Extract & Giveaway: Red Dirt by E M Reapy

A great giveaway over on portobellobookblog.com…..

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I’m delighted to be able to offer you the chance to win one of five hardback copies of Red Dirt (UK only) as well as the opportunity to read an extract, courtesy of Blake at the publishers, Head of Zeus. Red Dirt will be published in hardback and as an ebook on 2nd June.  You can order a copy here: Red Dirt

What the book’s about

Three young Irish people have come to Australia, running from the economic ruins of their home country and their own unhappy lives. In this promised land, stunned by the heat and the vast arid space of the interior, they each try to escape their past in a chaotic world of backpacker hostels, huge fruit farms and squalid factories, surrounded by new friends who are even more damaged and dangerous than they are themselves. Endless supplies of cheap drink and drugs loosen what little sense…

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My Name Is Leon by Kit de Waal

My Name Is Leon

Publisher: Penguin (2nd June 2016)

5/5*

What a beautifully written, moving story.

I have to say that the first thing to attract me to this book was the title – my twenty year old Step-son is called Leon. When I spotted it on Netgalley and read the blurb I was certain it would be a book I would love and I wasn’t wrong.

Leon is nine years old when his baby brother, Jake, is born. Jake has a different Dad though and his Dad isn’t a black man like Leon’s. Set in 1980/81 as the country prepared for the big Royal Wedding, there was still obvious tension between races.

Leon’s Mother, Carol, has mental health issues including severe post natal depression after the birth of Jake and Leon does his best to help out where he can. Circumstances aren’t helped by Jake’s Dad not sticking around. When social services become involved the boys are fostered and placed in the care of Maureen. Leon likes Maureen, but he’s desperate to be back with his Mum. It’s heart-breaking to read the obvious guilt Leon carries on his shoulders. He thinks he should have looked after his Mum better then they would all still be together. Imagine carrying such a massive responsibility at only nine years old! He is determined they will be a family again one day.

We follow Leon’s story as he deals with adjusting to life with Maureen and with losing his baby brother when he is adopted by a new family.

You can feel the bond between him and his mother the odd time she turns up for contact, she just isn’t capable of giving him the care and stability he needs and losing Jake forever has broken her heart. Leon seems very aware of the hole this has left in his mothers world and he’s desperate to fill it. Probably the most heart-breaking line of the book for me (and I hope I’m okay to quote) was….

‘I could be him, Mum,’ he says. ‘You could come back for me and, sometimes, I could be him.’”

Absolutely heart-wrenching!

It’s so sad to think how many people go through what Leon and his family go through. I cannot begin to imagine having to give my children up or being so ill that they were literally better off without me. We can only be glad that at least the stigma surrounding mental health issues is decreasing as time goes on and more people are getting the support they need. It also highlights the importance of good and dedicated foster carers. They do such a fabulous job. Maureen’s commitment to Leon, despite her own health issues, is heart-warming. I loved the relationship she develops with Leon, along with her sister, Sylvia. I also enjoyed the relationships Leon forms with Tufty and Mr Devlin at the allotments.

My Name Is Leon is an emotional and gripping story which I am sure will stay with me for a very long time to come. I feel like I can’t express enough just how brilliant this book is! I will be more than happy to recommend it to anyone.

With many thanks to the Publisher and Author for approving my ARC via Netgalley.

My Name Is Leon will be released on 2nd June and you can pre-order your copy HERE

Description (via Amazonuk) –

A brother chosen. A brother left behind. And a family where you’d least expect to find one.

Leon is nine, and has a perfect baby brother called Jake. They have gone to live with Maureen, who has fuzzy red hair like a halo, and a belly like Father Christmas. But the adults are speaking in low voices, and wearing Pretend faces. They are threatening to give Jake to strangers. Since Jake is white and Leon is not.

As Leon struggles to cope with his anger, certain things can still make him smile – like Curly Wurlys, riding his bike fast downhill, burying his hands deep in the soil, hanging out with Tufty (who reminds him of his dad), and stealing enough coins so that one day he can rescue Jake and his mum.

Evoking a Britain of the early eighties, My Name is Leon is a heart-breaking story of love, identity and learning to overcome unbearable loss. Of the fierce bond between siblings. And how – just when we least expect it – we manage to find our way home.

