The Infirmary: A DCI Ryan Mystery (Multicast Drama): An Audible Original Drama by L J Ross @LJRoss_author #BookReview @audibleuk

The Infirmary audible drama

I have absolutely LOVED the Audible Original Drama version of The Infirmary!

This is book eleven in the DCI Ryan series, but is a prequel. It works really well at this point in the series having read all of the previous ten books, and loved them all, but I’m sure it will be enjoyed by anyone new to the series by way of introduction to the characters.

I’m sure I would have loved the Kindle version also, but listening to it with all of the character’s having their own voice made it really come to life. It was like listening to a TV crime drama. Each voice suited the character perfectly, in my opinion, especially Phillips! He sounds exactly as I had imagined him to and he really does make me giggle at times. Ryan sounds as suave and authoritative as expected. I was totally immersed in their world for a few wonderfully entertaining hours. I listened right to the end last night and only then did I notice the time and realise that I had to be up for work this morning!

Being a prequel, the story itself naturally takes us back to before Holy Island and how Ryan comes to be there after the death of his sister. It isn’t an easy read/listen as there are some quite graphic descriptions of the murders committed, as in the rest of the series, and I have to say that the voice of the murderer when taunting his victims is really, really creepy!

Brilliantly written, as always with L J Ross. I can’t wait to read The Moor.

Via AmazonUK…..

Introducing a new multicast drama by LJ Ross, the author of the international number one best-selling series, the DCI Ryan mysteries.

There’s a serial killer targeting the streets of Newcastle, seemingly picking his victims at random but subjecting them all to the same torturous end. When the Chief Inspector on the case goes missing, it falls on DCI Ryan to track down the man who is brutally murdering women and goading the police to ‘catch me if you can’.

As everyone becomes a suspect, Ryan and his team get drawn further and further into the case, but for Ryan the nightmare gets closer to home than he could ever have imagined.

This Audible Original drama stars Tom Bateman (Murder on the Orient Express, Jekyll & Hyde, Snatched), Bertie Carvel (Doctor Foster, Les Misérables), Hermione Norris (Spooks, Cold Feet) and Kevin Whately (Lewis, Auf Wiedersehen, Pet) and is a prequel to the DCI Ryan series.

Starring: Alun Armstrong, Rachel Atkins, Tom Bateman, Mark Bazeley, Anna Bolton, Bertie Carvel, Stephen Critchlow, Vicki Davids, Reece Dinsdale, Harriet Ghost, Frances Jeater, Jack Lloyd, Dean Logan, Daniel Matthew Lemon, Roger May, Hermione Norris, Kate Okello, Colleen Prendergast, Shaun Prendergast, Nicholas Rowe, David Seddon, Marlene Sidaway, Tom Slatter, Fiona Victory, Lauren Waine, Kevin Whately and Hannah Wood

About the author…..

Louise Ross

LJ Ross is the author of the #1 international bestselling series of DCI Ryan mystery novels and her books have sold more than 4 million copies since 2015. She has released 12 full-length novels, nine of which have reached number one in the Amazon UK Kindle best-sellers chart. They are available to purchase in e-book, print and audiobook narration on the Amazon store.

Her eleventh novel, ‘The Infirmary’, is a prequel story which is also available as a major Audible Originals drama starring Tom Bateman, Kevin Whately, Hermione Norris and Alun Armstrong.

Her twelfth novel, ‘The Moor’, was released in ebook and paperback on 27.04.19, and will be available as an audiobook shortly.

Louise was born in Northumberland, England. She studied undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in Law at King’s College London and studied abroad in Paris and Florence. She spent much of her working life in London, where she was a regulatory lawyer for a number of years before taking the decision to change career and pursue her dream to write.

Now, she writes full time and lives with her husband and son in Northumberland. She enjoys reading all manner of books, travelling and spending time with family and friends.

If you would like to connect with LJ Ross, she would be very happy to hear from you:

https://www.facebook.com/LJRossAuthor

http://www.ljrossauthor.com
http://www.lovesuspense.com
lj_ross@outlook.com

happy reading/listening 🙂

 

What Lies Around Us by Andrew Crofts @RedDoorBooks #BookReview

What Lies Around Us cover

What Lies Around Us is quite an intriguing and shocking tale.

A British ghostwriter, Andrew, is offered a million dollars to write the autobiography of one of Hollywood’s biggest stars. The one offering the million dollars though is a powerful billionaire, with seemingly no real incentive to want this book written. Why is he so keen for it to be a success?

When Andrew is flown out to America to interview for the book, he gets more than he bargained for and the story cranks up a notch when he’s caught up in a school shooting. He finds himself becoming closer to his subject, that is until his wife, Caroline (who works in publishing), is flown out to work alongside him on the project.

This books starts out as a seemingly simple story of a ghostwriter’s stroke of luck, hitting the jackpot with a million dollar offer too good to refuse, especially as the subject is one of his celebrity crushes. It soon turns darker though as secrets are revealed and Andrew realises there is far more to this story than meets the eye.

Many thanks to Anna @ RedDoor for my review copy.

Via AmazonUK…..

It is possible that since this book’s publication you will have heard that I have died in “suspicious circumstances”. Obviously I hope that will not be the case, but I believe it is worth taking the risk in order to get this story out there.

Why would one of Silicon Valley’s most powerful billionaires offer a British ghostwriter a million dollars to write the autobiography of Hollywood’s biggest star?

Only once he is living and working among the world’s richest and most beautiful people does the ghost realise that there is way more than a publishing deal at stake.

The ghostwriter must face the dark underbelly of the tech industry. He must face corruption and manipulation, come to blows with people who will do anything to remain at the top of their game and uncover the dark truth behind what it really means to be an ‘influencer’ . . .

What Lies Around Us takes the reader into a world of myth-makers and power-brokers and reveals who is really running the world. Who is telling the stories and controlling the way we all think with a mixture of old media, social media and fake media?

