#FlashbackFriday with @Jancoledwards @DianaJFebry @MTilburyAuthor #BookReviews

Hi and welcome to my Flashback Friday feature 🙂

On the first Friday of each month I like to have a little look back at the books I was reading at the same time in previous years, since I’ve been blogging.

Here are my reviews from May 2017 (including a link to 2016)…..

Leinster Gardens and Other Subtleties by @Jancoledwards @alchemy_press #BookReview

Leinster Gardens

Bells On Her Toes by @DianaJFebry #BookReview

Bells on her Toes

The Revelation Room #BlogTour #BookReview @MTilburyAuthor @Bloodhoundbook @sarahhardy681

TheRevelationRoom1

Flashback Friday – May2016

#FlashbackFriday with @simonmaltman @KitdeWaal @JulieannDove @CathedralOfLies #BookReviews

 

Have you read any of the above?

What were you reading this time last year?

Feel free to join in with #FlashbackFriday 🙂 Don’t forget to share your link with us in the comments if you do.

Kerry x

The Ghost of Glendale by Natalie Kleinman @NatKleinman #BlogTour #Spotlight @rararesources

The Ghost of Glendale banner

The Ghost of Glendale

At twenty-four years old, Phoebe Marcham is resigned to spinsterhood, unwilling to settle for anything less than the deep love her parents had shared. That is, until adventurer Duncan Armstrong rides into her home wood, larger than life and with laughter in his eyes and more charm in his little finger than anyone she’s ever met before. Far from ridiculing her family ghost, Duncan resolves to help solve the mystery which has left Simon Marcham a spirit in torment for two hundred years.

The Ghost of Glendale cover

Purchase from Amazon UK –

http://amzn.to/2DKo8yB

Author Bio –

Natalie Kleinman

Natalie is a published novelist and short story writer whose addiction to the books of Georgette Heyer and love of The Regency have been the inspiration for her latest book, The Ghost of Glendale.

Working on the premise that you never stop learning, she goes to any and every writing event and workshop she can. In addition she attends The Write Place Creative Writing School in Hextable in Kent, one of the rewards for which is an abundant supply of cream cakes to celebrate the frequent successes of its students.

Natalie is a member of the Romantic Novelists Association, The Society of Authors and the Society of Women Writers and Journalists. She lives with her husband in southeast London.

Social Media Links –

Blog:

https://nataliekleinman.blogspot.co.uk/

Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/NatalieKleinmanAuthor/

Twitter:

@NatKleinman

Check out the rest of the blog tour for reviews, and more, with these awesome book bloggers…..

The Ghost of Glendale blog tour

Enjoy!

#ForeverAtConwennaCove by Darcie Boleyn @DarcieBoleyn #BlogTour #GuestPost @ElliePilcher95 @canelo_co

Today I have the pleasure of joining in with Darcie Boleyn’s blog tour for Forever at Conwenna Cove 🙂

Forever at Conwenna Cove cover

 

‘If you have never read a book by Darcie Boleyn you are definitely missing out.’ Rae Reads

Following heartbreak, Zoe Russell found a haven in Conwenna Cove. As the owner of the village diner and a volunteer for the local greyhound sanctuary, she’s happy with her peaceful life.

Local surfer Nate Bryson plans to leave Conwenna and see the world. He wants to shake off his reputation as a ladies man and start again somewhere new. Before departing, Nate decides to raise funds for the dog rescue home as a way of giving back to the community.

When Nate approaches Zoe to help with the charity event she sees there’s more to him than meets the eye. Nate can’t believe he’s failed to notice the kind and beautiful woman right before him. But can two such different people ever be together, especially if one of them is determined to leave?

Perfect for fans of Holly Martin, Phillipa Ashley and Sarah Bennett.

Praise for Darcie Boleyn

I just LOVE Darcie Boleyn’s books‘ Katherine’s Book Universe

‘Darcie never fails to deliver!‘ Consumer Reviewer

‘Darcie has this way of making you fall in love with Conwenna Cove and the residents that live there.’ Dash Fan

‘Darcie Boleyn writes the most heart warming and comforting stories that completely wrap you up in the characters lives.’ Rae Reads

‘Darcie Boleyn is now one of my go to authors, one I know will never disappoint me and that I can pick up one of her books and be transported immediately to another world.’ My Chestnut Reading Tree

A guest post by Darcie Boleyn…..

My Inspiration for Writing Forever at Conwenna Cove

There were a few reasons why I wrote this novel.

Firstly, I adore Cornwall and loved writing about it. It’s a fabulous location with a dramatic coastline, stunning beaches, pretty fishing harbours, spectacular scenery and a rich and intriguing history. As a teenager, I enjoyed some amazing family holidays in Porthleven; they were magical times and I treasure the memories. Writing the second and third books in the series, Christmas at Conwenna Cove and Forever at Conwenna Cove meant that I could return to the location in my imagination, and I really enjoyed describing the cove at different times of the year. It also meant that I could develop the stories of characters from the first two books, as I knew that I’d want to give Nate the chance to have his story told.

Secondly, as an author, former teacher, wife and mother, I’m well aware of how stressful and hectic life can be when we’re trying to juggle everything. Taking time out to be with loved ones is very important. Holidays can be restorative and allow your body and mind to recuperate from the ups and downs of everyday life. Cornwall is the perfect place to do this and that’s why being in Conwenna Cove has this effect upon my characters. I wanted to write about a place where my characters could go to rest, to heal and to fall in love. I hope that readers can enjoy a (book) holiday there too, by reading about Conwenna Cove, and that they feel they’ve actually been to the location and met the characters.

Thirdly, I wanted to raise awareness about the plight of rescue greyhounds. As a greyhound mum, I care a great deal about these beautiful, gentle creatures. I adopted my girl, Freya, from Greyhound Rescue Wales, and the rescue sanctuary in the novel is based on the sanctuary in Wales, where Freya came from. The employees and volunteers of GRW work tirelessly to care for the hounds and they deserve recognition for the wonderful work they do. Greyhounds feature in all of the Conwenna Cove books and if reading about them encourages more people to donate to greyhound charities, volunteer some time to work with the dogs, or even to adopt a greyhound, then I’d be delighted.

Thanks so much for writing a guest post for Chat About Book, Darcie 🙂

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Forever-Conwenna-Cove-Darcie-Boleyn-ebook/dp/B07BF7VBNF/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1524662830&sr=8-1&keywords=forever+at+conwenna+cove

About the author…..

Darcie Boleyn

Darcie Boleyn has a huge heart and is a real softy. She never fails to cry at books and movies, whether the ending is happy or not. Darcie is in possession of an overactive imagination that often keeps her awake at night. Her childhood dream was to become a Jedi but she hasn’t yet found suitable transport to take her to a galaxy far, far away. She also has reservations about how she’d look in a gold bikini, as she rather enjoys red wine, cheese and loves anything with ginger or cherries in it – especially chocolate. Darcie fell in love in New York, got married in the snow, rescues uncoordinated greyhounds and can usually be found reading or typing away on her laptop.

Check out the rest of the blog tour for reviews, and more, with these awesome book bloggers…..

Forever at Conwenna Cove blog tour

 

 

 

 

 

Enjoy!

#CoverReveal #HushHush by Mel Sherratt @writermels @AvonBooksUK #TeamSherratt

I am SO excited to be able to share the cover reveal for Mel Sherratt’s upcoming release of Hush Hush 🙂 🙂 🙂

This is the start of a new series, featuring DS Grace Allendale and is set in Stoke-on-Trent. I can’t wait to read it!! Those of you who know me well enough will know that I am a massive fan of Mel Sherratt and her books, so you will understand exactly how exciting this is for me 🙂 (and many others!).

Description…..

A gripping new series from million-copy bestseller Mel Sherratt

A killer is on the loose, attacking people in places they feel most safe: their workplaces, their homes. It’s up to DS Grace Allendale to stop the murders, and prove herself to her new team.

All clues lead to local crime family the Steeles, but that’s where things get complicated. Because the Steeles aren’t just any family, they’re Grace’s family. Two brothers and two sisters, connected by the violent father only Grace and her mother escaped.

To catch the killer, Grace will have to choose between her team and her blood. But who do you trust, when both sides are out to get you?

An unforgettable thriller that fans of MARTINA COLE and CARA HUNTER won’t be able to put down.

Check this out ⇓⇓⇓

 

Hush Hush cover

Awesome, or what!

I love that the background picture is of Stoke-on-Trent! It looks fab!

Pre-order here…..

 

#TeamSherratt

 

 

Medium Wave by Rose Zolock @RoseZolock #BlogTour #AuthorInterview @caffeinenights @rararesources

Medium Wave banner

Interview with Rose Zolock…..

Rose Zolock

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

ABOUT ROSE ZOLOCK

Welcome to the world of Rose Zolock.

A world where the supernatural may be just a step away; behind a door, beyond a curtain, in the darkness, waiting. A slight movement, shimmering, indistinct, glimpsed out of the corner of your eye. But when you turn to look… it’s gone. A change in the air: unexpected. A suggestion of a creeping chill or a hint of musty smell: inexplicable. The ghost stories, the flickering candlelight, the ancient relic which lies in a dusty cabinet, all may reveal a history of the unspeakable.

My Irish grandmother first told me about the Banshee when I was just a small child. How the wailing sound of the spirit of the dead and dying could be heard when someone was about to pass. It was family folklore that the women in the family had ‘the touch’, the ability to see spirits and other dimensions. I listened and grew up fascinated by those who claimed to have supernatural or psychic abilities.

I do not claim to have those powers. Take me to Venice in February when the mist swirls over the canals, walk by my side along the darkened streets of Greenwich Village in New York City in high summer, listening to a ghost walk tour guide tell the stories of death, murder and the unexplained – I would say those stories, and our belief in them, gives me a power to see into the shadows within our imagination.