Reviews

Tender and heart-breaking (Rachel Joyce, bestselling author of ‘The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry’)

A beautiful story told with compassion, urgency and wit (Stephen Kelman, author of the Booker-shortlisted ‘Pigeon English’)

Vivid and endearing – a very powerful book (Emma Healey, bestselling author of ‘Elizabeth is Missing’)

Leon is pure goodwill in a wicked world, and he won’t leave you when you put this unique book down. Authentic and beautiful, urgent and honest, this novel does what only the best do: it quietly makes room in your heart. At the end of the story I couldn’t bear to close the book on Leon. I felt I was abandoning him. I wanted to talk about it straight away with someone else who’d read it, and I know a great many readers will feel the same. (Chris Cleave, bestselling author of ‘The Other Hand’)

Beautiful and heartbreaking – I cried buckets of tears for Leon and his family (Cathy Rentzenbrink, author of ‘The Last Act of Love’)

A compelling storyKit de Waal is to be congratulated (Jane Shemilt, bestselling author of ‘Daughter’)

About the Author

Kit de Waal was born in Birmingham to an Irish mother, who was a foster carer and a Caribbean father. She worked for fifteen years in criminal and family law, was a magistrate for several years and sits on adoption panels. She used to advise Social Services on the care of foster children, and has written training manuals on adoption and foster care. Her writing has received numerous awards including the Bridport Flash Fiction Prize 2014 and 2015 and the SI Leeds Literary Reader’s Choice Prize 2014. My Name is Leon is her first novel. She has two children.

A Reason To Stay by Julieann Dove

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Publisher: Edward Allen Publishing, LLC (1st June 2016)

5/5*

Elise seemingly has it all with a successful career, her own home, car and cardiologist boyfriend, Darren, who is obviously besotted with her. However, he is waiting for the right moment to propose, but she is waiting for the right moment to break up!

Elise and commitment don’t gel!

I have to say that I didn’t warm to Elise at first, but as I learned more about her life growing up and her relationship, or lack of it, with her mother, I began to understand her more and she grew on me as the story progressed. I loved the relationship between Elise and her sister, Melanie. Also the relationship she has with her niece and nephew. The scenes where she has been left to care for them are hilarious!

I was a bit confused to start with about her relationship with Ben, as he was first introduced as the father of her sisters children, but all made sense soon afterwards.

I felt quite sorry for Elise and the way her Mothers selfishness had shaped her future. I was really routing for her when she went to see her Dad who she hadn’t seen since she was a little girl. She needed answers as to why he never tried to have any kind of relationship with her. She was not prepared for the truth.

I found myself wanting to shake some sense in to Elise where Ben is concerned as they are obviously made for each other, although I did feel sorry for Darren. You can’t make yourself love someone though, no matter how lovely they are.

This may be a love story with a happy ending, but it’s much more than that. It is very funny in parts and heart-breaking in others. A very well written romance with real and likeable characters you will care about. I’m sure many readers will relate to their stories.

I was only left with one question….. What is white gravy?

Many thanks to Julieann Dove for sending me an advance review copy of A Reason To Stay. I have thoroughly enjoyed it.

It will be released on 1st June 2016 and you can pre-order a copy HERE

Description –

Elise Newton has it all—a dream job, a house that’s all hers, and a boyfriend who’s a cardiologist. Darren has been carrying an engagement ring in his pocket for two months, waiting for the perfect time to ask her to be his wife. He has no idea Elise has been waiting for the perfect time as well—to break up.

You see, Elise has a fatal flaw. She cannot commit to love.

An early-morning call from her sister gives Elise hope. She’s needed back home in Kentucky, to care for their mother who’s recovering from surgery. It’s the break Elise has been searching for, a reprieve from the strain of ducking Darren’s declarations of love.

But along with Kentucky comes seeing Ben—her first love, the one who came closest to being her happily ever after. Now a single dad, Ben has moved on with his life. But has his love for her moved on as well?

When Elise discovers a long-hidden truth about her family—and the reason why she can’t commit—she must decide which man will give her a reason to stay.

About the author –

Julieann lives in Virginia, yet longs to live everywhere else. It doesn’t come as a surprise that along with her gypsy soul, comes an active imagination. That’s why she loves to write and invent worlds and people, so that she can formulate their happily ever after. Hobbies include cooking new recipes, sewing, and spending time with her cute boyfriend/husband and five fabulous children. Vacations happen in Nantucket or the Carolina beaches–anywhere there is inspiration for her next book. One day she hopes to travel to Italy, drive one of those little cars around the countryside, and speak the language fluently!

You can visit Julieann Dove’s author page here on AmazonUK

Field Of Lies (DI Doug Taylor Book 2) by John Pye

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Published 11th May 2015

Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.

5/5*

Having read Cathedral Of Lies (Detective Inspector Doug Taylor Book 1) back in October 2013 (I can’t believe it was that long ago!) I downloaded Field Of Lies (Detective Inspector Doug Taylor Book 2) when it was released, which is now over a year ago. Where has that year gone!? Review commitments have prevented me from reading this sooner, but I can tell you it has definitely been worth the wait.

Field Of Lies is a hard book to review without giving too much away, but when a local man is found dead it seems like an obvious suicide. Some are happy to just accept this theory and wrap up the case, but others aren’t convinced it’s so straight forward. DC Geoff Deakin certainly isn’t convinced and is determined to find proof. However, Geoff suffers horrific injuries in a seemingly accidental explosion at his home. DI Doug Taylor is Geoff’s friend and colleague and he immediately smells a rat. He will find out the truth, by any means necessary. As he discovers the truth it’s much worse than they could ever have imagined.

Field of Lies is a fast-paced police procedural which will keep you gripped from the start. The characters are very real and (mostly) likeable. I love the relationships between the colleagues. I imagine Police Officers must form very strong bonds with those they work closely with and this shows in the book(s).

I also love that these books are set in and around my hometown. John Pye is a local-to-me author who introduced himself on the Facebook Book Club page I admin. If you haven’t already and would like to, you can see John’s author interview here Q&A with author, John Pye

If you haven’t already, you really should add this series to your reading lists. You won’t be disappointed!

You can buy Field Of Lies HERE

I would recommend that you read Cathedral Of Lies first though.

Exeter Crown Court – 1986 – a multimillion pound drugs trial. The blast from a powerful handgun brings a halt to proceedings.
Three days and two hundred miles separate the finding of a mutilated corpse in a Staffordshire beauty spot – there seems no connection.
Interesting police work and pathology establish a shocking and unexpected history to the corpse and then another body is discovered. Detective inspector Doug Taylor knows that plenty of long days lie ahead.
Sinister characters from different walks of life emerge as tales of rape, murder, corruption and horrific torture develop.
A vigilante chase crosses the North Sea. Peril and intrigue loiter at every corner as the struggle to determine the criminal mastermind’s objectives intensifies with terrifying events in two different countries.
Matters become all the more curious when a bizarre secret held by a cathedral and a church appear pivotal to the core of the affair – it is a secret surrounded by lies, a secret which stretches back decades and one which the main players will go to any lengths to obtain.
The story will reveal an amazing, true and unsolved crime. Once you have read the book you will be able to go to the book’s website http://www.cathedraloflies.com and unlock secret pages for a guided tour of some of the truths within the story. You will also be able to look at the intricacies of the actual monumental felony… perhaps you could solve the crime yourself!

You can buy your copy HERE

Cathedral of Lies was before I was blogging, but I did rate it 5***** on Amazon….

Cathedral of Lies review

Also available (and currently on my TBR list)…..

A journey in time through the author’s career with Staffordshire Police – from cadet to inspector – from schoolboy to man.
‘It was the practical jokes and camaraderie which kept us sane.’
The book presents a cameo of some of the events which went on behind the scenes of policing in the seventies, eighties and nineties. A lifetime of side splittingly funny tales are mixed with some sad and tragic stories which made up the ‘policeman’s lot’ along with the black humour which often served to temper the emotions and relieve the stress.
Snippets of social history – now long forgotten are recalled – the ‘Policeman’s window’, the obsessive checking of property and other routines of the day. Most of all, the absurdly funny and unusual tales recalled from a career as a front line bobby:
Vampires in Stoke on Trent? