Chat About Books in Newcastle Life Magazine! #bookblogger

Hiya! I hope this finds you well.

I hope you don’t mind me sharing this with you all, but my book blog has been featured in a local magazine 🙂

A couple of months ago local author (to me), John Pye, sent me a message about a fabulous feature he’d done in Newcastle Life Magazine. He said that he’d mentioned me and my book blog to the editor, Laura Campbell, in the hope that I’d be interested in featuring in the magazine also. Obviously this was an exciting opportunity for me so I was put in touch with Laura, who is lovely by the way and very professional. I was asked for details about myself and how my book blog came about etc. I hope you’ll agree that Laura has put together a lovely feature…..

newcastle-life-magazine-feature

You can read the feature in full by clicking on this link (I’m on page 23, but please do have a look at what else we have going on locally) – Newcastle Life Magazine, Issue 4 

I’d like to also take this opportunity to say thanks to all of you lovely people who have supported my blog along the way. It really does mean the world! Every time you read, like and share it’s very much appreciated.

To my fellow book bloggers, you are all awesome!

I really hope my posts help, just a little bit, towards the authors and publishers success. I’m totally in awe of writers and the hard work they put in to the awesome stories we can all enjoy!

If you’ve loved a book please do leave a review. It doesn’t have to be a long one, but it really will be appreciated and it can make all the difference.

Why not send the author a Facebook message and/or Tweet. They will be very happy to hear from you, I’m sure.

Thanks again for reading!

Kerry. X

Ps – In case you missed it, check out my interview with John Pye here – Q&A with author, John Pye

Lost In Static by Christina Philippou *Review* @CPhilippou123 @urbanebooks

Publisher: Urbane Publications (15th September 2016)

I was very excited to learn that Christina Philippou, fellow book blogger, was releasing a novel of her own! Even more excited when my request to read it was approved by the publisher via Netgalley.

I knew I was going to like Lost In Static from the very first page.

We follow the stories of four fresher students as they embark on their first year at University.

I liked Ruby, although the constant use of the word ‘mate’ was a bit much sometimes. I have known people who talk like that though. Ruby is a normal northern lass, a bit of a tom boy, into football and just wants to get on with University life. She soon falls for Callum though, which complicates things.

Callum has a secret which, if leaked, would seriously put the cat amongst the pigeons. I quite liked Callum’s character. He was very believable as a typical lad, making the most of his University experience.

Juliette also has a secret, one that really needn’t be though, in today’s society. However, not all families are as understanding and accepting as others. Juliette soon becomes firm friends with Ruby, but struggles with other relationships.

Yasmine is one on her own, I did not warm to her at all. She sets her sights on Callum so is obviously jealous of Ruby and she is determined to find out Callum’s secret, at any cost.

I haven’t been to University, so I can’t comment on the authenticity of the general behaviour of these teenagers, over their first few terms, but it did make me kind of hope that my children decide they don’t want to go!

I loved the way this book is written. Four different characters, writing to four different recipients about the same situations, but obviously from their own perspectives. It was a very refreshing and enjoyable read. Fast paced and full of suspense. Very cleverly written. It’s quite hard to believe that this is Christina’s debut novel. Needless to say, I’m looking forward to what she will write next.

Many thanks to Urbane Publications for my auto-approval status on Netgalley. I will be more than happy to recommend Lost In Static to anyone and everyone. It deserves every success.

You can buy your copy of Lost In Static HERE

Description (via AmazonUK):

Sometimes growing up is seeing someone else’s side of the story. Four stories. One truth. Whom do you believe? Callum has a family secret. Yasmine wants to know it. Juliette thinks nobody knows hers. All Ruby wants is to reinvent herself. They are brought together by circumstance, torn apart by misunderstanding. As new relationships are forged and confidences are broken, each person’s version of events is coloured by their background, beliefs and prejudices. And so the ingredients are in place for a year shaped by lust, betrayal, and violence… Lost in Static is the gripping debut from author Christina Philippou. Whom will you trust?

About the Author

Christina’s writing career has been a varied one, from populating the short-story notebook that lived under her desk at school to penning reports on corruption and terrorist finance. When not reading or writing, she can be found engaging in sport or undertaking some form of nature appreciation. Christina has three passports to go with her three children, but is not a spy. Lost in Static is her first novel.
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Added to my TBR list, September 2016…..

Direct from the author / publisher…..

 (e-book from Ralph Webster)

Near the edge of the Baltic Sea, in a small East Prussian town, lives a happy and prosperous family. The Wobsers are patriotic Germans and faithful Lutherans with four beautiful children: chatty Trude, fearless Lotte, careful Ilse, and precocious Gerhard. The decade-older sisters treat Gerhard as their little prince. He is the apple of his father’s eye. Then, one day in 1933, their world falls apart. They have been identified as Jews, a heritage never denied, but a religion never embraced.

This chilling true story follows the four Wobser siblings as they struggle to survive a Nazi regime intent on their extermination. Even those that manage to flee will find themselves without a home or country to call their own.

From Edinburgh to Shanghai, the Wobsers will travel the world in search of a place they belong. Author and historical chronicler Ralph Webster (a descendent of the Wobsers) deftly connects their story and survival to the struggles modern refugees face every day. In addition to serving as a fascinating piece of history, A Smile in One Eye: A Tear in the Other is a passionate call to arms for organizations and individuals to properly protect and help the world’s refugees.

 (mobi from David Ahern)

Suspense, mystery, action, a little romance and lots of laughs

Out-of-work actress Derry O’Donnell is young, talented, a teeny bit psychic … and broke. Spurred on by an ultimatum from her awesomely high-achieving mother, and with a little help from her theatrical friends, Derry embarks on a part-time career as Madame Tulip, fortune-teller to the rich and famous. But at her first fortune-telling gig – a celebrity charity weekend in a castle – a famous rap artist will die.

As Derry is drawn deeper into a seedy world of celebrities, supermodels and millionaires, she finds herself playing the most dangerous role of her acting life. Trapped in a maze of intrigue, money and drugs, Derry’s attempts at amateur detective could soon destroy her friends, her ex-lover, her father and herself.

