mysterious taxi driver, Danny, who agrees to help her, turn out to be the real gift this season?

As the snow sparkles on the trees and hot chocolate steams in your hand, snuggle into the delicious magic of Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse.

THIS IS A NOVELLA OF 100 PAGES IN PRINT, AND WAS FIRST PUBLISHED AS THE RELUCTANT ELF BY MICHELE GORMAN

What everyone’s saying about Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse and the author

“A precious little gem – packed with laughs, emotions, up and downs and love.” 5* Alba in Bookland
“So engaging and witty” Sophie Kinsella
“Gave me the warm and fuzzies. Definitely, one for you to put by for your Christmas reading.” BrizzleLass Books
“Well-written and an easy read” Daily Mail
“Lottie was an absolute dream of a character.” 5* Crooks on Books
“Full of fun…I loved it” Cathy Bramley
“Completely recommended as a feel-good read.” 5* Shaz’s Book Boudoir
“A funny, feel-good romcom… the perfect read to curl up with” FABULOUS magazine
“The storyline instantly pulls you in but the characters and the festive feel make this story a magical CHRISTMAS read that will brighten those gloomy winter days.” 5* For Love of a Good Book
“Fun, flirtatious and fresh” Alex Brown
“From the beginning I loved the story, the setting, and the characters, who made me laugh out loud. It has a wonderful light-hearted charm.” 5* Jaffa Reads Too
“Fresh, funny and brilliant” Heat Magazine
“What a gorgeous, sweet novella. It’s put me in a lovely mood and made me feel a little festive.” 5* Krafti Reader
“Warm, witty, and wonderful – the perfect rom com” Debbie Johnson
“This was a lovely novella, the characters are likeable, and once I started reading, I had to keep going to the end, perfect for a Sunday afternoon on the sofa.” 5* author Amanda Prowse
“An engaging read that makes you smile with each page turned.” My Weekly
“Wonderfully funny and festive, left me with a huge smile of satisfaction on my face.” Jen Med’s Book Reviews
“A fun, sassy writer who always makes me smile.” Carole Matthews
“This was such a cute romantic comedy for Christmas! A quick, entertaining and heart-warming read.” Chick Lit Chickadees
“[An] entertaining read.” S Mag, Sunday Express

Lilly Bartlett.gif

Enjoy!