About the author…..

Andrew Crofts is a ghostwriter and author who has published more than eighty books, a dozen of which were Sunday Times number one bestsellers. He has also guided a number of international clients successfully through the minefield of independent publishing.

Andrew’s name first became known amongst publishers for the stories he brought them by the otherwise disenfranchised. Travelling all over the world he worked with victims of enforced marriages in North Africa and the Middle East, sex workers in the Far East, orphans in war-torn areas like Croatia and dictatorships like Romania, victims of crimes and abused children everywhere. He also worked with members of the criminal fraternity.

The enormous success of these books brought many very different people to his door; first came the celebrities from the worlds of film, music, television and sport, and then the real elite in the form of world leaders and the mysterious, powerful people who finance them, arm them and, in some cases, control them.

As well as using traditional publishers to reach readers he has also experimented with e-books, publishing, “Secrets of the Italian Gardener”, a novella which draws on his experience amongst the powerful and wealthy, and “The Fabulous Dreams of Maggie de Beer”,(a prequel to his traditionally published “The Overnight Fame of Steffi McBride”, now filmed and appearing in episodes on YouTube’s This is Drama channel).

His books on writing include “Ghostwriting”, (A&C Black) and “The Freelance Writer’s Handbook”, (Piatkus), which has been reprinted eight times over twenty years.

Throughout his bestseller, “The Ghost”, Robert Harris quotes Andrew’s seminal book, “Ghostwriting”. Harris’s book went on to become a major movie by the same name, directed by Roman Polanski and starring Ewan McGregor as the eponymous ghost. The opening lines in Robert Harris’s book sum up Andrew’s philosophy:

“Of all the advantages ghosting offers, one of the greatest must be the opportunity that you get to meet people of interest”.

happy reading 🙂

 

#MonopoliBlues #BlogTour #Extract @unbounders #RandomThingsTours

Welcome to my stop on the Monopoli Blues Blog Tour! 

I’ve just noticed that I’m not actually on the poster but, never mind, I still have the excellent first chapter to share with you all.

Monopoli Blues BT Poster

Enjoy!

