Silent Lies #BlogTour @KatCroft @bookouture #BookReview

I am over the moon to be taking part in Kathryn Croft’s Silent Lies blog blitz! 🙂 🙂 🙂 

Silent Lies - Blog Blitz

My review…..

Wow!

The prologue certainly grabbed my attention and that was it, I was hooked!

Mia is trying to move on since her husband, Zach, committed suicide five years previously. She’s a likeable character and you can’t help but feel for her. She is raising their daughter, Freya, and has since qualified as a counsellor. She is also in a new relationship with Will, but it still a doting daughter-in-law to her late husbands parents, who adore their Granddaughter.

When Alison turns up on her doorstep as a new client and seems to have known Zach, things start to unravel. She’s an odd character and she starts to make Mia question the past. Did Zach have an affair with his student, Josie? Did he commit suicide?

The chapters alternate between Mia at the present time and Josie from five years ago. I couldn’t wait to find out what this Alison thought she knew.

It’s a tense read and at times frightening as Mia seeks the truth. And that ending!!! Woah, I never saw that coming! Absolutely gobsmacked!

Brilliantly written, as always. I’m a big fan of Kathryn Croft!

Silent Lies cover

Description: 

‘Your husband didn’t kill himself.’

Five years rebuilding your life. Five words will destroy it again.

Mia Hamilton lived the perfect life with her husband, university teacher Zach, and their two-year-old daughter. But everything changed when Zach committed suicide on the same night one of his students vanished. 

Five years later, just when Mia is beginning to heal, stranger Alison walks into her life, saying her husband didn’t kill himself. 

Fragile, slight Alison leads Mia on a path into Zach’s past, and Mia begins to think she never really knew her own husband. As the secrets revealed get darker, Alison becomes harder to read, and Mia starts to wonder – why is Alison so keen to help?

And then a piece of the puzzle appears in an impossible place, and Mia has to ask, is she losing her mind, or should she be afraid for her life?

An absolutely unputdownable psychological thriller about obsession and buried secrets, with a brilliant twist. Fans of The Girl on the TrainBehind Closed Doors, and Gone Girl will be hooked from the very first page. 

Amazon Links:        

UK 🇬🇧 http://amzn.to/2wpL1It 

  US  http://amzn.to/2vWyXLr

Author Bio:

Kathryn-Croft-author

Kathryn Croft is the bestselling author of five psychological thrillers, and to date has sold over one million copies of her books. The Girl With No Past spent over four weeks at number one in the Amazon UK chart and her other novels, Behind Closed Doors, The Stranger Within and The Girl You Lost all reached number one in the psychological thriller charts.

She has just completed her sixth psychological thriller, which is due for publication on 25th October 2017.

After six years teaching secondary school English, Kathryn now writes full time and has a publishing deal with Bookouture, as well as foreign rights deals in thirteen different countries.

Having always been an avid reader, Kathryn believes in the power of words to entertain, teach and transform lives. She is also a firm believer in following your dreams and says anything is possible if you work hard enough and never give up!

Kathryn lives in Guildford, Surrey with her husband, their little boy and two cats.

 Author Social Media Links:

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

Twitter: https://twitter.com/KatCroft

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/authorkatcroft/

Website: www.kathryncroft.com

Previous posts on Chat About Books featuring Kathryn Croft and her books…..

The Girl With No Past by Kathryn Croft

While You Were Sleeping by Kathryn Croft *Review* @KatCroft @bookouture #BlogTour

My 5* reads of 2016…..

#FlashbackFriday with @RSinclairAuthor @Dchandlerauthor @writermels @keefstuart @CPhilippou123 @mredwards @KatCroft

 

THE CABINET OF LINGUISTIC CURIOSITIES A Yearbook of Forgotten Words by Paul Anthony Jones @paulanthjones @HaggardHawks @eandtbooks @alisonmenziespr #ForgottenWords

I am thrilled to be today’s stop on Paul Anthony Jones’s THE CABINET OF LINGUISTIC CURIOSITIES A Yearbook of Forgotten Words blog tour!

CLC blog tour poster.indd

This book is just fascinating and I think you will agree that it is beautiful…..

The Cabinet of Linguistic Curiosities

I love the word on my Birthday (12th October) – 

love-light (n.) a romantic glimmer in a person’s eyes; an infatuation 🙂

Some of the words are absolutely hilarious, such as the word on my friend Gayle’s Birthday (30th October) – 

panshite (n.) a state of panic, confusion, or uproar (LOL!)

& on 15th December – scurryfunge (v.) (which is now my favourite word ever!) Meaning – to hastily tidy a house

I sat around our table with my husband and two teenage children, flicking through this wonderful book and in between laughing we were very impressed with the history behind each word. I will be purchasing a few copies for Christmas presents this year. It’s just brilliant!

Excerpt…..