Madame Tulip is the first in a series of Tulip adventures in which Derry O’Donnell, celebrity fortune-teller and reluctant detective, plays the most exciting and perilous roles of her acting life, drinks borage tea, and fails to understand her parents.

Fans of humorous mystery writers Janet Evanovich and Carl Hiaasen will love Madam Tulip.

Freshman Fourteen by [Rodgers, Beth] (kindle gift from Beth Rodgers)

Navigating the halls of Kipperton High should be easy for someone like Margot Maples. She’s smart, sweet, and ready to start fresh. But with her best friend moved away, she’s stuck wondering just how to fit in. Making her transition more difficult is Max, who always knows how to push her buttons, Walter, her geeky suitor, Cassie, the girl who seemingly has it all, and Peter, her first true crush. So, life doesn’t go just the way she hopes.

Full of teen drama and theater, Beth Rodgers’ foray into young adult literature captures the uncertainty of freshman year in the new novel, Freshman Fourteen.

If you are in the market ­for books about romance and the everyday annoyances that plague a teenage girl, look no further. It is a YA fiction book that will keep you riveted.

So, join Margot on a journey through the beginning of ninth grade – a time when your reputation is determined by the most trivial of matters, including where you eat, how many friends you have, and – most notably – who you kiss.

 (e-book from Nightingale Editions)

When Helena returns to her childhood home in Orkney, she is forced to face memories that she has spent half a lifetime running from. Her best friend, the charismatic Anastasia, disappeared after a swimming incident. But what really happened that night by the wrecks? An intense portrait of adolescent yearning and obsession.

 (Signed paperback from Christina Banach)

Fourteen-year-old twins Minty and Jess are inseparable. Maybe they bicker now and then, even crave a bit of space once in a while. But they have a connection. Unbreakable. Steadfast. Nothing can tear them apart. Until a family trip to the coast puts their bond in jeopardy. As Minty tries to rescue her dog from drowning she ends up fighting for her life. Will Minty survive? If she doesn’t, how will Jess cope without her? Only the stormy sea has the answer. Minty is a story of love, loss and coming to terms with consequences. It’s a spiritual tale that will linger in your mind long after you’ve read the final word.

Madam Tulip and the Knave of Hearts by [Ahern, David] (ebook from David Ahern)

“Madam Tulip! Actress, fortune-teller, psychic, sleuth!”

When out-of-work actress Derry O’Donnell moonlights as celebrity fortune-teller Madam Tulip in an English Stately home, she’s trying to make some cash.
Instead, she is drawn into an alien world of wealth, titled privilege and family secrets.

A countess once a chorus girl, a gambling earl and his daughters, a cultured and handsome art expert—all caught in a terrifying web of ghastly threats, murder and
abduction. As an aristocratic engagement party turns into a nightmare, Derry and her friend Bruce face the prospect of a gruesome and infamous death.

Madame Tulip and the Knave of Hearts is the second in a series of thrilling and hilarious Tulip adventures in which Derry O’Donnell, celebrity fortune-teller and
reluctant amateur detective, plays the most exciting and perilous roles of her acting life, drinks borage tea, and fails to understand her parents.

 (ebook from Kathleen Jowitt)

A new year at the University of Stancester, and Lydia Hawkins is trying to balance the demands of her studies with her responsibilities as an officer for the Christian Fellowship. Her mission: to make sure all the Christians in her hall stay on the straight and narrow, and to convert the remaining residents if possible. To pass her second year. And to ensure a certain secret stays very secret indeed. When she encounters the eccentric, ecumenical student household at 27 Alma Road, Lydia is forced to expand her assumptions about who’s a Christian to include Quaker Becky, bellsandsmells Peter, and bisexual Methodist Colette. As the year unfolds, Lydia discovers that there are more ways to be Christian, and more ways to be herself, than she had ever imagined. Then a disgruntled member of the Catholic Society starts asking whether the Christian Fellowship is really as Christian as it claims to be, and Lydia finds herself at the centre of a row that will reach far beyond the campus.

Brake Failure by [Brodie, Alison] (ebook from Alison Brodie)

“Is it too late to tell him you love him when you’re looking down the barrel of his gun?”

Ruby Mortimer-Smyth is an English debutante, destined for Lady’s Day at Ascot and taking tea at The Savoy. She knows the etiquette for every occasion and her soufflés NEVER collapse.

She is in control of her life, tightly in control … until fate dumps her down in Kansas.

Ruby believes that life is like a car; common-sense keeps it on the road, passion sends it into a ditch. What she doesn’t know is, she’s on a collision course with Sheriff Hank Gephart.

Sheriff Hank Gephart can judge a person. Miss Mortimer-Smyth might act like the Duchess of England but just under the surface there’s something bubbling, ready to explode. She’s reckless, and she’s heading for brake failure. And he’s not thinking about her car.

With the Millennium approaching, Ruby gets caught up in the Y2K hysteria. She joins a group of Survivalists, who give her a gun and advise her to stockpile basic essentials, such as gasoline and water-purifying tablets. So she bulk-buys Perrier, Gentleman’s Relish and macaroons.

Ruby, far from home, is making Unsuitable Friends and “finding herself” for the first time. She falls in with a gang of Hells Angels and falls foul of the law. At every turn, she comes up hard against Sheriff Hank Gephart, whose blue eyes seem to look deep into her soul. She desperately wants him but knows she can never have him.

She’s angry at the emotions he arouses in her. Pushed to her limit, she bursts from her emotional straightjacket.

As the clock strikes midnight of the new Millennium, she’s on a freight train with three million dollars, a bottle of Wild Turkey and a smoking gun.

What happened to Miss Prim-and-Proper? And why did she shoot Mr Right?

From Netgalley…..

Pub Date 27th October 2016

One warm spring evening, five teenagers meet in a local park. Only four will come out alive.
Six months after the stabbing of sixteen-year-old Deanna Barker, someone is coming after the teenagers of Stockleigh, as a spate of vicious assaults rocks this small community. Revenge for Deanna? Or something more?

Detective Eden Berrisford is locked into a race against time to catch the twisted individual behind the attacks – but when her own niece, Jess Mountford, goes missing, the case gets personal.

With the kidnapper threatening Jess’s life, can Eden bring back her niece to safety? Or will the people of Stockleigh be forced to mourn another daughter…?

A terrifying, compelling, police procedural which will thrill fans of Angela Marsons, Peter James and Rachel Abbott.

Purchased / downloaded…..

Who We Were Before by [Mercer, Leah] (Kindle first prime member freebie)

Zoe knows that it wasn’t really her fault. Of course it wasn’t. But if she’d just grasped harder, run faster, lunged quicker, she might have saved him. And Edward doesn’t really blame her, though his bitter words at the time still haunt her, and he can no more take them back than she can halt the car that killed their son.

Two years on, every day is a tragedy. Edward knows they should take healing steps together, but he’s tired of being shut out. For Zoe, it just seems easier to let grief lead the way.

A weekend in Paris might be their last hope for reconciliation, but mischance sees them separated before they’ve even left Gare du Nord. Lost and alone, Edward and Zoe must try to find their way back to each other—and find their way back to the people they were before. But is that even possible?

EVO Nation: EVO Nation Series: Book One (science fiction/ urban fantasy) by [CHAPMAN, K.J.] (Free download)

The government tortures her, her own kind use her, and she is learning the true meaning of ulterior motives. Teddie Leason has been dragged into the festering underbelly of the secretive world of EVO; a world about to be blown wide apart.

EVO are the next link in evolution, but with that title come the dangers of capture, torture, and experimentation. And with that threat come the need to survive, and a breed of EVO who are set to not only thrive, but rule.

Teddie has the fate of the EVO and Non-EVO world resting on her shoulders, and now, the reclusive teenager who couldn’t get upset without her unruly ability causing destruction, has to somehow embrace her gift to save her new friends and her new love.

Will the actions of one man fuel a suppressed, supremacist cult’s desire for war and vengeance, or will Teddie be strong enough to stop him? Should she stop him?

EVO Shift: EVO Nation Series: Book Two by [Chapman, K.J] (free download)

She killed him, but did it make a difference?

Her kind has been exposed, abused, and segregated, and now Teddie Leason is top of Britain’s most wanted list at just nineteen. Teddie has to decide whose side she is on, what she fights for, and whether it’s worth her life.

How can she protect the man she adores, the Uncle who has taken her under his wing, and her unfaltering friends, when she can barely take care of herself? Dealing with new power and a history that has long since been forgotten, has rendered the world’s most powerful EVO vulnerable and at risk.

When will she be dealt a winning hand? Could a clandestine, renegade group of EVO change not only her fate, but that of everyone affected by this unprecedented war? And how does Teddie fit in a world bracing for a shift of unfathomable magnitude?

Free to Be Tegan: Free from the cult...to find love, to be herself by [Grand, Mary]

Tegan, aged twenty seven, is cast out of the cult, rejected by her family and from the only life she has known. She is vulnerable and naïve but she also has courage and the will to survive. She travels to Wales, to previously unknown relations in the wild Cambrian Mountains.
This is the uplifting story of her journey from life in a cult to find herself and flourish in a world she has been taught to fear and abhor.
Guilt and shadows from her past haunt her in flashbacks, panic attacks and a fear of the dark. However she also finds a world full of colour, love and happiness she has never known before. The wild beauty of the hills, the people she meets and the secrets slowly revealed by the cottage all provide an intriguing backdrop to Tegan’s drama.
The novel is set in spring, a story of hope, new growth, of the discovery of self and the joy of living.

Enjoyed Maeve Binchy and Diane Chamberlain? You’ll love Free to Be Tegan

”Strong writing, insights, and secrets most of us do not understand flow form the pages of this readable novel.”- Grady Harp, Hall of Fame, Top 100 reviewer, Vine Voice

“This debut novel is a triumph.”

“Loved the book …. I was gripped and couldn’t put it down.”

“It was very thought provoking and emotional with lots of plot twists to keep you on your toes. I highly recommend this book.”

Little Kitty wouldn’t exactly call herself a cat burglar. She just likes to bring back the occasional gift for her humans… A lovely story for younger readers and adults alike – perfect for reading together. Beautifully illustrated by Catie Atkinson and designed by Rachel Lawston.

About the Authors:

Eight authors, one editor, one illustrator and one designer came together to produce this book, with all monies going to Alzheimer’s Research UK.

In The Midst Of Life (An Inspector Angel mystery Book 1) by [Silverwood, Roger]

Twenty years ago, a nurse in a hospital for the criminally insane was brutally and savagely murdered by a patient.

It later turned out that the patient had had his medication withheld by another nurse, who had been stealing and selling drugs for her own gain – and her subsequent disappearance triggers the beginning of a gruesome trail of enquiries.

Then the disgraced nurse’s sister arrives in Inspector Michael Angel’s office with news of a murder, and fears for her own safety.

With some mysterious clues – a dead woman wearing one stocking inside out, an American class ring, and two dead cats – and a lot of clever humour, Inspector Angel scrambles to find the killer in south Yorkshire.

Despite obstruction from the Chief Constable, the doggedly determined and charismatic Inspector Angel stubbornly ferrets out the suspects.

By relying on his eternally willing right hand man, and resorting to an unusual strategy, he manages to narrow the long list of suspects down.

But are his suspicions right?

And can he stop the killer before anyone else is cut down In the Midst of Life…?

‘In the Midst of Life’ is the first novel in the DI Michael Angel series.

Added to my wish list…..

  What Goes Around: A chilling psychological thriller by [Corbin, Julie]     

   Clever Deception: A Deception novella prequel to Tragic Deception by [Comley, M A, Prather, Linda S.]

The Gift: The gripping psychological thriller everyone is talking about by [Jensen, Louise] Stalking Jack the Ripper by [Maniscalco, Kerri]  The Diary Of A Serial Killer by [Killmaster, Tara] Candles and Roses: a serial killer thriller by [Walters, Alex]  

 

September wrap up…..

Hi all!

How was your September?

Here’s what’s been happening on Chat About Books, in case you missed anything…..

Q&A with author, Ralph Webster

Q&A with author, Laura Briggs

The Hummingbird’s Cage by Tamara Dietrich *Review*

Q&A with author, Catherine Byrne

#AskMeAnything with #bookblogger Christina Huber…..

The Devil’s Work by Mark Edwards *Review*

 **Blog Tour** Q&A with author, Simon Maltman #AChaserOnTheRocks 

Stormy Weather for Spooks

Christmas at the Little Village Bakery (Honeybourne Book 2) by Tilly Tennant *BLOG BLITZ*

Q&A with author, Christina Banach

The Loving Husband: You’d trust him with your life, wouldn’t you…? by Christobel Kent *Review*

 

A Cornish Christmas: A cosy Christmas romance to curl up with by the fire by Lily Graham *BLOG BLITZ* @Lilywritesbooks @bookouture

Happy Publication Day to Lily Graham and Bookouture!

a-cornish-christmas-kindle

Publisher: Bookouture (30th September 2016)

How gorgeous is that cover!

I’m over the moon to be able to treat you to Chapter 1 of this lovely book, which is released today.

Enjoy…..

A CORNISH CHRISTMAS

by Lily Graham

CHAPTER ONE

The Writing Desk

Even now it seemed to wait.

Part of me, a small irrational part, needed it to stay exactly where it was, atop the faded Persian rug, bowing beneath the visceral pulse of her letters and the remembered whisper from the scratch of her pen. The rosewood chair, with its slim turned-out legs, suspended forevermore in hopeful expectation of her return. Like me, I wondered if it couldn’t help but wish that somehow she still could.

I hadn’t had the strength to clear it, nor the will. Neither had Dad and so it remained standing sentry, as it had throughout the years with Mum at the wheel, the heart, the hub of the living room.

If I closed my eyes, I could still hear her hum along to Tchaikovsky – her pre-Christmas music – as she wrapped up presents with strings, ribbons and clear cellophane, into which she’d scatter stardust and moonbeams, or at least so it seemed to my young eyes. Each gift, a gift within a gift.

One of my earliest memories is of me sitting before the fire, rolling a length of thick red yarn for Fat Arnold, our squashed-face Persian, who languished by the warmth, his fur pearly white in the glow. His one eye open while his paw twitched, as if to say he’d play, if only he could find the will. In the soft light Mum sat and laughed, the firelight casting lowlights in her long blonde hair. I shut my eyes and took a deep breath, away from the memory of her smile.

Dad wanted me to have it: her old writing desk. I couldn’t bear to think of the living room without it, but he insisted. He’d looked at me, above his round horn-rimmed glasses, perpetual tufts of coarse grey hair poking out mad-hatter style on either side of his head, and said with his faraway philosopher’s smile, ‘Ivy, it would have made her happy, knowing that you had it. . .’ And I knew I’d lost.

Still it had taken me two weeks to get up the nerve. Two weeks and Stuart’s gentle yet insistent prodding. He’d offered to help, to at least clear it for me, and bring it through to our new home so that I wouldn’t have to face it. Wouldn’t have to reopen a scar that was trying its best to heal. He’d meant well. I knew that he would’ve treated her things reverently; he would’ve stacked all her letters, tied them up with string, his long fingers slowly rolling up the lengths of old ribbon and carefully putting them away into a someday box that I could open when I was ready. It was his way, his sweet, considerate Stuart way. But I knew I had to be the one who did it. Like a bittersweet rite of passage, some sad things only you can do yourself. So I gathered up my will, along with the box at my feet and began.

It was both harder and easier than I expected. Seeing her things as she left them should have made the lump in my throat unbearable, it should have been intolerable, but it wasn’t somehow.

I began with the drawer, emptying it of its collection of creamy, loose-leafed paper; fine ribbons; and assorted string, working my way to the heart of the Victorian desk, with its warren of pigeon holes, packed with old letters, patterned envelopes, stamps, watercolour brushes, and tubes of half-finished paint.

But it was the half-finished tasks that made the breath catch in my throat. A hand-painted Christmas card, with Santa’s sleigh and reindeer flying over the chimney tops, poor Rudolph eternally in wait for his little watercolour nose. Mum had always made her own, more magical and whimsical than any you could buy. My fingers shook as I held the card in my hand, my throat tight. Seeing this, it’s little wonder I became a children’s book illustrator. I put it on top of the pile, so that later I could paint in Santa’s missing guiding light.

It was only when I made to close the desk that I saw it: a paper triangle peeking out from the metal hinge. It was tightly wedged but, after some wiggling, I pried it loose, only – in a way – to wish I hadn’t.

It was a beautiful, vintage French postcard, like the ones we’d bought when we holidayed there, when I was fifteen and fell in love with everything en français. It had a faded sepia print of the Jardin des Tuileries on the cover, and in elegant Century print it read ‘[Century font writing] Carte Postale’ on the back.

It was blank. Except for two words, two wretchedly perfect little words that caused the tears that had threatened all morning to finally erupt.

Darling Ivy

It was addressed to me. I didn’t know which was worse: the unexpected blow of being called ‘Darling Ivy’ one last time, finding out she’d had this last unexpected gift waiting for me all along, or that she’d never finish it. I suppose it was a combination of all three.

Three velvet-tipped daggers that impaled my heart.

I placed it in the box together with the unfinished Christmas card and sobbed, as I hadn’t allowed myself to for years.

Five years ago, when she passed, I believed that I’d never stop. A friend had told me that ‘time heals all wounds’ and it had taken every ounce of strength not to give her a wound that time would never heal, even though I knew she’d meant well. Time, I knew, couldn’t heal this type of wound. Death is not something you get over. It’s the rip that exposes life in a before and after chasm and all you can do is try to exist as best you can in the after. Time could only really offer a moment when the urge to scream would become a little less.

Another friend of mine, who’d lost his leg and his father in the same day, explained it better. He’d said that it was a loss that every day you manage and some days are better than others. That seemed fair. He’d said that death for him was like the loss of the limb, as even on those good days you were living in the shadow of what you had lost. It wasn’t something you recovered from completely, no matter how many people, yourself included, pretended otherwise. Somehow that helped, and I’d gotten used to living with it, which I suppose was what he meant.

The desk wasn’t heavy. Such a substantial part of my childhood, it felt like it should weigh more than it did, but it didn’t and I managed it easily alone. I picked it up and crossed the living room, through the blue-carpeted passage, pausing only to shift it slightly as I exited the back door towards my car, a mint green Mini Cooper.

Setting the desk down on the cobbled path, I opened up my boot, releasing the back seats so they folded over before setting the desk on top, with a little bit of careful manoeuvring. It felt strange to see it there, smaller than I remembered. I shut the boot and went back inside for the chair and the box where I’d placed all her things; there was never any question of leaving it behind. On my way back, I locked up Dad’s house, a small smile unfurling as I noticed the little wreath he’d placed on the door, like a green shoot through the snow after the longest winter. It hadn’t been Christmas here for many years.

Back to my car, I squeezed the chair in next to the desk and placed the box on the passenger seat before I climbed in and started the engine. As the car warmed, I looked at my reflection in the side mirror and laughed, a sad groaning laugh.

My eyeliner had made tracks all down my face, leaving a thick trail into my ears, and black blobs on either side of my lobes so that I looked like I’d participated in some African ritual, or had survived the mosh pit at some death metal goth fest. With my long dark blonde curls, coral knitted cap and blue eyes, it made me look a little zombiefied.

I wiped my face and ears and grinned despite myself. ‘God, Mum, thanks for that!’ I put the car in gear and backed out of the winding drive, towards the coastal road.

Cornwall.

It was hard to believe I was back, after all these years.

London had been exciting, tiring, and trying. And grey, so very grey. Down here, it seemed, was where they keep the light; my senses felt as if they’d been turned up.

For a while, London had been good though, especially after Mum. For what it lacked in hued lustre, it made up for by being alive with people, ideas, and the hustling bustle. It was a different kind of pace. A constant rush. Yet, lately I’d craved the stillness and the quiet. So when The Fudge Files, a children’s fiction series that I co-wrote and illustrated with my best friend Catherine Talty, about a talking English bulldog from Cornwall who solves crimes, became a bestseller, we were finally able to escape to the country.

In his own way, Stuart had wanted the move more than I did; he was one of those strange creatures who’d actually grown up in London, and said that this meant it was high time that he tried something else.

In typical Stuart fashion, he had these rather grand ideas about becoming a self-sustaining farmer – something akin to Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall – and setting up a smallholding similar to Hugh’s River Cottage. The simple fact of it being Cornwall, not Dorset, was considered inconsequential. Which perhaps it was. I had to smile. Our River Cottage was called Sea Cottage (very original that), yet was every bit as exquisite as its namesake, with a rambling half acre of countryside, alongside rugged cliffs that overlooked the aquamarine waters of the Atlantic Ocean in the gorgeous village of Cloudsea with its mile-long meandering ribbon of whitewashed cottages with window frames and doors in every shade of blue imaginable, perched amid the wild, untamed landscape, seemingly amongst the clouds, tumbling down to the sea. It was the place I always dreamt about when someone asked me where I would choose to live if I could magically supplant myself with a snap of my fingers or be granted a single genie’s wish. Cloudsea. And now. . . now we lived here. It was still hard to believe.

So far our ‘livestock’ consisted of four laying hens, two grey cats named Pepper and Pots, and an English bulldog named Muppet – the living, slobbering and singular inspiration behind Detective Sergeant Fudge (Terrier Division) of The Fudge Files, as created by Catherine, Muppet’s official godmother.

Despite Stuart’s noble intentions, he was finding it difficult to come to terms with the idea of keeping animals as anything besides pets. Personally, I was a little grateful for that. We assuaged our consciences though by ensuring that we supported local organic farms, where we were sure that all the animals were humanely treated.

But what we lacked in livestock, Stuart made up for in vegetation. His potager was his pride and joy and even now, in the heart of winter, he kept a polytunnel greenhouse that kept us in fresh vegetables throughout the year. Or at least that was the plan; we’d only been here since late summer. I couldn’t imagine his excitement come spring.

For me Cornwall was both a fresh start and a homecoming. For the first time ever I had my own art studio up in the attic, with dove grey walls, white wooden floors, and a wall full of shelves brimming with all my art supplies; from fine watercolour paper to piles of brushes and paint in every texture and medium that my art-shop-loving heart could afford. The studio, dominated by the mammoth table, with its slim Queen Anne legs, alongside the twin windows, made it a haven, with its view of the rugged countryside and sea. One where I planned to finish writing and illustrating my first solo children’s book.

Now, with our new home and the news that we’d been waiting seven years to hear, it would all be a new start for us.

I was finally, finally pregnant.

Seven rounds of in vitro fertilisation, which had included 2,553 days, 152 pointless fights, five serious, two mortgages, countless stolen tears in the dead of the night in the downstairs bathroom in our old London flat, my fist wedged in my mouth to stem the sound, and infinite days spent wavering between hope and despair, wondering if we should just give up and stop trying. That day, thankfully, hadn’t come.

And now I was twelve weeks pregnant. I still couldn’t believe it. We hadn’t told Dad yet; I didn’t want to get his hopes up, or tempt fate; we’d played that black card before.

Our hopes. . . well, they’d already soared above the stars.

It was why I so desperately wished Mum were here now. It would have made all of this more bearable. She had a way of making sense of the insensible, of offering hope at the darkest times, when all I wanted to do was run away. I missed how we used to sit up late at night by the fire in the living room, a pot of tea on the floor, while Fat Arnold dozed at our feet and she soothed my troubled fears and worries – the most patient of listeners, the staunchest of friends. Now, with so many failed pregnancies, including two miscarriages, the memory of which was like shrapnel embedded in our hearts, so that our lives had been laced with an expectant tinge of despair, primed for the nightmare to unfold, never daring to hope for the alternative; we were encouraged to hope. It was different, everyone said so, and I needed to trust that this time it would finally happen, that we’d finally have a baby, like the doctors seemed to think we would. Stuart had been wonderful, as had Catherine, but I needed Mum really, and her unshakeable, unbreakable faith.

There are a few times in a woman’s life when she needs her mother. For me, my wedding was one and I was lucky to have her there, if luck was what it was, because it seemed to be sheer and utter determination on her part. It had been so important to her to be there, even though all her doctors had told us to say our goodbyes. I will never know what it cost her to hold on the way she did, but she did and she stayed a further two years after that. In the end, it was perhaps the cruellest part, because when she did go, I’d convinced myself that somehow she’d be able to stay.

But this, this was different. I needed her now, more than ever. As I drove, the unstoppable flow of tears pooling in the hollow of my throat, I wished that we could have banked those two years, those two precious years that she had fought so hard and hung on for, so that she could be here with me now when I needed her the most.

Well, this book now has to go on my reading list!

Many thanks to Kim at Bookouture for letting my join in with today’s Publication celebrations 🙂

A CORNISH CHRISTMAS by Lily Graham is out today – 30th September 2016

UK: http://amzn.to/2atWI7G

US: http://amzn.to/2azduwO

Nestled in the Cornish village of Cloudsea, sits Sea Cottage – the perfect place for some Christmas magic …

At last Ivy is looking forward to Christmas. She and her husband Stuart have moved to their perfect little cottage by the sea – a haven alongside the rugged cliffs that look out to the Atlantic Ocean. She’s pregnant with their much-longed for first baby and for the first time, since the death of her beloved mother, Ivy feels like things are going to be alright.

But there is trouble ahead. It soon emerges that Stuart has been keeping secrets from Ivy, and suddenly she misses her mum more than ever.
When Ivy stumbles across a letter from her mother hidden in an old writing desk, secrets from the past come hurtling into the present. But could her mother’s words help Ivy in her time of need? Ivy is about to discover that the future is full of unexpected surprises and Christmas at Sea Cottage promises to be one to remember.

This Christmas warm your heart and escape to the Cornish coast for an uplifting story of love, secrets and new beginnings that you will remember for many Christmases to come.

www.facebook.com/LilyRoseGrahamAuthor

www.twitter.com/Lilywritesbooks

https://lilygraham.net/

About Lily Graham

Lily has been telling stories since she was a child, starting with her imaginary rabbit, Stephanus, and their adventures in the enchanted peach tree in her garden, which she envisioned as a magical portal to Enid Blyton’s Faraway Tree. She’s never really got out of the habit of making things up, and still thinks of Stephanus rather fondly.

She lives with her husband and her English bulldog, Fudge, and brings her love for the sea and country-living to her fiction.

lily-graham

Blog tour: Alzheimers Research – Little Kitty by Caterina Longtail & co! @brookcottagebks @aruknews

thewritinggarnet's avatarThe Writing Garnet

littlekitty
This morning’s blog post is a rather special one as it extremely significant. As soon as I saw the information about this book, I knew I had to show my support in any way that I could, granted, not as much as the authors involved have!

All of the authors involved in ‘Little Kitty the Cat Burglar’ have donated their time free of charge and have written one chapter of the book each. All proceeds from the book will go to Alzheimers Research UK. You can find out more about the charity right here. The amazing authors involved are: Suzan Collins, Tottie Limejuice, Jo Wilde, JB Johnston, Lucy Rayner, Ros Lyons, Ann Bowyer and Tracy Terry. Together, they became known as Caterina Longtail!

Buying this cute book will not only give you a lovely bedtime story to read (for yourself or to a child!), it will also help to support a charity…

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The Loving Husband: You’d trust him with your life, wouldn’t you…? by Christobel Kent *Review*

The Loving Husband: You'd trust him with your life, wouldn't you...? by [Kent, Christobel]

(Kindle) Publisher: Sphere (7th April 2016)

(Paperback) Publisher: Sphere (1st September 2016)

This is going to be a difficult one to review because I haven’t loved it, but I haven’t disliked it, as such, either. Something was missing for me, but I can’t quite put my finger on what.

It starts where Nathan has moved his wife and two children back to his childhood home. They have bought a house in the middle of nowhere which is quite a culture shock compared to living in a busy city. One night, Fran wakes to find Nathan murdered, practically right outside their back door. It’s a brutal killing and naturally Fran is in shock. Who would want to kill her Nathan and why do the police seem to think it might be her? Why aren’t they really telling her anything?

As the story unfolds it becomes obvious that Fran might not have known her husband as well as she thought and how could he have been in bed with her that night at the same time as lying dead outside? Nothing adds up.

I did like the idea of this story, but it didn’t flow particularly well for me. I think it dragged a little bit to be honest. I also found the ending a bit of an anti-climax. I didn’t connect with any of the characters, which I don’t think helped.

The Loving Husband isn’t poorly written at all, but I can’t say that it had me gripped. It did interest me enough to read it to the end as I did want to know what happened, but it didn’t have the wow factor for me, unfortunately. Having said that, it’s only my opinion and I’m sure lots of other readers will love it! I’ll be interested to read other reviews.

Many thanks to the author and publisher for approving my request on Netgalley.

If you’d like to read it yourself and let me know your opinion you can buy a copy HERE

Description (via AmazonUK):

Fran Hall and her husband Nathan have moved with their two children to a farmhouse on the edge of the Fens – a chance to get away from London and have a fresh start.

But when Fran wakes one night to find Nathan gone, she makes a devastating discovery. As questions about her husband and her relationships start to mount, Fran’s life begins to spiral out of control.

What is she hiding from the police about her marriage, and does she really know the man she shared her bed with?

Maybe you have already read it. If so, what did you think? I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Q&A with author, Christina Banach

Hi all, today I have the pleasure of welcoming Christina Banach, author of Minty, to my blog.

I am very grateful to Christina for agreeing to answer my questions and also for sending me a beautiful signed paperback copy of Minty which I am looking forward to reading and reviewing 🙂

christina-banach

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

I’m a writer and former Headteacher living in the Kingdom of Fife, Scotland, with my husband and our two rescue dogs. I write young adult/crossover fiction. Some of the things I love are: writing (obviously!); spending time with my husband and dogs; being curled up with a good book; luxuriating in cake, scones and great food; being on or near the sea; chilling in front of the TV; going for long walks; having fun with friends and family; and enjoying nights at the theatre. Oh – did I mention chocolate? I love chocolate!

My book, Minty, is set in Fife and is a contemporary ghost story, told from the point of view of the ghost. It has described it as a cross between The Lovely Bones (without the grim murder!) and Ghost. I’m told that it’s a real weepy, but nevertheless has heart and warmth at its core. It tells the story of fourteen-year-old twins Minty and Jess who, although they sometimes bicker, are completely inseparable. Then a day trip to the coast puts their bond in jeopardy. As Minty tries to rescue her dog from drowning she ends up fighting for her life, a fight that results in drastic consequences for both sisters.

Minty was a Scottish Book Trust Teen’s Book of the Month, shortlisted for the SCBWI Crystal Kite Award and nominated for a Cybils Award.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

From everywhere: television and film, theatre and the news, and reading (fiction and non fiction). Or from observing the world, and mulling over a long-held opinion or belief. More than anything, though, it’s asking that all important question, what if?

Nevertheless, sometimes an idea can appear in a flash, as it did with my debut novel, Minty. During the night I thought I sensed my late father’s presence, after which, unable to get back to sleep, I sat in the sunroom contemplating what had actually happened. Whilst doing this I heard my dog panting and put out my hand to stroke her. Until it struck me – how could it be my pet? She’d died the month before.

That’s when Minty’s story came to me: the tale of a teenaged girl to whom the unimaginable happens. One that deals with universal themes such as love, family, grief, hope and redemption, but that also attempts to answer one of the big questions in life, namely, what happens to us after we die?

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

None of my characters are based on any one person. However, I’m sure that the characteristics and mannerisms etc of family, friends and aquaintances worm their way into my fiction. Plus, I’ve been known to observe strangers, eg in restaurants or on the train, and note down anything that piques my interest, to use later when crafting a story. I think, like most writers, I’m a bit of a magpie!

How do you pick your characters names?

Sometimes they simply pop into my mind, as was the case with Minty and her twin sister Jess. Other times I refer to my trusty book of baby names, or trawl though websites for suitable Christian names. For surnames, if one doesn’t suggest itself to me, I tend to use telephone directories or turn to websites.

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

Once I have an idea that won’t let go I start reading around it, making lots of notes. When I have enough information I brainstorm all the plot ideas that emerge and consider how I’ll mould these in the context of a three-act structure. I used to be a bit of a Pantser but the more I’ve learned about plot and structure the more I plot the bones of my story before I embark on the first draft. Nontheless, it’s a very basic structure and I’m not wedded to it. When it comes to the actual writing of the story, I maintain a detailed handwritten journal during each writing session but type the story straight on to the computer. However, if I get stuck I will revert to longhand to get me out of the mire. I tend to write several drafts before a book is finished – Minty took eight drafts to get to publication. Oh dear, that’s hardly my writing process in a nutshell, is it? Sorry but I could talk about this subject all day long!

Do you have a favourite author?

Gosh, that’s such a difficult question! I love so many authors, some of whom write for children and young adults and others who write adult fiction. While saying that, if I have to whittle it down to one then I’d say David Almond. If I hadn’t read his children’s novel, Skellig, I wouldn’t have written Minty. I had worked on adult fiction until I came across David’s book but was so capitivated by the style and content of the book that it made me wonder whether I could write for young people, too. I decided to give it a try and it was then that I found my voice. Actually, I owe him a debt of gratitude.

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

There are so many authors, past and present, that I would love to meet. However, in light of what I said above, my answer this question has to be David Almond. I’m going to the SCBWI BI conference in Winchester University this November where the man himself is giving a keynote speech. I honestly can’t wait for that! I hope to pluck up the courage to say ‘hello’ to him if I see him around the campus. As for what I would ask him, my first question should probably be ‘would you like a coffee?’, because by buying him a drink I’ll be able (in a very small way) to repay my debt to him and pick his writerly brain!

Were you a big reader as a child?

I read a fair bit when I was a child but, in all honesty, my voracious appetite for books only kicked in when I was in my twenties.

When did you start to write?

From early childhood I wrote stories and created my own comics. I also wrote short plays for my friends to perform. In my teens I turned to writing angst-ridden (and pretty awful!) poetry but once I went to university I stopped writing creatively. It wasn’t until many years later, when I was on sick leave from my headteacher’s post, that I picked up pen and paper and started writing again. Then the writing bug truly got hold of me. However, it was increasingly difficult to find the time to work on my novels so, eventually, I took a leap of faith and resigned from my job. I’ve been writing full-time ever since.

What are you working on right now?

At the moment I’m working on the fourth draft of COIRA, a young adult mystery set in the legendary village of Glencoe. It’s a complex and ambitious story which has involved a lot of research but I’ve fallen completely in love with writing it.

When can we look forward to a new release?

There’s no publication date, as yet, for my next book. Dare I say, ‘watch this space?’.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I love connecting with readers and have several online accounts to enable this. I can be contacted through my website, or on Twitter and Facebook. I can also be found on Pinterest and Instagram.

Here are the links to my social media accounts:

Website: www.christinabanach.com

Twitter: @ChristinaBanach

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/christina.banach.9

Pinterest: https://uk.pinterest.com/cbanachauthor/

Instagram: Christina Banach (can’t seem to transfer the link from my phone for this one. Sorry!)

Thank you for inviting me to feature on your blog, Kerry. It has been fun!