Chapter 1

‘Ero qui durante la guerra’ Guildford, England, 1960 In 1960, when I was nine, my parents moved to a largish house close to Guildford. Just outside the spare room at the top of the stairs was a big old cupboard. One day, I was rummaging through it when I came across Pop’s naval uniform. The thing that grabbed my attention was the parachute badge sewn on to the sleeve. In all my reading on the war–and, being of the generation that had grown up in its immediate aftermath, I’d read a lot – I’d never come across a naval parachutist before. Why did Pop have a parachute on his uniform? Could it be possible that there had been more to his wartime service in the Royal Navy, as I thought of it then (he had actually been in the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve, the RNVR), than he had been letting on? When I asked him about it, he said he’d done some parachuting, but had dismissed it with a wave of the hand – telling me that parachuting itself had been no more frightening than jumping off a 12-foot wall. This, however, coupled with a training manual tucked amongst a pile of vintage Second World War National Geographic magazines I’d found under a bed in my grandparents’ house round about the same time – it had contained a set of instructions on how to  make bombs as well as stripping and reassembly notes for a Brengun – hinted that my father’s wartime career had been more interesting than he’d been letting on. A year or two after this, we went on holiday to France. One day, to give us a break from the beach, Mop and Pop took us to visit the port at St Nazaire–the place where, in 1942, HMS Campbeltown, her bow packed full of explosives, had rammed and destroyed a dock used for repairing German battleships. The St Nazaire raid had been legendary, one of the most daring of the entire war, and it had struck me as curious that Pop had known quite so much about it. My naïve view of the way the Navy waged war had been supplanted by a more 23
mature appreciation of combined land–sea operations, the St Nazaire raid being a prime example of the way in which the roles of sailors, commandos and soldiers had blurred when the need arose – usually when there was a requirement to hit the enemy via unconventional warfare. But I still wasn’t able to equate ‘being in the Navy’ with doing anything subversive. So, the plot thickened when, that same holiday, Pop took us to see a memorial to French Resistance fighters in the Loire Valley. He had clearly been moved by it, but had said nothing. It was only the following year, on our next holiday, driving around Puglia in Southern Italy, that the penny finally dropped. We arrived at a fishing port called Monopoli, where, out of the blue, my parents announced they’d met each other. ‘Ero qui durante la guerra,’ Mop would tell any local she came across in her broken Italian. I was here during the war. I learned, from other asides, she’d been a wireless operator/coder. But neither she nor Pop ever divulged the essential point: that the reason they’d been in Monopoli was because it had been the operational HQ of the Special Operations Executive in Italy from 1943 to 1945. In the mid-1960s, SOE was barely on anyone’s radar, because 20 years after the war most of its operations remained highly secret. Bits and bobs had come out in books like The White Rabbit by Tommy Yeo-Thomas, which I’d read avidly, but it was only when I was at university, and I got hold of Professor M.R.D. Foot’s seminal history of the SOE in France, which had recently been published, that I appreciated how big Special Operations Executive had been and what it had done. In Pop’s case, it had clearly involved guns, because shortly after our Italian holiday my brother, Will, and I had found his weapon: a Beretta automatic, complete with its magazine and ammunition. Even though it couldn’t fire, we’d played with it, mouldy green bullets and all, until one day, during one of those amnesties that used to get held every so often, a policeman turned up to ask if Pop had any old weapons he wanted to hand in.
My father’s best friend had been a man called Tommy Walmsley.
Tommy, big, kind and always on hand with an amusing story, had been Pop’s drinking buddy for many years in a touching weekly tradition they never, ever broke. Tommy had been in the Lancashire Fusiliers and described his greatest military achievement as saving the regimental wine at Dunkirk. He and Pop had met while they’d worked together at Slaughter and May, the legal firm, where, years later, I also ended up. Every Sunday evening, Pop and Tommy would meet for a couple of hours at the Seahorse, a pub near Guildford where they would set the world to rights. Tommy died in 1982 at the age of only 60. Pop had many friends, but nobody quite filled the vacuum left by Tommy  or the enjoyment of those Sunday evenings down at their local. When  I became a lawyer and Pop had moved on from law to forge a career  as a banker, for 15 years our offices were less than 500 yards apart. In all that time, however, we met for lunch or for an after-work drink maybe half a dozen times, until he retired in 1989 – though ‘retirement’, in actual fact, simply meant work at a less frenetic pace and several days in London as opposed to the whole week. He and I then started to implement our own tradition of the weekly drink. Every Tuesday, after work, for an hour and a half, in the convivial atmosphere of an old-fashioned ‘local’, Pop began to open up a little more, in part because of my continual prompting, but perhaps also because, being away from home, he was less ‘on guard’. The stories were, at best, episodic – snatches, more than anything else – and it never took too much for the conversation to move on. Until, that was, the day in April 1991 he announced he’d received a letter from Curetti. Who, I asked Pop, was Curetti? Sergio Curetti, he told me, was the man – he was not much more than a boy then – who had rescued him and taken him in the night that he parachuted behind the lines. He reached into his jacket, produced a letter, unfolded it and handed it to me. I started to read: Dear Sir, I’m writing to you hoping that you are the person I have tried to trace these following years. This person is some one who I have met in Italy in 1944. If you are not the person I am seeking, please excuse me. It was on November 16, 1944, at San Giacomo di Roburent (a small town in the mountains), where I was a ‘partigiano’. Two English soldiers were parachuted. Sergio Curetti explained he had written to Pop because he’d recently read a book in which Pop and a man named Cauvain had been mentioned as the parachutists who’d dropped into San Giacomo. The Italian declared that he had been trying to track Pop down ever since the end of the war, but, knowing Pop had been captured, had feared he had been killed. The book mentioned that Sub-Lieutenant Robert Clark RNVR had gone on to carve out a distinguished career for himself in the City and it was via this snippet of information that Curetti was able to track him down. I asked Pop about Cauvain and to my surprise he replied without hesitation. Later, I took this as evidence of just how much Curetti and the letter had meant to him. Eddie Cauvain, Pop said, had been his radio operator. They were part of a small team that was supposed to work with the partisans against the Germans, but it started to go wrong from the beginning. Instead of dropping into the place they were meant to, Pop (and his ‘unholy’ baggage) had ended up in a tree in the garden of a priest and had broken his ribs. He and Cauvain had landed more than 15 miles from the drop-zone. But they had ended up captured before they could do much good. Three-quarters of the party didn’t drop that night – they came in a month later. When I asked Pop if he was going to reply to Curetti, he told me he already had, and that he and Mop were going to go to Italy to meet him and his family. The visit (including a return to the locations of their wartime activities), took place the following year and turned out to be a great success; a few years later, during a second visit to the Curettis, I joined them. The Curettis lived where they’d always lived, in the lee of the Alps, in a town called Mondovi, close to where Pop had made his Monopoli Blues jump. They were delightful and made me feel – as they have done ever since – as if I were part of their family. Slowly, between our weekly sessions in the pub and the visit to the Curettis, a few more pieces of the puzzle had come together. Even though we’d never actually sat down and spoken about the arc of his wartime career, many of the episodes of which Pop had spoken over the years had now knitted into a narrative of sorts. I knew that he had been recruited to SOE from