The word for 25th October…..

polyanthea (n.) a literary collection, an anthology

Geoffrey Chaucer died on 25 October 1400. Chaucer’s written work includes a verse retelling of Troilus and Cressida, English translations of works by renowned Latin and French scholars and philosophers, and a non-fiction account of the workings of an astrolabe, an elaborate mechanical device used by navigators and astronomers. But it is for his Canterbury Tales that he is obviously best known today: an anthology of twenty-four tales related by a group of pilgrims en route to Canterbury to visit the shrine of Thomas Becket. An anthology is literally ‘a collection of flowers’. The word derives from the same root – the Greek for ‘flower’, anthos – as words like dianthus and chrysanthemum. But this isn’t the only book that treats its contents as ‘flowers’ in a literary garden:
• florilegium (n.) Latin for ‘flower-gathering’, florilegium dates from the 1600s and refers to what the Oxford English Dictionary calls ‘a collection of the flowers of literature’

• polyanthea (n.) from the Greek for ‘many flowers’, polyanthea has been used since the early 1600s to refer to a choice collection of poems or literary works

• pomander (n.) originally a container of scented flowers used to freshen clothes, pomander was also used to refer to a choice collection of prayers or poems in the sixteenth century

• spicilegy (n.) from the Latin for an ear of corn, a spicilegy is a literal ‘harvest’ of literary extracts

• sylva (n.) from a Latin word meaning ‘tree’, sylva came to refer to a treatise on horticultural matters in the seventeenth century, and from there any choice collection of written work

Who knows where each day will lead you?

Open The Cabinet of Linguistic Curiosities on any day of the year: you might leap back in time, learn about linguistic trivia, follow a curious thread or wonder at the web of connections brought to you by popular language blogger Paul Anthony Jones.

Within its pages you will discover a treasure trove of language, with etymological quirks and connections for every day of the year.

PAUL ANTHONY JONES is something of a linguistic phenomenon. He runs @HaggardHawks Twitter feed, blog and YouTube channel, revealing daily word facts to 39,000 engaged followers. His books include Word Drops (2015) and The Accidental Dictionary (2016). His etymological contributions appear regularly, from the Guardian to the Telegraph, Buzzfeed to Huffington Post and BBC Radio 4.

“Brilliant for anyone interested in the effervescent oddness of English” Stig Abell on Word Drops

He lives in Newcastle Upon Tyne and is available for all types of word-nerdery.

Paul Anthony Jones’s Amazon Author Page

Enjoy!

Christmas Cookie #Giveaway Baked by #author Michele Gorman @MicheleGormanUK

Cookie giveaway

How lovely is this giveaway! Who doesn’t love cookies and Christmas books!?

Win 4 dozen homemade Christmas cookies from Sunday Times bestselling author Michele Gorman, aka Lilly Bartlett! 

Enter to WIN 4 dozen Christmas cookies baked by the author! Unlike poor Lottie in Christmas at the Falling-Down Guesthouse, she’s a keen cook who grew up baking every Christmas with her mum – dozens and dozens (and dozens!) of cookies to fuel the family through the season. This year, she’ll be baking for YOU! 

The giveaway is global and the winner will be randomly selected on November 1st. To enter, sign up for Michele’s/Lilly’s newsletter HERE (around 3x per year, you can unsubscribe easily at any time and your details will never be shared).

Good luck!

Lily Bartlett gif

Out tomorrow!

For more details and to buy your copy…..

Don’t miss the upcoming blog tour…..

Christmas Blog tour

Sofa, So Good! Me Life Story by @ScarlettMoffatt @BlinkPublishing #BookReview

Scarlett Moffatt

My review…..

I don’t read many autobiographies (I should read more), but I couldn’t resist this one as I think Scarlett Moffatt is such a lovely character. I have to admit, I haven’t watched much of Gogglebox, but I did really warm to her when she was on I’m A Celebrity. I absolutely love that programme! I love Ant & Dec and the contestants amaze me every year as there is no way you would get me out there with them spiders or eating gross things!! Scarlett was a very deserving winner.

I’ve seen a few comments such as ‘how can a 20 odd year old have enough life experience to write an autobiography?’ and I must admit I did wonder myself, but Scarlett proves that you don’t need to be 80 to have led an interesting life already. Sofa, So Good! Me Life Story is a heart-warming, honest, modest, inspirational and totally hilarious life story (so far!). I have laughed so much throughout. I could hear Scarlett’s voice in my head as though we were sat having a coffee whilst she told me her stories.

I’m in awe of Scarlett’s strength and determination not to let bullies, health and anxiety problems stand in the way of her dreams. I had no idea she had been through such difficult times. It just goes to prove that we should always be kind as we never know what someone might be going through.

I have given this book to my 15 year old daughter to read as I think she will relate and I know she will be inspired.

Even if you know nothing about Scarlett Moffatt already, you will love her after reading this book.

I love how close Scarlett and her family are as it reminds me of me and mine. We’re all a bit daft and love nothing more than just spending time together. I can’t relate to being an only child for 15 years before my sister arrived though!

I also loved the random facts at the beginning of each chapter. Brilliant!

Absolutely loved it from the first page to last and highly recommend to everyone!

Many thanks to the publisher for my exclusive bloggers edition.

For more info and to buy your copy…..

Enjoy!

The Stories She Tells #BlogTour @LK_Chapman #Extract @emmamitchellfpr

Today I have the pleasure of being one of three stops on LK Chapman’s The Stories She Tells blog tour! 🙂 

Make sure you check out the other posts on the tour, if you haven’t already…..

The Stories She Tells banner

Extract…..