Many thanks for joining me, Christina. It has been a pleasure 🙂

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000026_00038]

Publisher: Three Hares Publishing (8th April 2014)

Buy your copy HERE

Fourteen-year-old twins Minty and Jess are inseparable. Maybe they bicker now and then, even crave a bit of space once in a while. But they have a connection. Unbreakable. Steadfast. Nothing can tear them apart. Until a family trip to the coast puts their bond in jeopardy. As Minty tries to rescue her dog from drowning she ends up fighting for her life. Will Minty survive? If she doesn’t, how will Jess cope without her? Only the stormy sea has the answer. Minty is a story of love, loss and coming to terms with consequences. It’s a spiritual tale that will linger in your mind long after you’ve read the final word.

Christmas at the Little Village Bakery (Honeybourne Book 2) by Tilly Tennant *BLOG BLITZ*

I am over the moon to be taking part in Tilly’s Blog Blitz! Happy Publication Day Tilly and Bookouture 🙂

I have a fabulous Q&A with the lady herself for you all to enjoy 🙂

tilly-tennant

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

I’m Tilly, somewhere in my forties (that’s all you’re getting), two teenage daughters, a husband and lots of grey hairs as a result! I was born in Dorset but now live in Staffordshire. I write romantic comedies and I like to think that on the way to your happy ever after, there’s a little fun, a little suspense, and a little drama.

2. Where did/do you get your ideas from?

Honestly, from all over the place! I take inspiration from things that have happened to me, and even stories that other people tell me about things that have happened to them. If you’ve recently told me a story, beware, you could end up in one of mine! I see things on the news that often creep in or spark other ideas too.

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

I tend to cherry-pick bits of characteristics from people I know, people I’ve met briefly or even people in the public eye. So I suppose you could say they are loosely based on lots of people but rarely on just one individual.

4. How do you pick your characters names?

The baby name books come out quite a lot! Sometimes I just like a name or sometimes a character is actually named in a little tribute to someone. If I hear an unusual name I like I write it down in a notebook and go back to the list when I need one.

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

Most of my writing is done at the kitchen table. I desperately want an office but so far that’s proving tricky! I used to write in the evenings when the kids had gone to bed, so I would always be up late. This summer, however, I’m taking a career break so I’m happily sitting at the table when everyone else is at work and school. It’s much better for my social life and it means I now get to watch the odd bit of TV at night, which is a luxury compared to before when I would spend nights working. I try to set myself a word count target for that day, depending on what else I know needs doing, and I’m quite annoyed at myself if I don’t stick to it because that’s the only way I can discipline myself enough to make sure deadlines get met. I write first drafts quickly and quite messily while the ideas are all fresh, and then editing takes a little longer as I fine tune everything.

6. Do you have a favourite author? 

I can never choose one favourite; there are just too many brilliant ones.

7. If you could meet any author, who would it be? And what would you ask them?

Jane Austen. I’d ask her if she was shocked about her lasting success, and how she felt about the fact someone had turned one of her books into a zombie film!

8. Were you a big reader as a child?

Yes, I got into trouble a lot for sneaking a torch to bed and reading under the duvet so I wouldn’t be able to get up for school the next day.

9. When did you start to write?

I’d always dabbled, but never written anything seriously – mainly because I couldn’t imagine why anyone would care what I had to say. Then, ten years ago, I decided I’d had enough of feeling unfulfilled in jobs that I didn’t particularly enjoy, and I enrolled on a university course to study English. While I was there I filled a gap in the timetable with a creative writing module, wrote my first novel in the summer holidays, and instantly became addicted.

10. What are you working on right now?

I’m working on a new two book series set in Rome, which is quite a departure for me because I’m used to writing about people living in small towns and villages. I’m quite excited about it, though.

11. When can we look forward to a new release?

Christmas at the Little Village Bakery is out now. The first book of the Rome series will be released early spring of 2017.

12. How can readers keep in touch with you?

https://www.facebook.com/TillyTennant/?fref=ts

christmas-at-the-little-village-bakery-kindle

Most definitely on my TBR list!

Publisher: Bookouture (16th September 2016)

CHRISTMAS AT THE LITTLE VILLAGE BAKERY by Tilly Tennant

UK: http://amzn.to/29glVkf

US: http://amzn.to/295yTw0

It’s time to get toasty by the fire with a glass of mulled wine and a slice of chocolate yule log sprinkled with a little romance. Welcome to Christmas at the Little Village Bakery.

Snow is falling in Honeybourne and Spencer is bringing home his American fiancée Tori for a traditional English Christmas with all the trimmings. But when his hippie mum and dad meet her high-maintenance parents, sparks of the wrong sort start to fly. Then Spencer bumps into his first love Jasmine and unexpected feelings come flooding back.

Millie is run off her feet with Christmas orders at the Little Village Bakery and new baby Oscar. Thank goodness her cousin Darcie is here to help her. Although she does seem to be rather flirty with Millie’s boyfriend Dylan.

Will Darcie ever find true love of her own? And is marrying Tori a terrible mistake for Spencer if his heart is with someone else?

A heartwarming Christmassy romantic comedy, perfect for fans of Carole Matthews and Milly Johnson.

THE LITTLE VILLAGE BAKERY by Tilly Tennant was published in June 2016.

UK: http://amzn.to/24lNnTt

US: http://amzn.to/1VI2O3x

If you haven’t already and would like to, you can read my review of this lovely book here – The Little Village Bakery (Honeybourne Book 1) by Tilly TennantThe Little Village Bakery (Honeybourne Book 1) by Tilly Tennant 

About Tilly Tennant:

From a young age, Tilly Tennant was convinced that she was destined for the stage.  Once she realised she wasn’t actually very good at anything that would put her on the stage, she started to write stories instead. There were lots of terrible ones, likeThe Pet Rescue Gang (aged eight), which definitely should not see the light of day ever again. Thankfully, her debut novel,Hopelessly Devoted to Holden Finn was not one of those, and since it hit the Amazon best seller lists she hasn’t looked back. Born in Dorset, she currently lives in Staffordshire with her husband, two daughters, three guitars, four ukuleles, two violins and a kazoo.

www.tillytennant.com

Many thanks to Tilly for answering my questions and to Kim at Bookouture for letting me join in with this fab Blog Blitz! 🙂