the Navy after telling someone he’d ‘mucked about in small boats’; that he’d trained in Scotland where the weather was atrocious and where he’d apparently ended up meeting the assassins of Reinhard Heydrich, Hitler’s Reich-Protector of Bohemia-Moravia and one of the main architects of the Holocaust; that shortly afterwards, he’d been dispatched to the Helford River in Cornwall, where SOE had taught him how to infiltrate and exfiltrate by boat; that after this, and a short stint in Algeria, he’d sailed an old fishing smack from Malta to Southern Italy, where his operational career with SOE began. It was in Monopoli that he met my mother and from Monopoli that he’d made a number of missions up the coast, delivering and collecting agents, and carrying out sabotage missions. He’d also divulged, with some reluctance, how he and my godfather, Robin Richards, whom he’d met while training on the Helford, had been awarded DSCs: for carrying out a recce for a beach landing by a small force of commandos, known as ‘Popski’s Private Army’, led by a man called Colonel Vladimir Peniakoff, a Belgian of Russian-Jewish descent who’d fought with the British Army; and that despite the success of the mission the landing itself had gone spectacularly wrong. From my Italian trip, and a return visit by the Curettis to us, I also learned how Pop had been selected for the parachute drop into Northern Italy, that it had gone awry and after his capture he’d been incarcerated in a number of prisons – including a civilian jail in the middle of Turin. Thanks to the rescinding of Hitler’s order, late in the war, that all commandos caught behind the lines be shot, Pop had avoided execution to be sent instead as a POW into Germany, where he’d ended up first of all in a camp near Bremen, and then in another near Lübeck, where he was finally liberated. On that day, he’d enjoyed a whisky in the company of the legendary Battle of Britain flying ace Johnnie Johnson and, pitifully thin, had promptly fainted. In addition to a short interview he’d given to researchers at London’s Imperial War Museum – part of the IWM’s campaign to record oral histories of as many people as possible who had fought in the world wars – a short talk that he’d given at Westminster School, where his grandchildren, my two sons, had been at school, was probably the fullest account he’d ever made of his war. But, while all this gave me knowledge, it wasn’t any more than the version I had, by now, assembled piecemeal – one that was woefully incomplete.
Pop’s code in life had always been to look after those he felt responsible for, both at home and in the work place, and it was a duty he could not have discharged any better if he’d tried. He loved and looked after  my mother with a passion and dedication that even my brother, sister and I could see was a rare and precious thing – and he did the same by  us, too. But there comes a moment in most of our lives when our relationship with our parents changes and mine changed on the day that Pop, by now well into his seventies, got food poisoning at an SOE gathering in Oxford. The bacteria, they told us later, had been in the gelatin of some pâté he’d eaten and the resulting sickness so severe that it had disrupted the rhythm of his heart – and Pop went from being a man who had never had a day’s illness in his life to someone who started to rely on others to help him cope. He bore this shift in his circumstances with great dignity and when, in 2003, he was diagnosed with cancer as well, with considerable courage, too. After a number of operations, he was confined to a wheelchair, but the prognosis from his doctors was generally encouraging: Pop, they said, was of an age where the spread of the disease would be slow and, therefore, we shouldn’t worry unduly – he was, even after the food poisoning, they told us, a robust individual, who wouldn’t be leaving us any time soon. Nevertheless, we all knew that the time we had left with him was finite and that we had to make the most of it. And I knew that if the full story of his time with SOE was to come
out at all, it needed to do so in its own time – in his own time – and that there should be no pressure on him to divulge it. In 2010, I spoke to an old friend I’ll refer to as Gerry Pattinson who’d previously chatted with Pop about his time in SOE – and Pop had opened up to him, because Gerry had a background in the security services and knew a great deal about operations behind the lines. Gerry had asked me if Pop was coming to the SOE 70th anniversary dinner. The event commemorated the 70 years since SOE’s foundation in 1940. There were by now only 300 surviving former field officers, some 30 of whom were due to attend the dinner at the Imperial War Museum, and Pop announced he was keen to go. I accompanied him, and Pop sat next to Gerry and his wife, Susan (who also has a security services background). During the evening, Pop was introduced to a journalist from The Times who was fascinated by Falla (pronounced ‘Fire’) – the threadbare teddy bear Pop had had from the earliest days of his childhood, who had also made it to the dinner. Falla, who had been in the car for the early part of the proceedings and had, by popular demand, joined us for the speeches and toasts, had been with Pop through thick and thin during the war. The journalist asked Pop whether he would be happy for Falla’s story (and his own) to be the subject of an article and, knowing of Pop’s dislike of the limelight, I waited for his reply with apprehension. ‘I’d be delighted,’ he said. The article, which emerged a couple of weeks later, featured a colour photo of Pop, Mop and Falla – Falla looking jaunty in a blue knitted suit; Mop and Pop both smiling and happy, and both proudly wearing their medals. Falla was the hook for the story that appeared with the picture, which, while not revelatory, marked a shift, because it signalled, I felt, that Pop was ready for a lengthier account of his war to come out – that it was only the manner in which he told it that needed to be decided, and picking the right moment in which to sit down to get the details. The shift had come because of the time he’d spent at that dinner with his former colleagues and with it, perhaps, the sense that what he had done – what SOE had done – amounted to something that was still important. In the discussions I went on to have with Pop after the dinner, he was particularly keen to tell me about the Italians he had fought alongside. And while the details I’d craved from the beginning continued to remain elusive, the one thing I did come to appreciate was the esteem in which he held his partigiani co-combatants: ‘Forget all those stupid jokes about the tanks with four reverse gears. [The Italians] were amongst the bravest people I ever met,’ he said. Shortly afterwards, during a 90th birthday lunch for my godfather, Robin Richards, with whom Pop had served in No.1 Special Force, I listened as the two of them started to talk unselfconsciously about some of the experiences they had shared in Italy. Robin, I knew, had not dropped with Pop into Northern Italy, but had been with him on many other missions, and thus would be an invaluable source of information in building the picture. I resolved to contact Robin as soon as possible to see if he would be amenable to contributing to the story. But, a week before Christmas, Pop suffered a stroke. He had fought so many battles and won that I found it hard to believe that this one would be any different, a view that was given impetus, when, over Christmas, with the family around him, he regained some of his strength and we allowed ourselves to believe that he’d pull through. But, on 3 January, Mop rang me to say that he wasn’t eating and wasn’t talking and appeared to be going suddenly and rapidly downhill. I left work, picked up the family and drove as fast as I could down the A3 to my parents’ home. It was there, surrounded by his family, and with Falla by his side, that my father finally gave up the fight for life, three days short of his 89th birthday. I gave little thought in the weeks and months afterwards to the idea of continuing to research Pop’s war. But, bit by bit, as the rawest part of our grief began to heal, the desire in me to know only grew stronger. By the summer, my brother, Will, and I had resolved to go on a journey to find out. But with Will living in Australia, it was accepted that I would do most of the on-the-ground sleuthing. The problem, of course, was how to go about assembling the facts now that the principal of the story was no longer with us. I had never talked to Mop much about Pop’s war, because I’d always imagined that one day I’d sit down and talk with him about it. But Mop was very obviously the place to start.

Monopoli Blues cover

In November 1944, Sub Lt Bob Clark, a twenty-year old agent with Britain’s top-secret Special Operations Executive, parachuted into northern Italy. He left behind the girl he had fallen in love with, Marjorie, his radio operator.

Captured by the enemy, Bob’s fate hangs in the balance and Marjorie won’t know for six months whether he is alive or dead.

Monopoli Blues recounts the story of Tim Clark’s journey to uncover the story of his parents’ war – and the truth behind the betrayal of his father’s Clarion mission to the Nazis…

“Monopoli Blues puts the big picture in perspective. It is a detailed and intimate account of the Second World War drama as it affected two individuals who are in love and who are separated by the conflict. The story is the more powerful for being told by their son, Tim Clark. His assiduous search uncovers the drama and danger of facing a British agent who is betrayed and captured by the Nazis and whose girlfriend has no clue what has happened to him. This is the reality of war behind the headlines.” – Jonathan Dimbleby

 

happy reading 🙂

 

#InHerWords by J S Ellis @Joannewriter #BlogTour #AuthorInterview #LoveBooksGroupTours

Welcome to my stop on J S Ellis’ In Her Words blog tour with Love Books Group Tours!

In Her Words tour

Many thanks to Kelly @ Love Books Group Tours for arranging the following interview…..

In Her Words author

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

My Name is Joanne and I write under the pen name J.S Ellis and I wrote my debut psychological thriller In Her Words. I’m also working a mystery thriller novel a dystopian series. I also started a you tube channel recently all about crafting thrillers.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

I get my ideas from reading and movies and when I’m commuting where I put my headphone and build stories in my head.

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

No, not really. All the characters are fictional purely fragments of my imagination.

How do you pick your characters’ names?

Usually I would know what I’m going to name the characters before I start writing the book. If I don’t know what to name or I’ll be in doubt, I look in baby name sites or look at the end credits of movies/tv show to get idea of names.

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

I’m pantser so I don’t plan out my novels or do elaborate outlines. I’ll have the idea and make a list in bullet points with where I plan where the story needs to go, I do the basic what if question and divided act 1 to 2 and 3 and I start writing. I would know the ending before I start writing, though.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

George Orwell

Partick McGrath

Charles Bukowski

Nicci French

Taylor Jenkins Reid

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

Taylor Jenkins Reid and I would ask her where did she learn to write like that, that lady can write a good a story. I would ask her for tips crafting such emotional stories.

Were you a big reader as a child?

As child no, I wasn’t in fact funnily enough I hated reading. At school they used to make us stand and read aloud, as a dyslexic child, it made me stammer with nerves. I got into reading later on in my teens and thanks to reading, it improved my dyslexia.

When did you start to write?

At sixteen while I was doing my O’Levels I had this dream and I wanted to write it down and I couldn’t do anything else but to finish it. I still have that story written down in a notebook with a pencil.

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

Brave New World but not because I didn’t enjoy it. I enjoyed it a lot but it was confusing to me, that book most of time I couldn’t’ understand what was happening and then ended and I was so disappointed. Maybe, I would have made it clearer as the story was rather complicated in my humble opinion.

Is there a book you wish you had written?

1984 for sure.

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

The confessions of the grumpy introvert xD

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

Hermione Granger (Harry Potter) there is a local coffee shop in Malta surrounded with books you can have coffee or cake and read. What more could you want?

What are you working on right now?

At the moment I’m working on two projects one is resting while I give the final revision and send it off to my editor. It’s an adult dystopian which will be a series. And the other is a thriller/horror novel about a guy whose dad dies in sudden a heart attack after he got married. The father and son had estranged relationship, so Franklin the main character didn’t meet his father new bride. He later finds you she was survivor in mass murder that killed her friends and her boyfriend at the time.

Tell us about your last release?

In her words is about Sophie she’s an accountant with drinking problem who writes in diary to keep account of her on goings. She hides her drinking from her husband, one night she goes out with her friend and wakes up the next day with bruises all over body and no memory what happened her.

Do you have a new release due?

In Her Words is coming out on 7th May it’s available for pre-order at the moment. The first book in a dystopian The Chaperon will come out later this year or beginning of the next year.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

This my debut so I’m not sure maybe I open a bottle of wine and eat some cheese.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I would love to hear to hear from readers they can reach me through my website https://joannewritesbooks.com or through these social media accounts https://www.instagram.com/joannewritesbooks

https://www.facebook.com/joannewritersbooks/

https://twitter.com/Joannewriter

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/18812201.J_S_Ellis

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQ-lGYeUVzDC0I87ng4buFg?

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

Thank you so much for the opportunity.

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Joanne 🙂

In Her Words cover (2)

Back of the Book…..

While she seems to have it all, Sophie Knight
is looking for more. When gorgeous and carefree Michael Frisk walks into her
life, he offers the excitement and passion she desires.

Sophie is willing to risk everything she has.
After all, she is used to concealing things from her husband—like her
alcoholism, her unhappiness. But soon she has more to hide. She wakes up one
morning in an alcoholic haze and finds bruises on her body, but has no recollection
of what happened to her. Was she raped?

When unsettling notes and mysterious phone
calls start, Sophie wonders whom she should turn to. Is Michael the cause of
the frightening things happening in her life, or is he the answer to her
problems?

Buy Link

https://amzn.to/2Jq3NXq

Author Info

J.S Ellis is a thriller author. She’s currently working on an adult Dystopian series called
the Chaperone. She’s also working on another thriller novel, for now, it’s called
Opium, as it’s still a wip.

J.S always liked to scribble from a young age but started writing by the age of sixteen.
She spent all this time, enhancing and learning about the craft. Writing is her
passion books are her obsession.

She has a degree in Creative Writing, English literature, and digital marketing. She
works in an accountancy firm. She lives in Malta with her fiancé. When she’s
not writing or reading, she’s either cooking, eating cheese, and chocolate, or
listening to good music and enjoying a glass of wine or two.

 

The Lynmouth Stories by L V Hay @LucyVHayAuthor #BlogBlitz #Spotlight #BookPromo @rararesources

The Lynmouth Stories banner

The Lynmouth Stories

The Lynmouth Stories by L V Hay
Beautiful places hide dark secrets …

Devon’s very own crime writer L.V Hay (The Other Twin, Do No Harm) brings forth three new short stories from her dark mind and poison pen:

– For kidnapped Meg and her young son Danny, In Plain Sight, the remote headland above Lynmouth is not a haven, but hell.

– A summer of fun for Catherine in Killing Me Softly becomes a winter of discontent … and death.

– In Hell And High Water, a last minute holiday for Naomi and baby Tommy becomes a survival situation … But that’s before the village floods.

All taking place out of season when the majority of tourists have gone home, L.V Hay uses her local knowledge to bring forth dark and claustrophic noir she has come to be known for.

Did You Know …?

Known as England’s ‘Little Switzerland’, the Devon village of Lynmouth is famous for its Victorian cliff railway, fish n’ chips and of course, RD Blackmore’s Lorna Doone.