Two

Emily and her husband Andy lived in an old Victorian terrace, which they’d stripped back to the brick and then done most of the renovations themselves. In fact, Michael and Sadie had helped out a few times with the decorating in exchange for as much beer and takeaway pizza as they could manage. Personally, Michael hated the cutesy country cottage look that they’d replaced the peeling wallpaper and woodchip with, but he liked Emily and Andy well enough, even though they were really Sadie’s friends, not his. Emily had been Sadie’s closest friend at university, and he knew that made it even more painful that Emily had recently had the news Sadie was so desperately hoping for. It was late by the time they finished eating and Sadie went off to help Emily clear up in the kitchen, so Michael found himself left at the dining table with Andy. A small, quiet man with a mop of dense, dark hair and thick eyebrows, Andy had never been somebody Michael found it easy to talk to. In fact, most of the time Andy seemed quite content to be in the shadow of Emily, who was far more personable and sometimes even spoke for him. However, they managed to keep up some small talk for a minute or so, and then Michael found himself asking the question he probably least wanted to hear the answer to. ‘So,’ he said, ‘you looking forward to being a dad?’ Andy looked a little unsure. ‘Yeah,’ he said, ‘I mean, kind of scared too. I don’t really know what to expect.’ Michael was about to speak but he noticed Andy was giving him an odd look. ‘What?’ Michael said. ‘What is it?’ ‘I just remembered… you must already have a bit of experience of it.’ Michael laughed. ‘I never have anything to do with kids,’ he said. ‘I have a little nephew, but I don’t see very much of him – my sister doesn’t live round here.’ Andy frowned, ‘I… uh, sorry, I must have got mixed up,’ he said. Michael began to feel uneasy. He wished he could drop the whole conversation, but he knew he’d feel troubled until he understood what Andy was talking about. ‘Mixed up about what?’ Andy began to look intensely uncomfortable, but he must have realised he couldn’t get away without some sort of explanation so he tried his best to give one. ‘Emily said something about you having a baby with an ex-girlfriend,’ he said, ‘but I must have heard her wrong.’ He quickly got up and started clearing the remaining glasses from the dining table while Michael watched him in astonishment, his skin beginning to prickle. Rae, he thought to himself, remembering his ex-girlfriend for the first time in years. He’s talking about Rae.

The Stories She Tells

Blurb…..

When Michael decides to track down ex-girlfriend Rae who disappeared ten years ago while pregnant with his baby, he knows it could change his life forever. His search for her takes unexpected turns as he unearths multiple changes of identity and a childhood she tried to pretend never happened, but nothing could prepare him for what awaits when he finally finds her.
Appearing to be happily married with a brand-new baby daughter, Rae is cagey about what happened to Michael’s child and starts to say alarming things- that her husband is trying to force her to give up her new baby for adoption, that he’s attempting to undermine the bond between her and her child, and deliberately making her doubt her own sanity.
As Michael is drawn in deeper to her disturbing claims he begins to doubt the truth of what she is saying. But is she really making it all up, or is there a shocking and heartbreaking secret at the root of the stories she tells?

Buying link…..

About the author…..

LKChapman

Louise Katherine Chapman was born in Somerset, UK, in 1986. She studied psychology at the University of Southampton and has worked as a psychologist creating personality questionnaires for a consultancy company. She has also spent some time volunteering for mental health charity Mind.
Chapman loves to write because she loves learning about people and she loves stories. A major turning point in her life was the day she realised that no matter how strange, cruel or unfathomable the actions of other people can sometimes be, there is always a reason for it, some sequence of events to be unravelled. Since then she is always asking “why” and “what if” and she is fascinated by real life stories capturing the strength, peculiarities or extremes of human nature.
LK Chapman’s first novel, Networked, was a sci-fi thriller but now she’s turned her attention to writing psychological suspense. She lives in Hampshire with her husband and young family, and enjoys walks in the woods, video games, and spending time with family and friends.

LK Chapman’s Amazon Author Page

Enjoy!

 

Shanghai Tang #BlogTour Mick Bose @sbasu13 #CharacterSpotlight @emmamitchellfpr

Today I have the pleasure of joining in with Mick Bose’s Shanghai Teng blog tour! 

Shanghai Tang Banner (1)

Many thanks to Emma Mitchell for the opportunity to take part.

Character Spotlight…..