As a journalist, I take every opportunity to explore and investigate strange stories, myths and folklore. Living in rural Yorkshire, with a rich library of ghost stories and literary tradition, I also have a sceptical and forensic insight into those who peddle the stories which feed our imagination, but of which we have yet found no proof. I have listened to the debunkers who argue against those believers who are convinced that sand the dark side exist. My mind is open. Is yours?

MEDIUM WAVE

‘This thing has no defined shape. Whatever energy exists within it, it cannot settle on a shape. The strands of darkness curl out and then wrap back inwards. The bulk of the shadow becomes concave, then bulbous, the height building in on itself but lacking any skeletal structure to wrap itself around. There are no eyes, no clearly defined head shape. It is creating itself from darkness, like a swirl of ebony ink dropped into a vat of putrid water, spreading silently….’

Becky Moran has built a career claiming to talk to the dead. A successful clairvoyant medium, a Cambridge graduate with her own radio show ‘Medium Wave’ and a team dedicated to crafting the celebrity myth – because Becky Moran is a fake.

Until, one night, something supernatural, inexplicable, breaks through live in air as she is broadcasting. Becky Moran discovers the paranormal is real, the dead can indeed speak and she is being pursued relentlessly towards a battle

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

Oh, dark places, my imagination and the things which frighten me. I also research a great deal. I have based the stories in Medium Wave on real places, or objects which have a paranormal history. I use those as inspiration and then let the story take me somewhere else. When I talk about being frightened, I have a totally irrational fear of photographs – stills – of aircraft. I have no idea why. I had been fascinated by stories of restored World War Two bombers which were said to be haunted by the crews which flew them. I faced my fear and used it to create one of the most frightening sequences in the book. There are several very challenging and frightening encounters in Medium Wave – including a very well researched section on near death experience. But, ultimately, I write to entertain and allow you to make up your own mind if the paranormal is real.

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

If I were to say yes I could possibly end up in all kinds of trouble so I’ll say no, but they have been great fun to create. I set the story in the world of radio and television, as this is a world I know well. In Medium Wave, the character of Becky Moran and those of her close knit team are a blend of characteristics of people I have met or worked with along the way. There is an element of satire and humour in Medium Wave, a reflection of how self-serving and manipulative the media can be. I have also met many who tell me their stories of the supernatural and they are genuine in what they believe. I have used their sincerity and their fear to create the characters and narrative. I would hope anyone who reads Medium Wave will make their own mind up about supernatural encounters.

How do you pick your characters names?

They just come to me! I ‘see’ the character and the name is magically there.

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

I usually start with a picture in my head, a moment caught in time. By the time I begin to write, I have been researching the hauntings or objects which interest me and they set my mind working. I write for hours, rewrite and then edit. Medium Wave has an element of thriller to it, and it was a pure joy to see that play out as I typed the words.

On my desk I keep a skull, encrusted with diamante, for inspiration. It sits by my computer. I can tell by its hard, bony stare when I have not met the mark. I imagine that exposed, glittering jaw smiling when I do.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Stephen King, Daphne Du Maurier, Graham Green, Jilly Cooper and Edgar Allan Poe.

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

Only one? I shall be sneaky here and have two quick ones. I would ask Stephen King how it feels when he looks at the huge body of his work, lined up on the shelves. Charles Dickens would be next and I would ask him where his ability to create supernatural characters came from and if he wished he had lived now, to chronicle our world instead of the squalor of Victorian England. Oh, and can I ask the Bronte sisters if they ever had any fun? That’s three authors, three questions, three apologies from me.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Voracious. Enid Blyton at first and then I consumed anything I could lay my hands on. I was never out of my local library and one of my greatest pleasures is seeing my walls lined with books. They are my treasures and it was the first thing to be assembled when I moved house last year.

When did you start to write?

I have been writing, in one form or another, all my life. I work as a journalist and broadcaster and Medium Wave is my first fictional novel. I had to learn that writing fiction meant learning new techniques and I beat myself up a great deal over ‘show not tell’ and ‘point of view’. I found a very good editor to help me learn properly. I loved it.

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

I love Rosemary’s Baby by Ira Levin. A perfect horror story, a time capsule of the 1960’s combined with ancient witches, creepy apartment buildings and a tale of Devil worshipers. Rosemary, an innocent victim with a Vidal Sassoon haircut, betrayed by everyone she loved, all but one. We witness her descent into hell – literally – whilst doubting her own sanity.

The book ends with Rosemary accepting her devil child, smiling as the demonic eyed baby rocks in its cradle under an inverted cross. Of course, that is the true horror, where we either accept Rosemary’s insanity or we are witnessing her absorption into evil. Either way, we are sympathetic and horrified.

I always wish Rosemary had fought back. The truly unthinkable would have been for her to destroy her own child – and by doing so, saving herself. I wanted the coven which had used her to suffer, rather than stand around drinking sherry and being self-congratulatory. I also wanted to believe that the devil’s baby wasn’t growing up in New York City’s Upper West Side, waiting for daddy to call round.

Levin’s ending is perfect but think how truly horrific it could have been if Rosemary could have destroyed all of them. I can’t pass The Dakota Building in NYC without wondering what happened to all of them and hoping I don’t hear a baby cry…

Is there a book you wish you had written?

Practically every book I have ever enjoyed.

I think the Ghost Stories of an Antiquary by M.R. James, his collection of fine supernatural and frightening stories.

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

In Search Of The Paranormal Truth.

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

I would invite my guest, after sundown, to a table laid out in the ruins of Whitby Abbey.

There would be fine china and a cloth on the table. I would offer cake, but my companion would decline. My guest is Count Dracula, as created by Bram Stoker. This character launched a thousand versions of the vampire, has his origins in the historical figure of Vlad the Impaler and Transylvanian folklore, before evolving into the movie legends such as Bella Lugosi and Christopher Lee, both of whom dressed their Counts for a night at the opera.

I want to talk to the original, Stoker’s creation.

Naturally, I am clutching a large crucifix and have garlic strewn everywhere. A vial of Holy Water sits in my hand and I have notes from Professor Van Helsing to assist during my encounter. A wooden stake is propped up against my chair.

There are some practicalities I wish to discuss with him. I am curious as to how he keeps his clothes clean, sleeping by day in a coffin filled with the soil of his homeland. And who is the tailor who keeps the Count in his usual sartorial elegance and does he deliver? Is there a have a barber who cuts his hair after nightfall? Does Dracula finish off the poor barber after each trim, because he cannot resist? Being one of the undead, can he get hired help to assist with his day to day needs, the cleaning, the laundry, the gardening? How does he interview them? My eyes are firmly on this creature of the night as we sit, framed by the majestic arches of Whitby Abbey. I will be careful not to look him in the eye, just in case.

We could discuss why he makes immortality so attractive and ask if he ever gets fed up, knowing his existence is eternal but dependent on killing humans. Does Dracula ever dream? And of course, what it felt like – choosing and drinking the blood of that first victim.

Of course, if he were charming and courteous, we could talk a while. One twitch of the sharp pointed teeth, I may ask if he had ever thought of the benefits of being a vegetarian.

Finally, that bat thing. I would ask for an assurance that he won’t appear as a bat, tapping at my window. I suspect he would assure me that I was perfectly safe. I have a feeling I may not believe him…

What are you working on right now?

The second book in the Medium Wave series. This is a three book series.

Do you have a new release due?

Book one of the three part Medium Wave series was published by Caffeine Nights on 6th April, in Book, eBook and Audio Book.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

For any writer, the day their book is published and unleashed on the world is a major landmark. All writers know the hard work which has led to that point. I celebrate with my family and close friends and ask them to keep calling me ‘author’ or they don’t get any more champagne. Any writer of novels can ask for that for one day only…! Then it’s back to the blank page.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

Please follow me on twitter @rosezolock

Find me on Facebook rosezolock.9

Visit my website – http://www.rosezolock.com – you can email me from there, read my blogs and link to my podcast, The Guttering Candle

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

My mind is open on the paranormal. Is yours?

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

Medium Wave cover

Medium Wave

Becky Moran has built a career claiming to talk to the dead. A successful clairvoyant medium, a Cambridge graduate with her own radio show ‘Medium Wave’ and a team dedicated to crafting the celebrity myth – because Becky Moran is a fake. Until, one night, something supernatural, inexplicable, breaks through live on air as she is broadcasting. Becky Moran discovers the paranormal is real, the dead can indeed speak and she is being pursued relentlessly towards a battle for her very survival.

‘This thing has no defined shape. Whatever energy exists within it, it cannot settle on a shape. The strands of darkness curl out and then wrap back inwards. The bulk of the shadow becomes concave, then bulbous, the height building in on itself but lacking any skeletal structure to wrap itself around. There are no eyes, no clearly defined head shape. It is creating itself from darkness, like a swirl of ebony ink dropped into a vat of putrid water, spreading silently….’

Purchase from Amazon UK –

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Medium-Wave-Dead-Becky-Moran-ebook/dp/B079YY2DBX/

Check out the rest of the blog tour for reviews, and more, with these awesome book bloggers…..

Medium Wave blog tour

 

Enjoy!

A Warriner To Seduce Her by VirginiaHeath @VirginiaHeath_ #BlogBlitz #AuthorInterview #PublicationDay @rararesources

A Warriner To Seduce Her banner

Interview with Virginia Heath…..

Virginia Heath

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

I write witty, slightly racy Regency romantic comedies and have done for the last few years. Nine book babies are out in the wild, three more are working their way through the system and will all be out by 2019. Before I wrote books, I was a history teacher, which has come in very handy!