Located on the doorstep of the dramatic Valley of The Rocks and the South West Cliff Path, the twin villages of Lynton and Lynmouth have inspired many writers, including 19th Century romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, who honeymooned there in 1812.

PRAISE FOR LV HAY:

‘Well-written, engrossing & brilliantly unique’- Heat World

‘Prepare to be surprised by this psychological mystery’- Closer

‘Sharp, confident writing, as dark and twisty as the Brighton Lanes’- Peter James

‘Prepare to be seriously disturbed’ – Paul Finch

‘Crackles with tension’ – Karen Dionne

‘An original, fresh new voice in crime fiction’ – Cal Moriarty

‘The writing shines from every page of this twisted tale’- Ruth Dugdall

‘I couldn’t put it down’ – Paula Daly

‘An unsettling whirlwind of a novel with a startlingly dark core’ – The Sun

‘An author with a fresh, intriguing voice and a rare mastery of the art of storytelling’ – Joel Hames

Purchase Link –

http://myBook.to/LynmouthStories

Author Bio –

The Lynmouth Stories - book signing_LV Hay (1)
Lucy V Hay is a script editor for film and an author of fiction and non-fiction. Publishing as LV Hay, Lucy’s debut crime novel, The Other Twin, is out now and has been featured in The Sun and Sunday Express Newspaper, plus Heatworld and Closer Magazine. Her second crime novel, Do No Harm, is an ebook bestseller. Her next title is Never Have I Ever for Hodder Books.

Social Media Links –

http://www.twitter.com/LucyVHayAuthorhttp://www.facebook.com/LucyHayB2Whttp://www.instagram.com/LucyVHayAuthor

happy reading 🙂

 

#TheGlitteringHour by @Iona_Grey #BookReview #Netgalley

The Glittering Hour

I cannot even begin to tell you how achingly beautiful this book is.

Iona Grey has broken my heart all over again.

I know my words will never, in a million years, do this book the justice it deserves. You need to read it for yourself to understand. I cannot recommend it highly enough.

I absolutely adored Iona Grey’s previous novel, Letters To The Lost. I talk about it, a lot! I have been patiently waiting (for four years) for her next book and I can tell you that The Glittering Hour has most certainly been worth the wait, although I truly hope I won’t have to wait another four years for another book by this amazing author.

I practically squealed with excitement when the publisher sent me an invite to view The Glittering Hour on Netgalley, but unfortunately due to previous commitments I was unable to dive in immediately, although resisting it was hard work I can tell you! Anyway, it didn’t download to my Paperwhite, for some reason, and by the time I had realised it had already been archived, but never mind because I bought it anyway and I have the paperback on pre-order. I will be adding the audible narration also.

In 1925 Selina Lennox is well known as one of the ‘Bright Young Things’. Her life consists of enjoying parties with her friends, drinking and sometimes slightly risky activities which often result in their pictures appearing in the newspapers and fashionable magazines. She knows she will be expected to settle down one day and she is determined to enjoy her youth in the meantime. Then the untimely death of a cat brings her face to face with Lawrence Weston and her life changes forever.

Lawrence is a struggling artist with a passion for photography and is the most endearing of characters. I pictured him as extremely good looking. Tall, dark and handsome in a bit of a rough and ready kind of a way. I totally understood how Selina fell for him so easily, but I do believe, looks aside, that everyone has a soul mate and these two are most definitely each other’s. They reminded me so much of my husband and I except I cannot begin to imagine how I would ever give that up, especially to satisfy the expectations of family and society as a whole. Having said that, I could, sort of, understand Selina’s fears. Not so much her fear of what others might think, but her fear of loving so deeply and of being so emotionally overwhelmed. My heart broke for her, but especially for Lawrence. This story is just so full of raw emotion and I know it will be another one which will stay with me for a very long time to come.

When we meet Alice, Selina’s daughter, almost a decade later she is residing with her Grandparents as her parents are away on a business trip. Alice is 9 years old and the love between her and her mother is palpable. They keep in touch via letter, but obviously miss each other dearly and my heart went out to them both. Even more so as the story progresses and we learn that not all is as it seems. When I thought this story could not be any more heart-breaking it shattered my heart all over again as the chapters revealed the truth behind Selina’s absence. I sobbed so much I could barely read the words. It’s just so sad, but also hopeful in the end. I’d love to hear about how life pans out for these lovely characters after the closing chapter of this book. I have to hope that they find happiness and peace.

Via AmazonUK…..

The epic and long-awaited new romance from the author of Letters to the Lost, winner of the RNA Award.
‘Emotionally fraught, evocative and redemptive, The Glittering Hour has been well worth the wait. What a superb novel – Iona Grey really is back with aplomb’ Fiona Mitchell, author of The Maid’s Room
‘Poignant, beautiful and sad. A must read!’ Katrina Oliver
‘Deeply captivating, engaging and so irresistible. I could not put it down!’ Petra Quelch
‘An enchanting, evocative read’ The Sun

1925. The war is over and a new generation is coming of age, keen to put the trauma of the previous one behind them.

Selina Lennox is a Bright Young Thing whose life is dedicated to the pursuit of pleasure; to parties and drinking and staying just the right side of scandal. Lawrence Weston is a struggling artist, desperate to escape the poverty of his upbringing and make something of himself.  When their worlds collide one summer night, neither can resist the thrill of the forbidden, the lure of a love affair that they know cannot possibly last.

But there is a dark side to pleasure and a price to be paid for breaking the rules.  By the end of that summer everything has changed.

A decade later, nine year old Alice is staying at Blackwood Hall with her distant grandparents, piecing together clues from her mother’s letters to discover the secrets of the past, the truth about the present, and hope for the future.

ICYMI…..

#LettersToTheLost by Iona Grey @Iona_Grey Simon & Schuster @simonschuster #Netgalley #BookReview

happy reading 🙂

 

 

#InstantIndian by Rinku Bhattacharya @Wchestermasala #BlogTour #BookReview @rararesources

Instant Indian banner

I need an instant pot! I may have to invest in one.

The paperback version of this cookbook has gone straight on my wish list too.

It starts with an introduction to “the diversity of Indian cooking: regions, spices and kitchen basics.” It includes an excellent glossary of spices, herbs, fats and oils and an in-depth guide for using an instant pot.

I do love to cook Indian food and I definitely enjoy eating it! This book has totally inspired me to try making my own pastes and I look forward to trying out some of the mouth-watering recipes featured. I’m reviewing the kindle edition and the black and white photographs look delicious so I can imagine how enticing the colour versions would be.

I have never tried traditional Indian breakfasts, but I love the sound of ‘steamed rice & lentil cakes’ and ‘cracked wheat breakfast pilaf’ to name just a couple of recipes.

I pretty much like the sound of all the recipes in this book to be honest, including the naan bread which sounds amazing.

If you love to cook and are a lover of Indian cuisine then you need to add this book to your collection.

Many thanks to the author and to Rachel @ Rachel’s Random Resources for my kindle review copy. I highly recommend.

Instant Indian – Classic Foods from Every Region of India Made Easy in the Instant Pot

Instant Indian Cover

Discover favorite foods from all over India with the first regional Indian cookbook authorized by Instant Pot!

Rinku Bhattacharya — cookbook author and founder of Spice Chronicles — has put together a collection of 100 authentic recipes that showcase the diversity and range of the foods of India, where every state and region boasts its own unique dishes. Whether you crave takeout favorites or want to be introduced to lesser-known specialties, this cookbook brings the best of India to your table in an instant!

The Instant Pot® lends itself perfectly to Indian recipes, making flavorful, nutritious Indian fare (like simmering-all-day dals, legumes and all manner of curries) in minutes instead of hours. Instant Indian features numerous vegetarian and vegan options , and nearly all recipes are gluten-free.

With step-by-step instructions and color photos throughout, Instant Indian makes Indian cooking easy and fool-proof using all the functions of this popular appliance.

Purchase Links

US – https://www.amazon.com/Instant-Indian-Classic-Foods-Region/dp/0781813859/

UKhttps://www.amazon.co.uk/Instant-Indian-Classic-Foods-Region/dp/0781813859/

About Rinku Bhattacharya

Instant Indian - Bhattacharya_pic

Rinku Bhattacharya (spicechronicles.com) was born in India, and now lives in a house with a vibrant backyard in Hudson Valley, New York with her husband, an avid gardener, and their two children. Rinku’s simple, sustainable approach to Indian cooking is showcased on her blog, Spice Chronicles, and in her Journal News column “Spices and Seasons.”


Rinku has been teaching recreational cooking classes for the past nine years, and works extensively with local area farmer’s markets on seasonal demonstrations and discussions. Rinku is also the author of The Bengali Five Spice Chronicles (Hippocrene Books, 2012), winner of the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards 2013 for Best Indian Cuisine. She writes for the Poughkeepsie Journal, the Journal News, and several online sites, and is a frequent guest on CT Style TV.

https://twitter.com/Wchestermasala

https://www.instagram.com/spice_chronicles/

https://www.pinterest.co.uk/rinkub/?autologin=true

https://www.facebook.com/spicechronicles

Follow, like and share the book love with these awesome book bloggers…..

Instant Indian Full Tour Banner

happy reading & cooking 🙂

 

#AuthorInterview with DB Carter @DBCarterAuthor @CameronPMtweets

Today I have the pleasure of welcoming DB Carter to Chat About Books 🙂

Many thanks to Laura @ Cameron Publicity for arranging the following interview.

DB Carter

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

I am D B Carter, I live in Devon, England with my wife. We have three wonderful grown-up children. After 30 years of careers in art, science and business, I have followed my lifelong dream of becoming an author.

My first book, “The Cherries” has just been published, and it is a present-day drama with a dash of romance. It’s about everyday life, how we respond to the problems and traumas that people suffer, from bullying and self-harm to bereavement, anxiety and mental health. Through love and mutual understanding, we can help people to heal.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

From the world around me, from my own experiences and the lives of others that have touched mine, as well as books and films; but many ideas just come to me.

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

There are aspects of friends and family incorporated into the main characters, but I doubt anyone would recognise themselves. Susan has characteristics in common with my wife and my sister, but she is very much her own woman. Luke is the man I would like to be, I suppose.

How do you pick your characters’ names?

Sometimes they are my own tribute to a fictional character that I have enjoyed. For example, Susan is the real name of the eponymous hero in ‘Educating Rita’, which is a play, film and book that I would recommend to anybody. Susan’s mother, Marian, is an oblique reference to Miriam in Sons and Lovers. Neither of my characters is like their literary influence, but they are a private homage to wonderful creations that I have enjoyed reading.

However, in real life I am terrible at remembering people’s names, so I also pick ones that will stick. Even so, I have a long piece of paper beside my laptop which lists all my characters. Occasionally, I have inadvertently changed a name half way through and only realised at the end – thank heavens for ‘Find and Replace’.

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

Planned chaos

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, Anthony Trollope, R F Delderfield, Thomas Hardy

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

Charles Dickens and I’d ask him what would have happened at the end of his unfinished work, the Mystery of Edwin Drood

Were you a big reader as a child?

Yes. Enid Blyton, Malcolm Saville, JRR Tolkien, E Nesbit, and countless more authors. I would also buy the books of films I enjoyed, as we didn’t have a VCR in those days.

When did you start to write?

I always have, for my own interest. I started to write “The Cherries” a few years ago and found that I was happier than I had been in a long time.

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

Is there a book you wish you had written?

I’d expand on the finish of “The 39 Steps”. I love the book, but I found the ending very abrupt.

I think that I, like many people, would like to have written Pride and Prejudice.

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

A Series of Fortunate Accidents.”

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

Samuel Pickwick. We could go for a cup of tea to our lovely local farm shop.

Tell us a random fact about yourself.

I once cuddled a tiger.

What are you working on right now?

My second novel, presently titled “The Wild Roses”. It is quite different from my first book, but still very much in the drama genre.

Tell us about your last release?

The Cherries” was released a few weeks ago. It is a drama with a dash of romance, and it tries to touch upon the issues of modern life in a gentle and respectful way.

Do you have a new release due?

Not yet, but hopefully not too far off.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

Well, I’ve only had one, so it is hard to draw a pattern. All I can say is that no celebration could be complete without my wife as a part of it.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I’m on Facebook and Twitter, @DBCarterAuthor

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

Just that I am grateful to anyone who reads my book, and I would always love to hear from people with their honest feedback

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions!

The Cherries FINAL.jpg

When they have broken you, when you have been humiliated, bullied, deserted and destitute, can you find a place where you may dare to be happy?

Susan travels with her mother, escaping a life of heartbreak and poverty in the city, to live with their one remaining friend in a small rural village.

At twenty Susan is still bound by the trauma of her youth, but starts to blossom into womanhood, thanks to the tender encouragement of Luke, the eccentric occupant of ‘The Cherries’, who lives surrounded by books and art. It is a journey of tears and laughter, helping to heal mind and spirit.

But can the past ever be truly behind you?

Feeling safe and secure at last, mother and daughter nurture artistic talents that they had long since thought worthless, and their lives take directions they could never have imagined.

Yet, amongst the kindness and love in their new community, there lies hidden grief and a long-suppressed secret that must come to light. Something that might force Susan to another life beyond the confines of the village.

happy reading 🙂

 

#TheFriendWhoLied by @RachelAmphlett #BlogTour #BookReview @BOTBSPublicity

If you are a regular reader of my blog you will know I’m a massive fan of Rachel Amphlett and you will know what an absolute pleasure it is for me to be joining in with her The Friend Who Lied blog tour, with Book On The Bright Side Publicity 🙂

The Friend Who Lied blog tour.png

Many thanks to Sarah @ BOTBSPublicity for the opportunity to be a small part of this awesome tour!

My review…..

WOW! I have absolutely LOVED this book! It grabbed me from the very first page and didn’t let me go until I finished it late last night (05/06). There was no way I was going to sleep until I knew what had really happened.

I can’t say much without spoiling it, but the story is told from the perspectives of different characters, each having their own chapters, which I love. There is Lisa, Hayley, David, Bec and Simon, plus the mention of a Greg, who all met at University and have been friends ever since. They seem like a normal bunch to start with. However, Lisa’s kidneys are failing and she is in desperate need of a transplant otherwise she won’t have long to live as she isn’t a suitable candidate for dialysis.

The group arrange a final night out together, as things don’t look hopeful, but the night ends abruptly with a tragic accident. One which Lisa can’t remember, but when she comes round she discovers Simon has died and she has been given his kidney. What really happened that night though. Will they ever know?

What follows is an extremely tense, suspenseful journey to the truth. It’s a tangle of secrets and lies and had me wondering if any of these friends were ever truly friends in the first place. The truth is nothing short of shocking! It just goes to show that your past isn’t always buried and may come back to bite you on the bum at anytime.

Absolutely brilliantly written, as Rachel Amphlett’s books always are. I just love her writing style. If you haven’t read any of her books before then you honestly don’t know what you’re missing out on. Why not give this one a try!? If you’re a fan of psychological thrillers, you will love it!

The Friend Who Lied Cover EBOOK

Book Description:

What she doesn’t know might kill her…

Lisa Ashton receives a last-minute reprieve from death two weeks before her birthday. Regaining consciousness, she is horrified to learn one of her friends has been killed – and saved her life.

As she recovers, she uncovers a trail of carefully guarded reputations, disturbing rumours, and lies. Soon, Lisa begins to wonder if one of her friends is hiding a terrible secret.

Because five of them entered the escape room that day, and only four got out alive.

And someone is determined to cover their tracks before she can find out the truth.
Can Lisa find the killer before someone else dies?
The Friend Who Lied: a twisted psychological thriller from USA Today bestseller Rachel Amphlett – perfect for fans of The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley and Friend Request by Laura Marshall.

Author Bio:

rachel-amphlett


Before turning to writing, USA Today bestselling author Rachel Amphlett played guitar in bands, worked as a TV and film extra, dabbled in radio as a presenter and freelance producer for the BBC, and worked in publishing as a sub-editor and editorial assistant.
She now wields a pen instead of a plectrum and writes crime fiction and spy novels, including the Dan Taylor and English Spy Mysteries espionage novels and the Detective Kay Hunter British police procedural series.
She’s a member of International Thriller Writers and the Crime Writers Association, with the Italian foreign rights for her debut novel, White Gold sold to Fanucci Editore’s TIMECrime imprint, and the first four books in the Dan Taylor espionage series contracted to Germany’s Luzifer Verlag.
Praise for Rachel Amphlett
“Thrilling start to a new series. Scared to Death is a stylish, smart and gripping crime thriller” ~ Robert Bryndza, USA Today bestselling author ofThe Girl in the Ice
“Scared to Death… moves along at breakneck speed with twists and turns” ~ Angela Marsons, bestselling author of the Detective Kim Stone crime thriller series.

Social Media Links:

Email: info@rachelamphlett.com

www.rachelamphlett.com

Twitter: @RachelAmphlett

Instagram: @RachelAmphlett

Facebook: Rachel Amphlett

Purchase Links:

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Kobo

https://www.kobo.com/en/ebook/the-friend-who-lied

Apple Books

https://books.apple.com/book/the-friend-who-lied/id1461832054

Google Play

https://play.google.com/store/books/details/Rachel_Amphlett_The_Friend_Who_Lied?id=59OVDwAAQBAJ

happy reading 🙂

The Friend Who Lied Cover 3D wtih spine