Dan Roy

I originally intended Dan to be an English soldier. Specifically, an SAS man, who was trying to find his way out of trouble when a mission goes wrong. But I wanted him to tie in with an American corruption scandal, and a terrorist plot that originated there. It took time and some deliberation, but in the end, I envisaged Dan as the type of person who has spent most of his battling inner demons, like many soldiers do.
He was always going to have an American mother and an English father, but finally he became a fully American one. I saw his lonesome, brooding character as someone similar to an old western hero. The type who is disillusioned with the world, and wants to escape. I had a vision of a man on horseback, going through the deserts of western plains, with only the creaking of his saddle, and his ride, for company. Then I imagined him as a special forces soldier in the same situation. Left to die, and fighting back to clear his name.
Parts of Dan’s character was forged from my conversation with a soldier I met while waiting for the doctor. He was a Gurkha, in fact, and listening to his stories of training in the highest regions of the world – in Nepal, gave me an idea to base part of Dan’s childhood there. Gurkha’s have extraordinary fitness as they run up and down mountain slopes of the Himalayas. Dan did the same with his parents, who worked for United Nations, and were based at a Nepalese village while he was a teenager. Carrying a doko bag on his head, and scrambling up the hills in low oxygen environments was to give Dan a level of physical fitness far superior to his army contemporaries.
The training continued when he was chosen to join Delta Forces, similar to the SAS in England. Special Forces soldiers train very hard, and have fitness levels similar to professional athletes. They often speak foreign languages, and are skilled at surviving in extreme environments. Dan is fluent in Russian, and in his very first novella, he is based in a remote district of Afghanistan, where a Russian plot is discovered.
In the next novel, Hidden Agenda, Dan is in London, and he is betrayed.
He doesn’t spend too much time wallowing in the past however. Doing that would be counterproductive. He is a man of action after all, and as he falls into trouble, his natural instinct is to get out of it.
By the time “Shanghai Tang” comes around, Dan has faded to the far East. It is something he has always wanted to do. Personally, I have some experience of living in Asia, and that comes out strongly in the novel.
Dan is a physical man, and staying in shape came with his army training, the only training he’s ever had. In Hong Kong, it becomes natural for him to take up Muay Thai, or Thai Style Kick Boxing, similar to Tae Kwon Do. He enjoys the hard work, and slowly gravitates towards the underground blood sport tournament called the Kumite. It’s illegal, and the Triads are involved
in betting and collecting money. At first, Dan is treated with wariness, as there is no dearth of occidentals who join the Kumite, only to fail miserably. But Dan succeeds, and even gains himself a nick name – Ju Long, the Dragon Slayer.
To be honest, Dan finds peace in the far East. He is anonymous, a stranger in a sea of humanity. The open markets, the crowds, the culture, everything is easy to adapt to. People don’t judge him. Yes, he does fall into trouble, but he doesn’t go looking for it, it happens. He makes plenty of friends as well. There is a protective streak in his personality, and in the previous novel, The Tonkin Protocol, he helps a little girl called Maya.
In this book, his comes across a Chinese woman called Xei Wai-Ling. As he gets to know her, he finds out more about the Chinese way of life. He gets deeper into Chinese customs, how they think, in fact, how they run their country. Chinese have a very communal way of thinking. Individuals don’t really consider themselves separate from the rest of society. Privacy has a very different meaning in China.
As Dan discovers, there is a saying – An upright nail gets hammered down.
A lot of Shanghai Tang is about Dan getting to know the Chinese culture, and how he changes as a result of that experience.

Shanghai Tang cover

Blurb:

Shanghai Tang – a fast paced and heart pounding action thriller from the wildly popular Dan Roy Series. A betrayed assassin is thrust into the secret life of Shanghai’s underworld. Dan Roy, ex Black Ops legend, is becoming a new legend in the infamous blood fight tournament called Kumite, in Hong Kong. He is carving himself a new life, when disaster strikes his loved ones back home. He gets a phone call, and he cannot deny Kimberly Smith’s plea for help. Not only is Kim’s life endangered, the rumbles of discontent have reached the White House… A devastating secret lurks inside the glamorous night life of Shanghai. Political interests are involved, and soon Dan finds himself in a ruthless and twisted struggle for survival. He gets help from Xiao WeiLing, A Chinese woman who is on the run herself. An ambitious Triad boss is making a bid to overrule the whole of Shanghai, and Dan Roy has become a thorn in his side. The Triads have help from the police, and all eyes are on Dan – alone in a foreign land. Get prepared for a white-knuckle ride from Hong Kong and Shanghai to the corridors of power in Washington, as we follow Dan on a terrifying adventure that could be his last. Will Dan meet his nemesis in the murky underworld of Shanghai? Or will he fight to live another day?

Buy your copy…..

About the author:

Mick Bose

If you are enthralled by Lee Child, David Baldacci and mesmerised by Vince Flynn, then you will like Mick Bose. Mick Bose is a writer in London who can often be found jogging around the parks of Wimbledon, when he is not writing.

The popular and well received series about Dan Roy is a tornado of hard action and military secrets. A novella introducing Dan is now out, which is available to subscribers free at http://www.mickbose.com.

He also has a standalone thriller, Enemy Within, which is a nail biting, fast paced manhunt about a secret weapon that can change World War 1. It is also a gesture of respect to the 100-year anniversary of the Great War.

Mick Bose’s Amazon Author Page

Enjoy!

Her Last Secret #BlogBlitz Barbara Copperthwaite @BCopperthwait @bookouture #BookReview

I am absolutely over the moon to be taking part in Barbara Copperthwaite’s Her Last Secret blog blitz! 🙂 🙂 🙂  So chuffed to be able to share my review of this amazing book with you all!

Her Last Secret - Blog Tour

My review…..

Written Monday 18th September 2017

OH MY WORD! This is a fantastic read! It’s the most intense and terrifying countdown to Christmas Day I have ever experienced.

In Her Last Secret we meet the Thomas family. On the surface, a loving family enjoying Ben’s success. It just goes to show you never know what might be going on behind closed doors.

The story alternates between Christmas Day and the days on the run up to it. I knew something terrible had happened, but exactly what and why was drip fed to me along the way, making this an absolutely gripping read. I was totally immersed in the Thomas family’s story. I read it in 2 days which might not be unusual for some, but is quick for me.

Ruby seems like a typical teenager to start with, but it soon becomes obvious that her mental health is a serious issue. She has been the victim of bullying and although she comes across as a bit of a spoilt brat, I really sympathised with her. My son was bullied all through high school and I will never know what that really did to him. He has always struggled to make friends and this has a seriously negative impact on his self esteem. I pray to God that he finds the strength to move on and not allow his past to consume him, as Ruby does.

As a parent, I can empathise with Ben and Dominique, as it’s easy to assume our teenagers are just being their usual stroppy selves and it’s easy to miss what might really be going on. You never really know what’s going on in their heads, especially if they are reluctant to talk and constantly shut you out. I can totally see how frustrating it is for Ruby though, feeling like she’s not listened to when she tries to involve her parents. I try my hardest to always listen when my children need to talk, but there is no handbook and non of us are perfect parents. I get things wrong. A LOT!

Anyway, I’m rambling, sorry.

Dominique is a likeable character on the whole. I have no idea how I would cope with finding out my world is falling apart around me whilst trying to keep a smile on my face in the hope of making Christmas special still, despite being desperately unhappy. She does it mostly for the sake of Mouse (Amber) her youngest, as she doesn’t want her to remember Christmas in any negative way. Mouse is the most lovely character. She’s a beautiful little girl who loves to hide in her wardrobe with her ted, torch and a book. She’s very confused why Ruby no longer wants to spend any time with her and is often left disappointed when her mother seems disinterested in anything she has to say. She doesn’t understand the heart-break her mother is facing. She seems quite used to her Dad not being around much though.

Ben is a much less likeable character. His greed and selfishness have landed him, his colleagues and family in a right mess. When things start catching up with him he isn’t left with many options.

This is a very emotional read. It sometimes made me smile, but also made me feel sad, angry and shocked. I did cry at the end! Outstanding, I highly recommend!

Many thanks to the author for my ARC of Her Last Secret and for inviting me to a part of her fab blog blitz. It’s an honour.

Her Last Secret cover

Description:

There are some secrets you can never tell.

The last thing to go through Dominique Thomas’s head was the image of her teenage daughter’s face and her heart lifted. Then the shot rang out.

They were the perfect family. Successful businessman Ben Thomas and his wife Dominique live an enviable life, along with their beautiful children; teenager Ruby and quirky younger daughter, Mouse.

But on Christmas Day the police are called to their London home, only to discover a horrific scene; the entire family lying lifeless, victims of an unknown assailant.

But when Ruby’s diary is discovered, revealing her rage at the world around her, police are forced to look closer to home for the key to this tragedy.

Each family member harboured their own dark truths – but has keeping their secrets pushed Ruby to the edge of sanity? Or are there darker forces at work?

This dark, gripping psychological thriller will have you holding your breath until the very last page. Fans of Behind Closed Doors, Sometimes I Lie, and The Girl on the Train will be captivated.

Amazon Links:

UK 🇬🇬 http://amzn.to/2eOtJtF

US 🇬🇬 http://amzn.to/2jhcE0G

Author Bio:

Barbara Copperthwaite author picture

What people say about Barbara’s books:

“Will have you looking over your shoulder and under your bed… Original, gripping, with a deep psychological impact,” Sunday Mirror

“Enthralling, tense and moving,” Real People magazine

“Totally gripping, and scarily believable,” Bella magazine

Barbara is the author of psychological thrillers INVISIBLE and FLOWERS FOR THE DEAD. Both have been Amazon best sellers. She is also the author of THE DARKEST LIES, and her latest book HER LAST SECRET is out on 13 October.

Much of her success is thanks to her twenty-odd years’ experience as a national newspaper and magazine journalist. She’s interviewed the real victims of crime – and also those who have carried those crimes out. Thanks to people sharing their stories with her, she knows a lot about the emotional impact of violence and wrong-doing. That’s why her novels are dark, realistic and tackle not just the crime but its repercussions.

When not writing feverishly, she is often found hiding behind a camera, taking wildlife photographs.

Author Social Media Links:

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AuthorBarbaraCopperthwaite

Twitter: https://twitter.com/BCopperthwait

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/author_barbara_copperthwaite/

Website: http://www.barbaracopperthwaite.com

Previous posts on Chat About Books featuring Barbara Copperthwaite and her books…..

Q&A with author, Barbara Copperthwaite @BCopperthwait

#CoverReveal #HerLastSecret @BCopperthwait @bookouture

 

 

The Secret Mother by Shalini Boland @ShaliniBoland @bookouture #Extract

I am thrilled to be joining in with Bookouture’s campaign to fill social media with an extract from Shalini Boland’s The Secret Mother! 🙂 

Enjoy, and share if you can!

Many thanks to Kim Nash, at Bookouture, for the opportunity to take part.

The-Secret-Mother-Kindle.jpeg

Blurb…..

Tessa Markham comes home to find a child in her kitchen calling her ‘mummy’. But Tessa doesn’t have any children.

Not anymore.

She doesn’t know who the little boy is or how he got there.

After contacting the police, Tessa comes under suspicion for snatching the child. She must fight to prove her innocence. But how can she convince everyone she’s not guilty when even those closest to her are questioning the truth? And when Tessa doesn’t even trust herself…

A chilling, unputdownable thriller with a dark twist that will take your breath away and make you wonder if you can ever trust anyone again. Perfect for fans of Gone Girl, The Girl on the Train and The Sister.