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

I have an odd brain, so they pop into my head. One book came as a result of a snippet in a history documentary, another from a door knob and my Wild Warriner’s series is my homage to my favourite film- Seven Brides for Seven Brothers.

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

Officially I should say no- but yes! Constance Stuart in Her Enemy at the Altar, the six-foot redhead who slammed doors was loosely based on my daughter. Lovett, the poor-drinking, incorrigible butler from The Discerning Gentleman’s Guide, is a dear family friend who also happens be called Lovett and Cassie Reeves from A Warriner to Rescue Her shares many of my quirky traits. There are others, but as they were baddies, I’m afraid they are top secret.

How do you pick your characters names?

Sometimes they just come to me, other times I use baby naming websites for Christian names and I usually use Google maps for place names to give my dukes, earls and viscounts. Although, I always try to put a little bit of Essex in my books because I’m an Essex girl. So far, I’ve used Rainham, Aveley, Redbridge, Bulphan, Upminster, Ockendon and Hadleigh.

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

Bearing in mind I’m weird, I don’t plot or spend hours agonising over the story. Instead, I see it like a film running through my head, so I type what I see as I see it. Odd, I know. I write full time, so I never work evenings or weekends. I write 9 till 5 Monday to Friday when the house is silent, then I turn into a pumpkin and become Mum again at all other times.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Nora Roberts

Tessa Dare

Julie Ann Long

Penny Vincenzi

Susan Mallery

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

Oscar Wilde was a genius and seems like such good fun. Any man whose last words are ‘Either this wallpaper goes, or I do’ is someone I would want to spend time with.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Yes, I devoured books. I still do.

When did you start to write?

I knew I always wanted to, but at first it seemed like a pipe dream. Working class daughters of a porter and a waitress didn’t write books. Later, as a teacher, the desire to do it was strong but I never had the time. So I quit my job Christmas 2014 and took the plunge. I gave myself 2 years to get published before I need to go back but managed it in under 18 months. Even if I hadn’t got a publishing deal, it would have been unlikely I went back to a proper job. Writing, it turns out, was what I was meant to do. Which is probably why I am so prolific.

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

Tess of the D’Ubervilles- too miserable. Gone with the wind- too miserable. Love Story- too miserable. Can you tell I like a happily ever after?

Is there a book you wish you had written?

Montana Sky by Nora Roberts. A page turning, heart-pounding, cracker of a romance. Absolute perfection.

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

Eyes on the Stars- my favourite quote is from Theodore Roosevelt “Keep your eyes on the stars, and your feet on the ground.” I’ve always been a dreamer who chases her dreams but I’ll never forget where I came from.

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

I’d take Mr Darcy on a romantic holiday to the Caribbean. Aside from the fact where were meant to be, that man needs to take a chill pill.

What are you working on right now?

I’m currently working on book 3 of my upcoming King’s Elite series about a sexy group of Regency spies, which is fun. They are chasing an evil smuggler but, inevitable, get a bit waylaid by my heroines.

Do you have a new release due?

I do! Today! A Warriner to Seduce Her, the final instalment of my Wild Warriner quartet is released today. Like all my books it can be read as a standalone, and follows the story of Jake Warriner- a charming ladies’ man with a dark secret. It’s a rom-com/romantic suspense set in Regency England.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

A bottle with bubbles in a nice meal in a restaurant. And a trip to the bookshop to take a surreptitious picture of me with my book.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

Links:

Website: https://www.virginiaheathromance.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/virginiaheathauthor/

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/VirginiaHeath_

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

A Warriner to Seduce Her Blurb

A sensible schoolmistress… Awakened by the notorious rake!

In this The Wild Warriners story, schoolmistress Felicity Blunt feels old beyond her years―and desper-ately dull. Meeting confirmed rake Jacob Warriner brings her gloriously alive, and yet no matter his al-lure she must remain immune to his obvious charms and unashamed flirtation. But is Jacob merely a mischievous scoundrel? Or is there much more to this Warriner than meets the eye…?

http://myBook.to/Warriner4

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

A Warriner To Seduce Her cover

A Warriner to Seduce Her

A sensible schoolmistress… Awakened by the notorious rake!

In this The Wild Warriners story, schoolmistress Felicity Blunt feels old beyond her years―and desperately dull. Meeting confirmed rake Jacob Warriner brings her gloriously alive, and yet no matter his allure she must remain immune to his obvious charms and unashamed flirtation. But is Jacob merely a mischievous scoundrel? Or is there much more to this Warriner than meets the eye…?

Purchase –

http://www.myBook.to/Warriner4

Author Bio –

When Virginia Heath was a little girl it took her ages to fall asleep, so she made up stories in her head to help pass the time while she was staring at the ceiling. As she got older, the stories became more complicated, sometimes taking weeks to get to the happy ending. Then one day, she decided to embrace the insomnia and start writing them down. Fortunately, the lovely people at Harlequin Mills & Boon took pity on her and decided to publish her romances, but it still takes her forever to fall asleep.

Social Media Links –

https://www.facebook.com/virginiaheathauthor/

https://twitter.com/VirginiaHeath_

https://www.virginiaheathromance.com/

Giveaway –

Win 3 x E-copies of A Warriner to Seduce Her (Open Internationally)

*Terms and Conditions –Worldwide entries welcome. Please enter using the Rafflecopter box below. The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then I reserve the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over. Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time I will delete the data. I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Good luck!

 

 

#CoverReveal #TheSecret by KL Slater @KimLSlater @bookouture

I am delighted to be joining in with K L Slater’s cover reveal for her upcoming release, The Secret 🙂  
Many thanks to Kim Nash, at Bookouture, for the opportunity to share such a fabulous cover!

THE SECRET by KL Slater

You turn your back for a minute. And now your son is in terrible danger …

Louise is struggling to cope.  As a busy working mum, she often has to leave her eight-year-old son Archie at her sister Alice’s flat.

Alice and Louise used to be close.  But there’s a lot they don’t know about each other now – like the bottle of vodka Louise hides in her handbag, Alice’s handsome new friend and the odd behaviour of her next-door neighbour.

Archie is a curious little boy. He likes to play on his own at his auntie’s flat until one day when he sees something he shouldn’t. Now he has a secret of his own.  One he can’t tell his mum. One that could put him and his family in terrible danger.

The most gripping psychological thriller you’ll read this year from the top five bestselling author K.L.Slater.  Perfect for fans of The Girl on the Train and Gone Girl.

Check this out!

⇓⇓⇓

 

The Secret cover

What readers are saying about K.L.Slater:

Omg! Slater is amazing! She is such a talented writer! Up to the very last page you will be shocked! Her cast of characters are so real!!!! Such a memorable book!… The end will have you gasping in disbelief! Whoa!!!!! 10 Stars!‘ Two Girls and a Book Obsession, 5 stars

‘One of the best psychological thrillers I’ve read… nothing short of stunning.’ Nigel Adams Book Worm, 5 stars

‘Keeps you guessing until the very end! I loved every twist and turn and couldn’t stop reading because I was dying to know what the big secret was … will keep you up late to find out the truth!Buried in a Book

One word – spectacular! This author gets better and better… This book had me on tenterhooks and there were times I forgot to breathe… She has exceeded the high standards she set in her previous books. Brilliant! An amazing, addictive, thrilling, unputdownable, fabulous read.’ Renita D’Silva, 5 stars

Twisssssss-ted! This book really played with my headspace… thanks for that K.L.! This book is a roller coaster ride of emotions and secrets and spookiness — when I finally finished it at 3.45 am I was so nervous I checked the locks three times.Book club pick for May? Picked!!!… A solid, five-star book!!!’ Janet’s Book Corner, 5 stars

‘She has done it again… I loved this book!! It had a great plot that was woven so well… 5 stars from me – very enjoyable and an addictive read!’ Donna’s Book Blog, 5 stars

The kind of book that you pick up and can’t put down again until the last page…I thought I had figured out everyone and everything but boy, was I wrong! This is the kind of book that you haunts you… an addictive, suspenseful, character-driven thriller… without a doubt an entertaining, compelling read.’ A Haven for Book Lovers, 5 stars

Once started I couldn’t put it down. Excellent characters, full of suspense and so well-paced it is a must-read for anyone who like psychological thrillers… An excellent read and I highly recommend it.’ Worcester Sauce

Always look forward to reading K.L. Slater’s novels… She certainly knows how to grab your attention from the start and keeps you there until the very end… Before I knew it, I’d devoured this book in one day… An addictive read full of suspense and mystery.’ Chelle’s Book Reviews

A huge HIT. I loved it and couldn’t read quickly enough … The reveal Reviewer 

Pre-order now…..

 


About the author…..

KL Slater


Kim is the bestselling author of psychological crime thrillers ‘Safe With Me,’ ‘Blink,’ ‘Liar’ and ‘The Mistake.’ Her latest thriller, ‘The Visitor’ was published 2nd March 2018 and is now available in ebook and paperback formats, online. Please note the Audible version is coming very soon, date tbc.

For many years, Kim sent her work out to literary agents and collected a stack of rejection slips. At the age of 40 she went back to Nottingham Trent University and now has an MA in Creative Writing.

Before graduating in 2012, she received five offers of representation from London literary agents and a book deal which was, as Kim says, ‘a fairytale … at the end of a very long road!’

Kim is a full-time writer and lives in Nottingham with her husband, Mac.

She also writes award-winning YA fiction for Macmillan Children’s Books, writing as Kim Slater.

Author website: www.KLSlaterAuthor.com
Twitter: @KimLSlater
Facebook: KL Slater Author

Tale Of A Tooth by Allie Rogers @Alliewhowrites #BlogTour #Extract & #Giveaway @Legend_Press

Today I have the pleasure of joining in with Allie Rogers’s Tale Of A Tooth blog tour! 🙂

Tale Of A Tooth

Four-year-old Danny lives with his mother, Natalie, in a small Sussex town. Life is a struggle and when they are threatened with a benefits sanction, salvation appears in the form of a Job Centre employee called Karen. But Karen’s impact is to reach far beyond this one generous gesture, as she and Natalie embark on an intense relationship. Told in the voice of an intelligent, passionate and unusual child, Tale of a Tooth is an immersive and compelling look at the impact of domestic abuse on a vulnerable family unit.
A literary/YA crossover dealing with themes of LGBTQIA+, alcoholism and domestic abuse – Told from the unique perspective of a child raised by a single mother
Published by Legend Press on 19 APRIL 2018

Extract…..

CHAPTER TWO

Jane in the library is the goodest person of the world except me and Meemaw. Jane is wet big eyes dark silvery hair crinkled face. Her voice is rumply-soft quiet like Meemaw’s velvety coat. When Jane talks her eyes go by the floor not staring and we talk of dinosaurs taking turns. But today no Jane. No Jane in the library and a hurt in my tummy of crying coming and four times of swallowing to keep it down inside. I did pulling but no words. Meemaw knowed it was wanting Jane. Just stay calm, poppet. If she doesn’t come, I’ll ask. Meemaw was still the grey of yesterday. On this morning she had smoked two rollies out the window. No milk in the fridge so her tea a dark dark potion. No milk for krispies. Just crust for toast and crust is too fat. I squeezed my toothpaste. Too much, Danny! Come on, share with me. Meemaw swooped in and stealed some on her brush. No Meemaw! I throwed my brush down then gone under the sink. Fluffy of grot on it. Meemaw shouted. We never did teeth. Get your shoes on then! Christ! Then no Jane in the library. I sitted on the spinny chair by the computer did kicking the underneath. Meemaw taked my hand pulled me off. Stop it! Come and look at the books! No! Then Jane. Jane sudden. Smelling right of Jane.
Danny! I hoped you’d be in, I’ve got a surprise for you. Two hands Jane holded up a big book. This came by in a box of old stock being weeded out of the stacks and I thought I knew someone who might like to have it. In two hands right out to me because she meaned me the someone. Walking with Dinosaurs. A book but like on YouTube. The actual thing. I taked it to the table heavy as treasure and thumped it open. What do you say, Danny? Chapter one new blood. Danny, what do you need to say to Jane? Chapter one new blood. Thank you so much, Jane. Thank you so much Jane. You’re very welcome. I turned to the back because of index that Meemaw showed. Up and down the letters my finger runned the good good words. Coelophysis Ornitholestes Troodon. I turned the pages fast fast. But remembering of careful. Careful careful of the pages Danny. Jane her hand near not touching. That’s right, Danny. You’re a careful boy with the books. I finded Troodon showed it and words underneath. See Jane! Fast and intelligent a deadly combination a deadly combination. I see. I finded Spinosaurus showed Spiney. Spinosaurus! See! I putted Spiney’s face on the actual word. Danny, love, time to go now. Take the book to the machine. No, no, you don’t understand! He can keep that one. It’s being chucked out anyway. It’s too tatty for stock. We’d only chuck it out. I looked up. Are you sure? Do you hear that, Danny? You can keep it forever! Quiet. I was wanting the book mine forever. I was wanting the book to live in the library. Library is borrowing and the books on the shelf. Orange label of dinosaur and prehistoric.
Jane crouched down not too near. Speaked by the side of me quiet. Would you like to keep the book, Danny? I didn’t like it then the keep or not. You can keep the book, Danny. Or you can leave it here. You can choose that. He might have a bit of trouble deciding, Jane. Decisions can be tricky. Shall we take the book home, Dan? Library books live in the library. I can bring it back sometimes. Sometimes to go on the shelf. Dinosaurs and prehistoric. But it’s coming home with us now, yes? I didn’t say more words. I think that’s a yes. Thanks again, Jane. Come on, Danny love, we need to go now. Meemaw going too fast. Bring it back sometimes. Jane speaked slow. Yes, you could do that, Danny. Bring it back sometimes for a visit. But always take it home again, won’t you? Because it’s your book now. Let’s write your name in it, shall we, to save confusion? Save confusion. Jane getted a pen. Can you do your own name, Danny? I taked it to do my Danny name she putted White. Then she writed personal copy withdrawn from stock. I readed each word she writed of the pen. Meemaw maked a sigh. I looked. Browning to brown. I don’t mean to be rude, and thanks so much, Jane. But we have to get going now. My coat twisted arms inside out hood gone upside down. I was busy with sort it out. Then I heared words of quieter. They don’t want you to hear of it. He’s got astonishing reading skills for four, hasn’t he? Meemaw too fast again grabbed my hand. No snatching! It’s not a big deal. It just comes naturally for him. Thanks again! Goodbye! Say goodbye, Danny. Goodbye.
I thinked why rushy rushy. Book was too heavy so Meemaw taked it for the bag. We’ve got to get to the Job Centre again, love, remember? No… Come on. You can look at your book when we get there. *** Outside the job centre we stopped. Better than going in. Right, I’ll text her. Wait just here, Dan. I did balancing two feet careful on the little wall of the flowers. Putted Spiney’s face inside the trumpetty daffodils. Spiney telled me whole world gone golden Danny. He whispered it very quiet in my mind. I taked him one to the next of five daffodils. Walked slow away of Meemaw. Danny love, come here! The Karen lady had come. Karen lady wearing a blue shirt of tangled flowers on it. Her hair spiked up. Perfume strong as knifes. I holded my nose. She touched Meemaw again right away touched her shoulder. Then she kissed Meemaw’s face. Only I do. Only I kiss Meemaw. Hi Karen! Karen pushed her spikes of hair they pinged up spring. Pink sticky again her face. Hi Natalie! Did you get my text? I just saw it now. Thank you so much! I can’t tell you how much it means. Thank you! Oh, it’s nothing. There’s discretion. She owed me a favour anyway. Well, thank you. Really, honestly, it makes such a difference. Well, I could tell you were decent. It’s not like you were taking the piss. Not like some of them. Meemaw didn’t take her turn then of talking. We take turns Danny. Meemaw looked over by the roundabout Karen smiled at me I looked. Still holded my nose. Meemaw saw then. She pulled my hand down. Well, look, I’ve only got fifteen minutes, really. Shall we get some drinks?
Meemaw holded my hand hurry hurry to the Costa. We don’t ever go too expensive a bloody joke those prices Danny. We sitted on silvery chairs a round table of one silver leg. What would you like? Coffee? Tea, please. And what about you, little one? I didn’t say. Oh, he’s fine, Karen. He doesn’t need anything. Right, back in a tick then. She went inside. No holding your nose around people, Danny, remember? It can hurt feelings. And Karen’s really helped us out. She’s really done us a favour. Karen came back with drinks. Three big cups. I got him a milkshake. Didn’t seem right not getting him anything. Oh… thanks… Meemaw taked the cups. All papery cups and lids. My one a straw stucked up out of its middle. I looked at it not touching. Meemaw maked a rolly. Messy one of tobacco squiggles escaping. Karen didn’t smoke she watched Meemaw. She watched Meemaw close like trying to learn of it. She watched Meemaw’s hands Meemaw’s mouth. I watched her eyes go zip zip about. Meemaw speaked not looking at me still looking at her rolly. Try your milkshake, Dan, eh? I did just in case of nice. But it was yuck. A painty thick and strongness. No more. I counted seven cars green or nearly. Green is rare. So, what you got planned for the rest of the day then? Oh, nothing much. He’s just got a new book, haven’t you, Dan? They were chucking it out at the library. Show Karen. I climbed down went in the bag and getted my book. I holded it on my tummy. Karen not to see. Come on. Don’t be mean, show Karen your book. Karen laughed a slidey laugh. Oh, don’t worry. I’m enjoying what I’m looking at right now. She putted her hand close Meemaw’s by the ashtray. Littlest fingers touched lied next to each other close. Meemaw did a laugh too. A laugh that was new and of a surprise. Then I needed a wee. Very urgent. I pulled Meemaw. I whispered. Wee Meemaw! Ah, we need the toilet I’m afraid, Karen. No worries. I have to get back now anyway. She pushed back again the spiky hair. Maked a big perfumey smell. A attack of smell. I coughed. Meemaw picked up the bag. Thanks so much for the drinks and for everything. You’ve been really kind. Meemaw pushed me gently on my back. My coat stucked on the silvery chair I pulled. Then it was free and we were going but Karen’s voice came sudden. Too loud. I was wondering if you fancied meeting up again, maybe? Meemaw stopped pushing me. Meemaw looked at Karen. Swoosh! Very fast very fast all the grey washed over. There was a waterfall on Meemaw of ruby red colour. Ruby red slippers. Very. I never saw Meemaw be it before that colour. The world was roary then of cars and I was needing a wee. Meemaw and Karen just standed still no talking. I pulled Meemaw. She taked no notice no. Didn’t look. Looked just at Karen. Yeah. I mean, yeah, it’s just me and him you know so… Karen’s words came fast tripping over. Sure! Yes, sure, how about the park? Maybe over the weekend? Meemaw’s words chased Karen’s words. Sure, yes. You’ve got my number, yeah? Great, yeah. The wee the wee! I was full and bursting. Meemaw! Okay! ‘Bye Karen. We went through the big glass door into Costa. Inside Costa clank bang of the coffee maker man. Music. Bright white. Too much. I holded my ears. Meemaw opened the door toilet. Inside was quiet. Long wee splashy in the toilet and Meemaw waiting not talking. The soap was appley foamy fluff I liked. I washed on a long time. More more the appley soap. Meemaw looked in the mirror. Meemaw looked looked. Still no words. Water getted too hot. I taked my hands out. Okay, sunshine, here’s the dryer, look. Pop your hands in for a whoosh of air. I looked. No! It says blade. Blade is of a knife. Air blade, Meemaw. I showed the words. Meemaw laughed. Do you dare me, Danny? Do you? No! Meemaw pushed her hands in. It roared! Such loudness. But not a blade of cutting. Meemaw’s hands in out. She laughed. Meemaw laughed lots. I holded my hands on my ears tight and waited for it to stop.

*** At home Meemaw gived me have three pieces of drawing paper and that is a lot. I started a comic of stegosaurs. They go over a cliff. Why don’t you use some other colours, Dan? Or your black pen will run out. I like black. Black is best for all except red sometimes of blood. Meemaw had a rolly in the big window. All was sunshine and Meemaw ruby ruby red. New colour. I watched sometimes sometimes I went in my picture. After one rolly and tea gone halfway Meemaw climbed on a chair taked down her precious box. Precious box lives on the wardrobe. I don’t look because of ashamed. Because of a day long ago I was three. Such a bad day. Meemaw put the box up high after. It was biggest big scissors and crinkly paper. I cutted it the precious letter of Meemaw’s mummy. The letter of Meemaw’s mummy when she was alive in America. Meemaw did dripping tears. Drip drip on it and sticky tape for mending. But the letter gone wonky and some of the words lost. I went under the cover a long time that day. Meemaw said ashamed. I don’t like it now to think. I don’t like it the box. But today was a day of shiny photographs. Meemaw tipped them all slidey out. Meemaw did lifting them up each one and looking. Little laughs. I did my best stegosaur and a bubble for words. I maked him say oh no! in his bubble. Meemaw leaned over showed me one of the pictures. Who do you think that is, Danny? There were witchy people of wild hair. Don’t know. Meemaw holded her finger by one face. Not even that one? It was a person of black bits round their eyes. The person had a open mouth like a roar. That’s me, Danny. That was me way back when and those were my friends. We were having a bloody ball. A ball is a dance of Cinderella. But Cinderella is a puffy dress and white mice. A pumpkin. Not blood. I looked at the Meemaw of black bits on the eyes. Those were my friends, Dan. Those were my friends. She stroked it the shiny photograph. Her thumb all round its edge and looking like loving. Her eyes blink blink. Strokes like a kitten on its teeny head or me me on my eyebrows sometimes in bed and night night my lovely boy. I pushed under Meemaw’s arms. I lied on her lap put my face in her tummy. Smelled the smell of her. My Meemaw. I wriggled in until she putted the photographs back in the packet cuddled me instead. Right. Bath time, Danny! Noooo! Come on. It’s getting late. Meemaw getted my clean pjs from the laundrette bag. Shaked them hard for crumples. Meemaw getted her baggy laggy joggers old holey t-shirt. Shaked them too. I snuffed sniffed in them the smell of laundrette blue. Thinked of turny machines frothy inside. Come on then, love, into the bathroom! Meemaw turned the taps squooged shower gel. Blue in a puddle and turning into white. Good good smells. Nothing wrong at bedtime. Bubbles maked a mountain in the bath tall. White mountain filled up of light. Always baths now. Shower’s gone so broken and too much tiles falled off. We can’t use it, Danny. See, the water squirts out all over. Even in your eye. Nozzle gone drippy. A drippy wozzle nozzle. Useless of a shower. We getted in the bath. Right! Time for an episode of Terence the Turtle! Ow! Sorry Meemaw. That was for a joke. No pinching boobies, Danny. Pinching boobies isn’t a joke. Listen now and hear what happens next. Meemaw tells it out of her head. She telled how he went to a island all empty just a tall coconut tree. Terence maked a pulley which is a contraption. He sended Caroline Crab up high to get their tea of a coconut. Caroline Crab and pinchy pinchers! Stop it, now. I told you, Danny White. Meemaw washed my hair careful as careful. No bubbles in my eyes. Eyes shut and my mouth closed up tight. No water getted in me. Meemaw wrapped me in a towel. I sitted on the bath mat pulled the frayey edge. Maked a long long string. Meemaw standed up a handful of blue of shower gel. Rubby froth all over and in the hairy fanny triangle the smelly under arms. After tooth cleans and last wees Meemaw getted the bed to flat. Up out it folds. Skeleton of the sofa comes out. Then it’s our bed. Stand back, sunshine, I’m always worried this thing might bonk you on the head. Are you reading Meemaw in the chair this night? No, I’m shattered tonight, Danny. Let’s just snuggle down. Meemaw drawed the curtains getted in beside me. I holded Spiney under the pillow he likes it best very soft. In my mind I heared him telling all his night night wishes. I listened. Said I love you Spiney in mind words. Feeled him warmer there. I putted my other hand on Meemaw’s squashy tummy. Inside is bubbles and pops. Meemaw still the red ruby coloured. Like the slippers of sharkle one day on YouTube. Meemaw singed me the song. Somewhere over the rainbow. Meemaw reached up clicked the light to off. Then she was just the dark shape the smell of clean Meemaw. I closed my eyes.

Giveaway…..

For your chance to win a paperback copy of Tale Of A Tooth, courtesy of Legend Press, then all you have to do is comment ‘Yes please’ on this post and I will choose a winner at random (UK ONLY PLEASE)

Thanks in advance for joining in!

Good luck!

 

Reviews…..

‘Allie Rogers strikes gold again … A book about issues that isn’t issue-led, and a book about childhood that isn’t mawkish and emotional – Allie Rogers has, in Tale of a Tooth, created a tale that’s original, powerful and long lasting. Danny’s voice is readable, memorable, and may just have changed my mind about child narrators’ The Book Bag

‘Exploring a narrative which is too often kept private, but nevertheless, desperately needs to be told, Allie Rogers is unflinching in her descriptions of bullying and brutality which can be found within relationships. For this, she deserves to be congratulated’ Jess Richards

‘An extraordinary story of the bond between a mother and her son. Four-year-old Danny’s voice is utterly convincing, heartbreaking and ultimately full of love and hope’ Catherine Hall

Purchase here…..

 

 

About the author…..

Allie Rogers

Allie Rogers was born and raised in Brighton, where she works as a university librarian.

Little Gold, Allie’s first novel, was published by Legend Press in May 2017. Drawing on her memories of Brighton in the early 1980s, the book is a story of survival and the transformative power of friendship.

The book received warm reviews, including this, from Umi Sinha, author of ‘Belonging’,

‘Reminiscent of Scout Finch, Little Gold is a great addition to literature’s endearing child characters. Vulnerable but fiercely individual, she navigates danger on many fronts – her broken family, her bullying schoolmates, and the dangers of predatory adults – until she finds an unexpected ally in an elderly neighbour. Vivid, touching, sad and frightening, this book exposes the dark underbelly of 1980s Brighton and left me haunted long after I put it down.’

‘Tale of a Tooth’ (Legend, April 2018) is a powerful narrative, told in the voice of four-year-old Danny. Jess Richards, author of ‘Snake Ropes’, ‘Cooking with Bones’ and ‘City of Circles’ has said,

‘Explores a narrative which is too often kept private, but nevertheless, desperately needs to be told.’

Check out the rest of the blog tour for reviews, and more, with these awesome book bloggers…..

Tale Of A Tooth blog tour

Enjoy!

Not Talking Italics by Russell Day @rfdaze #FreeShortStory #BookPromo @fahrenheitpress #PublicationDay @damppebbles

Morning all! I have a treat for you today!

You may remember the cover reveal for Russell Day’s Needle Song a few days ago!? Well, Needle Song is OUT NOW! The to buy link is below, but first I have the pleasure of sharing a brilliant short story by Russell Day. Enjoy! 

Not Talking Italics

This edition first published 2018 by Fahrenheit Press

http://www.Fahrenheit-Press.com

Copyright © Russell Day 2018

The right of Russell Day to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Not Talking Italics

 

By

 

Russell Day

A Slidesmith Short Story

 

Fahrenheit Press

 

Fahrenheit Press are publishing Russell’s full-length novel, NEEDLE SONG on 30th April 2018 which, like this short story, features James Slidesmith.

– …at three fifteen a.m. Present are James Slidesmith, Detective Constable Stephen Barker and, myself, Detective Sergeant Christopher Wade. For the benefit of the tape, Mister Slidesmith would you-

– Doctor.

– I’m sorry?

– It’s Doctor Slidesmith, not Mister.

– My apologies. For the benefit of the tape, Doctor Slidesmith-

– No italics.

– I’m sorry?

– You know, when you write something down you put it in italics to give it a certain inflection, make it sound sarcastic or patronising maybe. I hold a PhD in Psychology. So, just Doctor. No italics.

– Doctor Slidesmith, for the benefit of the tape, will you confirm that you have been given the opportunity to seek legal counsel but, have chosen to waive that right at the present time.

– Yes, I have waived the right to have a legal representative present during this interview.

– Okay, would you care to tell myself and DC Barker what happened last night at number, five Elton Avenue.

– Let’s see, me and Yakky got there around about quarter past ten.

– Yakky being Andrew Miller, it that correct?

– Yes.

– Mister Miller works for you?

– He tattoos at my shop and I take a percentage. Technically he’s self-employed.

– Okay, go on.

– We pulled up around quarter past, we were running a bit late ‘cos Yak’s bike was playing up again. They’d started without us. And it was already going sour.

– Going sour?

– Yes, going sour. Good use of italics. We’d been told we’d being playing limited-raise. When we got there, they were playing pot-limit.

– And that was a problem?

– You play Texas Hold Em’ at all Sergeant, you a poker man?

– I know the rules.

– How about Constable Barker there, no? Alright, for the benefit of Constable Barker and the tape, when you play Texas Hold ‘Em, the betting takes place in rounds and the players take turns. The first bet is compulsory and it’s for a pre-agreed amount, the second bet doubles it. That’s compulsory too. This is to get the pot started. From then on, if you want to stay in for that particular hand, you have to match the previous bet. If you think your cards are going to beat everyone else’s, then you’re going to want a bigger pot. So, you raise. If the game’s limited-raise the pot can only grow so fast, it limits the value of each hand. Limits what you can lose in one go. Pot-limit is slightly different, the max amount you can raise, is the size of the pot currently on the table.

Now, Constable, I’ll give you a piece of invaluable advice. Do not, I repeat not, take pot-limit poker games lightly. People hear the term no-limit and promptly wet themselves ‘cos they think they’re about to lose all their hard earned, and most likely they are. In a lot of no-limit games, hands are lost just because people can’t match the last bet. You can be holding five elevens, and still lose. But … people tend to do that once. They go in, all Johnny-Big-Bollocks, lose that week’s wages and the next month’s rent, then go home and cry about it. It’s not something a lot of people do twice. Now, if you looking to take someone to the cleaners, then no-limit’s all well and good, but if want a cash cow, a nice little Friesian that’s going to roll up for milking time and time again, you need pot-limit. Isn’t that right Sergeant?

– I wouldn’t know.

– Really? I thought you might. Nice watch by the way. Rolex?

– Fake. Made in China.

– Very convincing, looks real from here. They’re clever these Chinese. Sorry, lost my train of thought, Oh yeah, pot limit.

Most people, at least most westerners, aren’t too good at maths. If there’s a few people playing, and there were five of us last night, pot-limit can increase the value of each hand very, very quickly. But, a lot of people won’t notice that. Take someone’s wages and their Rolex—fake or otherwise—in one hit and they tend to remember. When it’s delicately taken away bit by bit over the course of a whole night, they don’t tend to feel the loss so keenly. So, maybe your Friesian heads back for another try. Isn’t that right Sergeant?

– So, why didn’t you walk away from the table?

– I would have done, if Li hadn’t been there.

– That would be Ms Li Chang?

– That’s right.

– She works at your shop too, is that right?

– She’s my apprentice, learning the ink.

– And you had no idea she’d be there?

– That’s right Sergeant. Only, I had No-Idea without the italics.

– You weren’t aware she played poker?

– A lot of people play poker, apparently you play poker, that doesn’t mean I expect to find them sitting next to Billy Sinclair shuffling a pack of cards.

– She didn’t mention it to you at work?

– If you were playing poker with Billy Sinclair, would you tell your boss?

– Okay, so you decided to stay and play with Billy Sinclair and Ms Chang. Was Mister Miller happy to play too?

– No, Yakky dropped out. He just stayed to watch.

– Just watch.

– That’s right. Nice italics by the way.

– You think this is some sort of joke? A man’s died in case you’re forgotten.

– According to your Rolex—sorry fake Rolex—it’s now three twenty-four in the a.m. The wee small hours, when the human body is at its lowest ebb. I’d say by now, two men have died.

– Did you know Ms Chang had a criminal record when you took her on?

– Of course I did. Anyway, she was up front about it.

– It didn’t put you off employing her?

– She served her time. And it’s not everyone can say that, is it fellas?

– What’s that meant to mean?

– I’m saying she’s paid her debt.

– The man she stabbed might argue with that.

– If she’d stabbed him two years earlier, she’d have been too young to have it on her permanent record and we wouldn’t be having this discussion.

– You think she was being abused?

– I think we’ve all got history, Sergeant. That all I’m saying.

– Shall we get back to the events of last night? You said there were five people present, is that correct?

– Not quite, there were six people. five of them, including me, were playing cards.

– Who were they?

– Myself, Li and of course Billy Sinclair were at the table with two other players. Yakky was somewhere behind me, watching.

– Who were the other two?

– I don’t know their names. One of them was the Bumper.

– And the final man?

– He was the guy who wasn’t meant to see the sucker.

– And for the benefit of the tape?

– But not for you, eh?

– Just tell us what you mean, Doctor Slidesmith.

– And we’re back to the italics. There’s an old saying about poker: if you can’t see the sucker, it’s you.

– So, this guy was the sucker?

– He was meant to be, well, we all were. Aside from Billy of course and the Bumper.

– Doctor Slidesmith, for the benefit of the tape, would you explain what the term Bumper means.

– Let’s suppose we three were having a game of poker, and Constable Barker is sitting there with a royal flush. That’s the top hand, Constable in case you don’t know, as good as it gets, cannot be beat. Only problem is the pot is next to nothing. You’ve got the best hand possible but all it’s going to get you is loose change. What would you do, Constable?

– When it’s my turn to bet I raise as high as I can?

– Why not tell him why you’re shaking your head, Sergeant Wade?

– The thing is Barker, if you make a big raise you’re telling people you have something worth betting on. So, unless they’re holding something pretty good, they’ll just fold.

– So, what you need is a Bumper. Let’s say you ask your friend Sergeant Wade here—oh, now don’t look like that, I’m sure he’s lovely—you ask Sergeant Wade to keep bumping up the stakes for you, a little bit at a time. You don’t need to raise at all, with each round you just put in enough to stay in the game.

Now, of course, I don’t know you’ve made this arrangement. I’m just seeing two players betting cautiously, as if they’re sitting on moderately good cards. So, I keep on playing, and if I’m a sucker, I don’t notice that the pot’s growing fat on my money.

That can go on for quite a while. Particularly if I’m holding what looks like a decent chance, the big casino sitting on a flush, say, or the dead man’s hand. And bad players quite often bet on mediocre cards, especially if they’ve put a lot in the pot already.

– What are-

– The big casino is the ten of diamonds, Constable. The dead man’s hand is two eights and two aces.

– Well, well Sergeant Wade, it sounds like you know a bit more than just the rules.

– Who was the sucker?

– I told you I don’t know. He was a bloody awful card player though. He even had a lucky charm.

– A lot of people have lucky charms.

– People either have lucky charms or skill. I’ve yet to see a poker player with both. Anyway, not only did he have a lucky charm … he tapped it against the table when he had a good hand.

– He had a tell.

– Dozens. He had more give-aways than Father Christmas.

– And you don’t know who he was?

– Never seen him before.

– And the other man, the Bumper?

– Never seen him either. Barely saw him when he was there if you know what I mean.

– No, I don’t.

– He was good at blending into the background. He was like a coat of beige paint.

– Come in… For the benefit of the tape, WPC Gillian Web has entered the room at three thirty-seven a.m.

– Can I speak to you outside for a moment?

– Pausing interview at three thirty-eight.

– Interview with James Slidesmith, re-commencing at three fifty-nine a.m. Doctor Slidesmith, does the name Matthew Dolan mean anything to you?

– Nothing.

– It seems Mister Dolan was the sucker. One of the Doctors at the trauma unit thought he recognised him. They pulled up his medical records and his widow has just confirmed ID. You were right, two men are dead.

– It wasn’t much of a deduction. He’d lost a lot of blood before the ambulance got there.

– A fair amount of that blood was found on Mister Miller’s hands and clothing. Substantial amounts on Ms Chang as well.

– Li was beside him when the bottle went in. Sit near a served artery and your dry-cleaning bills get out of hand.

– You told me Mister Miller was sitting behind you. He was covered in blood but you weren’t.

– Yakky jumped in to do some first aid and I stayed out of the way.

– You we’re happy to let him bleed? I thought you were a Doctor.

– Doctor of psychology. I leave the organic stuff to other people.

– People like Mister Miller.

– He knows more about first aid than I do.

– So, after Mister Dolan was stabbed you stepped aside while Mister Miller gave first aid. What time was this?

– I couldn’t say exactly. I’d estimate a little after midnight.

– You called the ambulance?

– That’s right.

– The dispatcher’s log records the time of your call as twelve thirty-seven a.m. That’s more than a little after midnight. Why the delay?

– It took me a while to find a phone.

– You didn’t have a phone with you?

– No.

– What about Mister Miller or Ms Chang?

– Yakky and I didn’t take our phones. Billy Sinclair didn’t allow mobile phones at his table. Rules of the game. Both our phones are back in my flat. Why don’t you call the search team you’ve got there, they’ll confirm it.

– Ms Chang?

– Li was at the table so I assumed she wasn’t holding a mobile either.

– You assumed?

– She was helping to stem Mister Dolan’s blood loss. It wasn’t the time to ask if she had a phone I might borrow.

– So, you sat and watched?

– No, I went through Billy Sinclair’s pockets. I figured he’d still have his phone on him, it being his table and all.

– And did he?

– Yeah, it was in the back pocket of his trousers. Last one I checked because he’d landed on his back and I had to roll him over to get to it.

– Searching Mister Sinclair’s dead body didn’t trouble you at all?

– All the troubles I’ve had over the years have been handed to me by the living not the dead.

– Billy Sinclair must have had a lot of pockets if it took you thirty minutes to go through them.

– It took a couple of minutes. But his phone was locked, so even after I found it I couldn’t use it. I tore round the house looking for a landline.

– You looked around the whole house?

– Yeah. That’s why your forensic team’s going to find my prints all over the place.

– Did you find a landline?

– No. In the end I ran out the house and started banging on doors. No one wanted to answer.

– Why not?

– I’m guessing Billy wasn’t a very neighbourly person. When you start interviewing people, I think they’ll tell you he wasn’t too considerate about keeping the noise down and wasn’t too pleased if people complained. I burst out of his house at gone midnight and started shouting the odds. It took a while to find someone willing to talk to me.

– So, you’re at a table where a man has just had an artery served. While he’s spraying blood over Mister Miller and Ms Chang, you conduct a body search and a body roll, on a man who’s just been shot. And yet your hands are totally … clean.

– Again: good use of italics.

– You’re not as funny as you think, or as clever. Three pairs of black latex gloves were found in your jacket pocket. Care to explain that?

– I’m a tattooist, I use latex gloves when I work. Black’s the favoured colour because they hide smears of  blood and ink. It saves upsetting squeamish clients.

– And you took three pairs to Billy Sinclair’s house because?

– I ride a nineteen seventy-eight Sportster. When you ride a machine getting on for forty years old, you expect to be fixing things by the side of the road from time to time. Latex gloves keep my hands … clean.

– Did you wear a pair of these gloves when you searched the body?

– No.

– I think you did. I think that’s why your hands don’t have any blood on them. Or any powder burns from the shot gun.

– I didn’t need to put gloves on, and when you get the lab reports, they’ll tell you my prints are all over Billy Sinclair’s phone. He took both barrels right between the eyes. He’d have been dead before he landed and dead people don’t tend to bleed. The mess was behind him, it wasn’t dripping into his pockets, it was dripping down the wall. The reason there’s no powder burns on my hands is simpler still. I didn’t fire the gun.

– When WPC Web asked me to step outside a moment ago she didn’t just inform me that Dolan was dead. She told me the team currently at Sinclair’s property reported finding a pair of black Latex gloves, with blood on them.

– Cool Hand Luke.

– What?

– Bad poker players, guys that remember winning once but forget a dozen losses, they have a favourite film. It’s either The Cincinnati Kid or Cool Hand Luke. With you it’s Cool Hand Luke, the bit where Paul Newman’s got a handful of bugger all and bluffs his way into a win. You can only bluff certain people at certain times. And, Sergeant, your bluffs are as clear as glass.

– So, tell me what happened.

– We’d been playing for about an hour and a half. In my experience that’s when the sharks come out to play and feeding time starts. Most players can’t play well for that long, they think they can but they’re wrong.

– So?

– So, I started cranking it up a little. Since I’d made the Bumper, I kept my eye on him. I couldn’t spot the signal he was getting to start upping the pot but I could see when he started betting and when Billy held back. Dolan was building up the pot quite nicely. So was Li. They were both losing money hand over fist.

– That bothered you?

– Li works for me, I know what I pay her and I know what she can’t afford to lose. Once she’d lost all her stake money, and that was more than a month’s earnings, Billy said he’d open a line of credit. That bothered me, a lot. It bothered Yakky too.

– Does he have the hots for her?

– Yakky’s not as mean as he looks, he’s got a weakness for lost souls. They bring out his maternal side.

– What happened?

– I told Li she’d do well to fold her cards and call it a night. Billy reminded her how much she’d just tipped into the pot and said it would be a shame to give it up without a fight.

– How much was in the pot at that point?

– Just short of three thousand. Of that Billy had put in less than two hundred. I’d largely coasted it but Dolan and Li had followed the Bumper and had both put in about a kay.

– You thought that was enough?

– It’s never enough if you stand to win. I don’t know what Billy had but I was holding David, Alexander, Julius and Charles.

– What-

– He means he had four kings, Constable.

– I was happy to let the hand carry on. I win, I keep the pot and use a chunk of it to pay off any debt Li might be about run up with Billy. If I’m feeling greedy I just buy the debt and stop it from her wages. Either way it’s in my interest to keep the pot going.

– Yakky, doesn’t know what I’m thinking and tells Li to walk away. Billy doesn’t like him butting in and tell him to shut it. Li is getting pissed off at me and Yakky, for telling her what to do. She tells both of us she can take care of herself and then tells Sinclair she’ll take the credit. Billy takes out this address book, he handles it with a certain flair, pale blue leather and obviously very expensive. Then he pulls out a fountain pen, opens the book at C and, very carefully, writes Li’s name down.

The games still on. Three more rounds, by now its big money just to stay in and Dolan’s nerve finally breaks. He folds then the bumper bows out and I tell Billy I’ll see him.

– And you nail him with your picture show?

– Yeah. He is not a happy bunny at this point. Yakky puts his oar in again and tells Li she should walk away, again. Billy tells him to shut the fuck up. The atmosphere is not what you’d call pleasant. Little-Boy-Beige sitting all alone starts getting a bit jittery and drops his cards. Trouble is they land face up and Dolan sees what he’s been betting against for the last twenty minutes.

– And it looks wrong?

– Very wrong, Mister Bump was holding nothing. Dolan was a lousy player but he wasn’t green. He twigged he’d been set up. He looks at the Bumper’s cards then at Billy and it’s obvious all hell is about to break loose. I should have just walked away there and then.

– Why didn’t you?

– The pot. There was over seven grand on the table by then. And it was mine.

– Dolan didn’t see it that way?

– No. To be fair, he didn’t know who was who at that point. As far as he could tell, everyone at that table was in on the trick. I go to take my winnings and he stands up and tells me to keep my hands off. I tell him okay and back off, but he’s working himself into a state. There was bottle of Scotch on the table, best Hollywood traditions and all that. Dolan grabs it, smashes it on the edge of the table, then walks around to Billy calls him a cheating piece of shit.

– What are your people doing all this time?

– My people?

– Mister Miller and Ms Chang.

– Me and Yakky were having a lad’s night out playing some cards. Li being there was a surprise. They’re not my people.

– Alright, so what were Mister Miller and Ms Li doing?

– Li was trying to edge away from the table. Yakky was behind me, so I couldn’t say what he was doing. Probably bricking it, same as me.

– And Billy?

– He was laughing. Laughing at the sucker. It didn’t do anything to improve the situation.

– If Dolan’s the one holding the broken bottle how did he come to get cut?

– Billy and Dolan were to my right. The Bumper was on my left, putting him almost opposite them. And he wasn’t only bumping, he was playing body guard. That’s partly what tipped me off that he was on Billy’s pay role. I couldn’t see Billy Sinclair having people in his drum and not having a heavy at hand.

– The way you describe him, this Bumper doesn’t sound like a heavy.

– Well, pulling a gun lent weight to his point of view.

– So, tell me, how is it Dolan ends up bleeding out with a chunk of glass in his neck and Billy Sinclair gets a face full of shot from his own man?

– As I say, the Bumper’s a smallish guy but the gun he’s holding makes up for that. He leans across the table, over all that money, and tells Dolan to put the bottle down. Dolan does as he’s told. He puts the bottle on the table, moves slow, keeps his hands where Bumper can see them. He wasn’t stupid.

When Billy stands up, the avuncular river-boat-gambler act is over. He sucker-punches Dolan in the ribs, folds him in two, then takes hold of the bottle. Dolan was doubled over with his head almost on the table. Billy grabs his hair, I think he was planning to give him a few scars to remember the evening by.

I’m pretty sure he didn’t mean to kill him. But Dolan was panicking and thrashing about. He twisted at the wrong moment. Instead of his face, the bottle goes into his neck. That’s where Li picked up most of the blood stains. It was like a hose pipe. A fair amount of it goes over the Bumper too.

Dolan’s still thrashing about and, by chance, grabs the barrels of the gun. I expect Bumper just tugged on reflex, only his finger’s on the trigger. Boom, he’s unemployed. And very unlikely to get a reference.

– So, it was all a big mistake?

– That how it appeared to me. But what does it matter? It’s too late to say sorry, they’re both dead.

– Then what?

– When Billy got shot he went over backwards and let go of Dolan’s hair. Dolan slides off the table and that’s when Yakky started doing his Florence Nightingale act. We didn’t notice what he’d done to his knee until later.

– And the Bumper, and you?

– Neither of us moved for a second. Rabbits in the headlights, you know? Then Bumper looks at what’s left of his boss and starts moving again. Once he’d got his wiggle on I unfroze too, but I didn’t do anything other than watch him for a moment. For all I knew he was about to reload.

– But he didn’t?

– No. He pulled out a handkerchief and tried to wipe the gun down. I don’t know how well he did it. Then he dropped it on the floor and started stuffing my bloody winnings into his pockets, when they were filled he stuffed the rest down his shirt front.

– And you let him?

– He didn’t look like he’d be easily dissuaded at that point. Anyway, once I was happy he wasn’t about to start putting the witnesses away I was more concerned with finding a phone.

– That was when you went through Billy’s clothes?

– No. At first, I was looking around the room for the landline that didn’t exist. I didn’t think of checking Billy’s body until I saw Bumper go over to him and take that fancy blue address book out of his pocket.

– And this Bumper character disappeared?

– I heard the front door slam.

– So, he just left, covered in blood, carrying seven large in cash?

– Yep. All the cash … and Billy’s little blue book.

– We’ve yet to find anyone to corroborate this story. None of Mister Sinclair’s neighbours report seeing the man.

– If you had Billy Sinclair for a neighbour I expect you’d keep your curtains closed too. That’s why it took me so long to make the nine-nine-nine call, remember? No one wanted to put their head outside their door.

– Mister Miller’s story differs substantially from yours.

– Word of advice Sergeant Wade, one card player to another: some people are harder to bluff than others.

– Okay, tell me again-

– I’d liked to take a break

– I’m sorry?

– I said I’d like to take a break. I’ve cooperated fully. I’ve answered all your questions. I’ve listened to your veiled accusations and I’ve done all that without a lawyer being present. Now, I want a break and a cup of tea.

– We’ve nearly done here and I think-

– I don’t care what you think. I have a right to remain silent and if I don’t get a cup of tea that’s what I’m going to do. Then I might exercise my right to legal representation.  And you see, Sergeant Wade, if that happens it’s likely to ruin the delightful rapport you and I have. Once I start dealing with an up-right and conscientious member of our great legal system we lose the intimacy, you see? Things, once revealed, may have to sit out there in the cold light of judicial scrutiny.

– Are you refusing to answer any more questions?

– Yes, unless they relate to tea.

– Okay. Constable, nip out and get us some teas eh? See if you can scare up some biscuits too, I’m starving. For the benefit of the tape, Constable Barker has left the room. Interview suspended at four forty-three a.m.

– And then there were two.

– You know something Doctor? You’re full of shit.

– Now the tape’s not running, we could drop the formalities. Why not just call me Doc? You could drop the italics then.

– The papers are going to love you. All this clever-clever talk and call-me-Doctor patter is going to go down a storm in the press gallery. But I’ll tell you something: juries don’t like smartarses. Neither do judges. If you’re lucky, with good behaviour, you’ll be out in under twenty. If you’re lucky.

– Twenty years for calling an ambulance? That seems harsh. What do you think they’ll give Yakky for administering first aid?

– I see it less as first aid, more as interfering with a crime scene. Was slicing himself open in the process part of the plan, bit of a sympathy ploy?

– Plan?

– I’ll tell you what I’m looking at Doctor. I’m looking at a room with three people in it, one of them with a history of putting a knife into somebody. Two of these three are covered in blood and just happen to work for the third. There’s a baize covered table in the room, playing cards scattered all over the shop and two dead bodies on the floor. All the markings of a high stakes poker game gone very, very wrong. All expect the money, which isn’t there. What I’m not seeing is hide nor hair of this mysterious Bumper who vanished, pausing just long enough to take the money and wipe any prints off one of the murder weapons of course. While he was doing that, your man Yakky manages to kneel on the broken bottle. And, because we can’t lift reliable prints off a pile of glass fragments, that destroys any evidence of just who used it to kill Dolan.

– That’s what you’re seeing is it?

– It is. I think the only Bumper there last night was Ms Chang. You and your little crew went over to Billy Sinclair’s with the intention of skinning him alive. Only you over played your hand and underestimated the dangers of taking money off villains. Or maybe you didn’t underestimate them and that’s why Mister Miller was there along with a shot gun. In case it went sour, to use your words. Now, the three of you are up to your ankles in blood. So, while Billy’s bleeding out, you gather up the money and come up with this cock and bull story about needing to scour the neighbourhood for a phone. Only you’re not looking for a phone, you’re looking to hide the money somewhere so you can collect it later.

– Can you see this?

– Your hand?

– Yeah, my hand. Notice something?

– It’s trembling, you starting to worry Slidesmith?

– The story I told you is as genuine as your fake Rolex, Sergeant. Think about that. When real players see another player pick up a card and get the shakes, they know it’s time to fold.

– Meaning?

– You tremble when the danger’s past. All the adrenaline as nothing to do, so it wanders round your veins and jangles your nerves. When a player picks up a card and trembles, it’s because he’s got the card he needs. He’s relieved, not worried.

– What have you go to be relieved about?

– You didn’t mention the blue address book. You see, Sergeant Wade, players, real players, don’t talk about tells, or know the fancy nick names for the cards and they don’t talk about luck. What they do is remember all the times they win and forget all the times they’ve lost. And they lose a lot. And that costs a lot. And the minute I saw you, I knew the only way you’d ever see the sucker at the table, was if someone handed you a mirror.

We’ll stick with the story about the Bumper but let’s add a twist. Maybe he didn’t run away with the money and the blue leather address book. Maybe I took the blue book. Billy had written down my apprentice’s name in it and I really didn’t want her name connected to a dead north London villain, not in writing. And maybe, being the curious sort, I spent a moment flipping through that book.

There were a good few names. people owing Mister Sinclair money, or favours in lieu. One of those names was Wade. Wade DC, to be exact, next to some very big numbers. DC? Darren Colin Wade? Dave Charles Wade? Who could know? Then guess what? I find my interviewing officer is a Detective Sergeant Wade. And DS Wade knows the silly names losers give to playing cards, talks about tells and thinks he has a talent for bluffing. So, I’m faced with a man who talks like a piss poor card player and wears a watch worth three kay. That he pretends is fake. So, I wonder—and please set that tape rolling again any time you like—if DC might stand for Detective Constable. Of course, that would mean DS Wade has been in Billy Sinclair’s pocket since before he was promoted. That would mean DS Wade has been losing money for quite a while. And that begs the question, where does a man who has on-going gambling debts to a local villain find the money to buy a Rolex? A Rolex he tells people is fake. I believe you, about juries not liking smartarses. Now, believe me; they like bent coppers even less.

– Good luck proving any of this Doctor Slidesmith.

– Oh dear, back to the italics are we? I don’t really need to proof it though, do I? I don’t even need to plant the-seed-of-doubt, because it’s there already, in someone’s head. I’m not the only one who can tell a genuine Rolex from a copy, and you can bet I’m not the only one to wonder about it.

If Billy Sinclair’s little blue book, as described on that tape over there, should turn up on someone’s desk, certain wheels might start to grind powerful small. Better it’s not found, better it stays lost, along with all the money.

– And do you think this Bumper character is likely to keep it somewhere safe, where it’s not likely to be found?

– Oh, I’m sure of it. I’m also sure that when DC Barker comes back with our tea, we’ll resume the interview. I’m also sure that, for the benefit of the tape, Mister Miller, Ms Chang and my good self will be praised for our attempts to save the unfortunate Mister Dolan. And then we’ll all walk out of here; free and clear.

And Sergeant Wade, when I say free and clear, I’m not talking italics.

 

THE END

Fahrenheit Press are publishing Russell’s full-length novel, NEEDLE SONG on 30th April 2018 which, like this short story, features James Slidesmith.

Needle Song cover

 

Spending the night with a beautiful woman would be a good alibi, if the body in the next room wasn’t her husband.

Doc Slidesmith has a habit of knowing things he shouldn’t. He knows the woman Chris Rudjer meets online is married. He knows the adult fun she’s looking for is likely to be short lived. And when her husband’s killed, he knows Chris Rudjer didn’t do it.

Only trouble is the police disagree and no one wants to waste time investigating an open and shut case.

No one except Doc.

Using lies, blackmail and a loaded pack of Tarot cards, Doc sets about looking for the truth – but the more truth he finds, the less he thinks his friend is going to like it.

Enjoy!

Russell Day

Russell Day was born in 1966 and grew up in Harlesden, NW10 – a geographic region searching for an alibi. From an early age it was clear the only things he cared about were motorcycles, tattoos and writing. At a later stage he added family life to his list of interests and now lives with his wife and two children. He’s still in London, but has moved south of the river for the milder climate.

Although he only writes crime fiction Russ doesn’t consider his work restricted. ‘As long as there have been people there has been crime, as long as there are people there will be crime.’ That attitude leaves a lot of scope for settings and characters. One of the first short stories he had published, The Second Rat and the Automatic Nun, was a double-cross story set in a world where the church had taken over policing. In his first novel, Needle Song, an amateur detective employs logic, psychology and a loaded pack of tarot cards to investigate a death.

Russ often tells people he seldom smiles due to nerve damage, sustained when his jaw was broken. In fact, this is a total fabrication and his family will tell you he’s has always been a miserable bastard.

 

#Events at @SoTLibraries #StokeonTrent

Hi all!

Just sharing the latest news from Emma, at City Central Library, regarding upcoming events. If you are local (or localish) please do support them if you can.

Many thanks to all who came to Postcard Poets. It was a very enjoyable morning, and fantastic to see so many people there. A big thanks to City Voices for supporting the event.

Dave Reeves, one of the poets from that event, has sent me a link to a poem that he scribbled whilst on the train home, using leaflets from the library and from the train station. If anyone would like to take a look, you can see it here:

http://www.textician.co.uk/news

There’s a reminder about the Poets, Prattlers and Pandemonialists event which takes place at City Central Library on Friday 18 May. There’s also news of the next 6X6 Reading Café, for which submissions are now open. If you’ve thought about submitting previously but haven’t yet given it a go, why not try now?

Finally, I’ve received details from colleagues in Staffordshire Libraries of a circus-themed poetry event and workshop for adults – it sounds like great fun! Do take a look at the attached details if this is something that would interest you.

All the best

Emma

Poets, Prattlers and Pandemonialists

Friday 18 May, 7.30pm

City Central Library, Hanley

Cost: £3 including refreshments

What happens when three poets meet up in a pub and decide to put on a show? Join nationally-acclaimed poets Dave Pitt, Emma Purshouse and Steve Pottinger as they come together to plot their path to fame and fortune – will they be distracted by beer and scratchings? Will they put the world to rights? Creative performance poetry at its very best – may contain language!

Contact City Central Library to book your place

6X6 Reading Café

6x6 June

Tuesday 12 June, 7pm

City Central Library, Hanley

Cost: free

Six writers…six readings…six minutes each. Join us for the ever-popular 6X6 Reading Café, where local authors read and promote their work. The submissions window is now open; if you’d like to find out more about the café, or how to submit, take a look at the 6X6 blog:

https://6x6writingcafe.wordpress.com/

Contact City Central Library to book your free place

I’ve been to all but the very first one of these and it’s always a lovely evening. Looking forward to this one! 🙂

Tel: 01782 238455

Email: central.library@stoke.gov.uk

 

Library event May

Contact details…..

Emma George

Senior Librarian: Outreach, Engagement and Information

Libraries and Archives

Housing and Customer Services

City of Stoke-on-Trent 

City Central Library     Bethesda Street     Hanley    Stoke-on-Trent     ST1 3RS

t 01782 236177   e emma.george@stoke.gov.uk

stoke.gov.uk