Extract…..

THE SECRET MOTHER

By Shalini Boland

Chapter One The street lamps flicker, illuminating the grey pavement mottled with patches of dirty snow and slick black ice. Slushy puddles hug the kerb, cringing away from the hissing, splashing car tyres. It takes all my concentration to keep my balance. My hands would be warmer if I jammed them into my coat pockets, but I need them free to steady myself on walls, fences, tree trunks, lamp posts. I don’t want to fall. And yet would it really be so terrible if I slipped on the ice? Wet jeans, a bruised bum. Not the end of the world. There are worse things. Far worse things. It’s Sunday: the last exhale of the week. That uncomfortable pause before Monday, when it all starts up again – this lonely pretence at life. Sunday has become a black dot on the horizon for me, growing larger each day. I’m relieved now it’s almost over and yet I’m already anticipating the next one. The day when I visit the cemetery and stand above their graves, staring at the grass and stone, talking to them both, wondering if they hear my inane chatter or if I’m simply talking into the empty wind. In burning sunlight, pouring rain, sub-zero temperatures or thick fog I stand there. Every week. I’ve never missed a Sunday yet. Sleet spatters my face. Icy needles that make me blink and gasp. Finally, I turn off the high street into my narrow road, where it’s more sheltered and the wind less violent. A rainbow assortment of overflowing bins lines my route, waiting for collection tomorrow at some ungodly pre-dawn hour. I turn my face away from the windows where Christmas tree lights wink and blink, reminding me of happier Christmases. Before. Almost home. My little north London terraced house sits halfway along the road. Pushing open the rusted gate, I turn my face away from the neglected front garden with its discarded sweet wrappers and crisp packets blown in from the street, now wedged among long tussocks of grass and overgrown bushes. I thrust my frozen fingers into my bag until they finally close around a jagged set of keys. I’m glad to be home, to get out of the cold, and yet my body sags when I open the door and step into the dark silence of the hall, feeling the hollow of their absence.
At least it’s warm in here. I shrug off my coat, kick off my boots, dump my bag on the hall table and switch on the light, avoiding my sad reflection in the hall mirror. A glass of wine would be welcome about now. I glance at my watch – only 5.20. No. I’ll be good and make a hot chocolate instead. Strangely, the door to the kitchen is closed. This strikes me as odd, as I always leave it open. Perhaps a gust of wind slammed it shut when I came in. I trudge to the end of the hall and stop. Through a gap in the bottom of the door I see that the light is on. Someone’s in there. I catch my breath, feel the world slow down for a moment before it speeds back up. Could I have a burglar in my house? I cock my ear. A sound filters through. Humming. A child is humming a tune in my kitchen. But I don’t have a child. Not any more. Slowly I pull down the handle and push the door, my body tensing. I hardly dare breathe. Here before me sits a little boy with dark hair, wearing pale blue jeans and a green cable-knit jumper. A little boy aged about five or six, perched on a chair at my kitchen counter, humming a familiar tune. Head down, he is intent on his drawing, colouring pencils spread out around an A4 sheet of paper. A navy raincoat hangs neatly over the back of the chair. He looks up as I enter the room, his chocolate-brown eyes wide. We stare at one another for a moment. ‘Are you my mummy?’ the little boy asks. I bite my bottom lip, feel the ground shift. I grasp the counter top to steady myself. ‘Hello,’ I say, my heart suddenly swelling. ‘Hello. And who might you be?’ ‘You know. I’m Harry,’ he replies. ‘Do you like my picture?’ He holds the sheet out in front of him, showing me his drawing of a little boy and a woman standing next to a train. ‘It’s not finished. I haven’t had time to colour it in properly,’ he explains. ‘It’s lovely, Harry. Is that you standing next to the train?’ ‘Yes.’ He nods. ‘It’s you and me. I drew it for you because you’re my mummy.’ Am I hallucinating? Have I finally gone crazy? This beautiful little boy is calling me his mummy. And yet I don’t know him. I’ve never seen him before in my life. I close my eyes tight and then open them again. He’s still there, looking less confident now. His hopeful smile has faltered, slipping into a frown. His eyes are now
a little too bright. I know that look – it’s the one that precedes tears. ‘Hey, Harry,’ I say with false jollity. ‘So you like trains, huh?’ His smile returns. ‘Steam trains are the best. Better than diesels.’ He scrunches up his face in disgust and blinks. ‘Did you come here on the train? To my house?’ ‘No. We came on the bus. I wish we did come on the train, the bus was really slow. And it made me feel a bit sick.’ He lays the sheet of paper back on the counter. ‘And who did you come with?’ I ask. ‘The angel.’ I think I must have misheard him. ‘Who?’ ‘The angel brought me here. She told me that you’re my mummy.’ ‘The angel?’ He nods. I glance around, suddenly aware that Harry might not be the only stranger in my house. ‘Is she here now?’ I ask in a whisper. ‘Is there someone else here with you?’ ‘No, she’s gone. She told me to do some drawing and you’d be here soon.’ I relax my shoulders, relieved that there’s no one else in my home. But it still doesn’t help me solve the problem of who this little boy is. ‘How did you get into the house?’ I ask, nervously wondering if I might find a smashed window somewhere. ‘Through the front door, silly,’ he replies with a smile, rolling his eyes. Through the front door? Did I leave it open somehow? I’m sure I would never have done that. What’s going on here? I should call someone. The authorities. The police. Somebody will be looking for this child. They will be frantic with worry. ‘Would you like a hot chocolate, Harry?’ I ask, keeping my voice as calm as possible. ‘I was going to make one for myself, so—’ ‘Do you make it with milk?’ he interrupts. ‘Or with hot water? It’s definitely nicer with milk.’ I suppress a smile. ‘I agree, Harry. I always make it with milk.’ ‘Okay. Yes, please,’ he replies. ‘Hot chocolate would be lovely.’ My heart squeezes at his politeness. ‘Shall I carry on colouring in my picture,’ he says, ‘or shall I help you? Because I’m really good at stirring in the chocolate.’ ‘Well, that’s lucky,’ I reply, ‘because I’m terrible at stirring in the chocolate,
so it’s a good thing you’re here to help me.’ He grins and slides off the stool. What am I doing? I need to call the police right now. This child is missing from somewhere. But, oh God, just give me ten minutes with this sweet little boy who believes I’m his mother. Just a few moments of make-believe and then I’ll do the right thing. I reach out to touch his head and immediately snatch my hand back. What am I thinking? This boy has to go back to his real mother; she must be paralysed with worry. He smiles up at me again and my chest constricts. ‘Okay,’ I say, taking a breath and blinking back any threat of tears. ‘We’ll do the chocolate in a minute. I’m just going to make a quick phone call in the hall, okay?’ ‘Oh, okay.’ ‘Carry on with your drawing for a little while. I won’t be long.’ He climbs back up onto the stool and selects a dark green pencil before resuming his colouring with a look of serious concentration. I turn away and pad out to the hall, where I retrieve my phone from my bag. But instead of dialling the police, I call another number. It rings twice. ‘Tess.’ The voice at the other end of the line is clipped, wary. ‘Hi, Scott. I need you to come over.’ ‘What? Now?’ ‘Yes. Please, it’s important.’ ‘Tessa, I’m knackered, and it’s hideous out there. I’ve just sat down with a cup of tea. Can’t it wait till tomorrow?’ ‘No.’ Standing by the hall table, I glimpse Harry through the doorway, the curls of his fringe flopping over one eye. Am I dreaming him? ‘What’s the matter?’ Scott says this the way he always says it. What he really means is, What’s the matter now? Because there’s always something the matter. I’m his damaged wife, who’s always having some new drama or make-believe crisis. Only this time he’ll see it’s something real, it’s something not of my making. ‘I can’t tell you over the phone, it’s too weird. You have to come over, see for yourself.’ His sigh comes long and hard down the phone. ‘Give me twenty minutes, okay?’
‘Okay. Thanks, Scott. Get here as soon as you can.’ My heart pounds, trying to make sense of what’s happening. That little boy in there says an angel brought him. He says I’m his mummy. But he’s not mine. So where on earth did he come from? I take a breath and go back into the kitchen. The air is warm, welcoming, cosy. Nothing like the usual sterile atmosphere in here. ‘Can we make hot chocolate now?’ Harry looks up with shining eyes. ‘Of course. I’ll get the mugs and the chocolate. You open that drawer over there and pass me the smallest pan you can find.’ He eagerly does as I ask. ‘Harry,’ I say. ‘Where are your parents, your mummy and daddy?’ He stares at the pans in the drawer. ‘Harry?’ I prompt. ‘They’re not here,’ he replies. ‘Is this one small enough?’ He lifts out a stainless-steel milk pan and waves it in my direction. ‘Perfect.’ I nod and take it from him. ‘Can you tell me where you live?’ No reply. ‘Did you run away from home? Are you lost?’ ‘No.’ ‘But where’s your house or flat? The place you live? Is it here in Friern Barnet? In London? Close to my house?’ He scowls and looks down at the flagstone floor. ‘Do you have a last name?’ I ask as gently as I can. He looks up at me, his chin jutting out. ‘No.’ I try again, crouching down so I’m on his level. ‘Harry, darling, what’s your mummy’s name?’ ‘You’re my new mummy. I have to stay here now.’ His bottom lip quivers. ‘Okay, sweetie. Don’t worry. Let’s just make our drinks, shall we?’ He nods vigorously and sniffs. I give his hand a squeeze and straighten up. I wish I hadn’t had to call Scott. And yet I need him to be here when I ring the police. I can’t deal with them on my own, not after what happened before. I’m dreading their arrival – the questions, the sideways glances, the implication that I might have done something wrong. I haven’t done anything wrong, though. Have I?
And Harry… he’ll be taken away. What if his parents have been abusive? What if he has to go into foster care? A thousand thoughts run through my mind, each worse than the one before. But it’s not my place to decide what happens to him. There’s nothing I can do about any of it, because he’s not mine. I don’t have a child. Not any more.

THE SECRET MOTHER
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What readers are saying about Shalini Boland:

‘Read in one sitting from 9pm last night until 2:15 am. I literally could not put it down!!!! The story line and the twists and the way it’s written just draws you in completely and you have to know where it’s going I couldn’t read fast enough… absolutely addictive and brilliant and an end I didn’t see coming. This is one book you have to read and it gets 5 huge stars from me!!!!’ Goodreads reviewer, 5 stars

‘What can I say? Just wow. I’m usually never surprised by an ending, but this one blew me away. I am totally in shock and think I’ll have a hangover from this book for a while. A great read that keeps you on your toes until the very last word.’ Stacey Harrell, Goodreads 

‘If anyone can have me reading until 2am and finishing a book in less than 48hrs in the school holidays it’s this author… massive five stars from me.’ Sarah Mackins, UK Crime Book Club, 5 stars

‘The ending of this book blew me out of the water, you won’t be able to put this down.’ For the Love of Books, 5 stars

‘The plot is gripping and once you’ve started reading, you have to keep on reading, you need to know how the story will end.’ Bits About Books, 5 Stars
 
… one of the most chilling reads of the year for me.’Ajoobacats Blog, 5 Stars

‘This book should come with a warning… make sure you have enough time to read it in one-sitting because as soon as you’ll pick it up, you won’t be able to put it down!’ Bookishly Ever After, 5 stars
 
‘This is a brilliant psychological thriller. In fact, it’s one of the best I’ve read. It is full of suspense and has more twists and turns than a fairground ride.’ Jackie Roche, UK Crime Book Club, 5 Stars

‘I thought I knew the direction this story was going go. Then the jaw dropping moment happened!… unputdownable!’ Goodreads Reviewer, 5 Stars

‘Once again, Boland has managed to blow my mind with all the twists and turns… an outstanding explosive read!’ Mello and June, 5 Stars

Shalini Boland

Chat About Books is 2 today! :-) #Blogiversary #Giveaway

Two years today.jpg

Chat About Books is 2 years old today! I can’t quite believe it!

I just want to say a big, huge thank you to all you lovely people who follow my little blog, read my posts, like my posts, share my posts and join in with giveaways etc. Also to everyone who nominated and voted for my blog in this years Annual Bloggers Bash Awards. Your support means more to me than you’ll ever know and I am so blessed to know you all!

To all the fabulous authors, publishers & book publicists, it is an honour to work with you all!

Giveaway…..

I haven’t yet decided on the prize exactly, but anyone who comments on this post will have their name put in the hat for the chance to win a surprise parcel.

Thank you! 🙂

Love

Kerry. x

The Visitors #BlogTour Catherine Burns @C_Burnzi #AuthorInterview #Giveaway @Legend_Press

I am delighted to be today’s stop on Catherine Burns’s The Visitors blog tour! 🙂

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Interview with Catherine Burns…..

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

I was born in Manchester, I studied law at Cambridge then worked in the City of London for several years. Later in life I became a university lecturer. I only recently started writing and The Visitors is my first novel. My book is about a lonely middle aged woman called Marion Zetland. She lives with her brother John in a crumbling mansion. Her brother is keeping a terrible secret down in the cellar of the house and Marion faces the moral dilemma of whether to expose it or protect her brother.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

I was inspired by several true life-crime stories – Josef Fritzl and Marc Dutroux. Also I have always been intrigued by the question of how far someone would go to protect a loved one, even if they did something really terrible.

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

There is one character in the book, I’m not saying who it is but I’ll be interested to see if they recognise themselves when they read it!

How do you pick your characters names?

I try to imagine what names their parents would pick!

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

I like to write a really quick first draft to get the story down then edit, edit, edit. I must have written twenty drafts of The Visitors. But once you get the first draft down the process doesn’t seem so daunting. Also, like Marion, I daydream a lot!

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Shirley Jackson Donna Tartt Joyce Carol Oates Anton Chekhov Thomas Mann

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

Mikhail Bulgakov author of The Master and Margarita to ask what it was like working in Stalinist Russia. It must be dreadful to write in fear that you might be killed or sent to a prison camp if you upset the authorities.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Yes I devoured books. I loved C.S. Lewis, but I also enjoyed stuff that was probably too old for me like Stephen King. Always been a big horror fan.

When did you start to write?

Not until I was over forty, never too late!

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

That would be sacrilege to change someone else’s book!

Is there a book you wish you had written?

Plenty! But I think it’s a bad idea to compare oneself to other authors; everyone needs to write their own story.

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

I wouldn’t!

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

Vronsky from Anna Karenina and we’d go for cocktails.

What are you working on right now?

I’m working on a thriller with a supernatural twist set in London.

Do you have a new release due?

Not yet.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

I haven’t had one yet but I am sure there will be champagne involved.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

https://www.facebook.com/cburnsbooks/

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

The Visitors cover

Publisher: Legend Press (3rd October 2017)

Perfect for fans of Paula Hawkins and Ruth Ware.

Marion Zetland lives with her domineering older brother, John in a decaying Georgian townhouse on the edge of a northern seaside resort. A timid spinster in her fifties who still sleeps with teddy bears, Marion does her best to shut out the shocking secret that John keeps in the cellar.

Until, suddenly, John has a heart attack and Marion is forced to go down to the cellar herself and face the gruesome truth that her brother has kept hidden.

As questions are asked and secrets unravel, maybe John isn’t the only one with a dark side.

Fancy winning yourself a paperback copy?

Just comment ‘Yes please’ on this post and I’ll pick a winner at random! (open until Saturday 14th October 2017)

Thanks in advance for joining in & Good Luck!

Not lucky enough to win…..

Buy your copy…..

Enjoy!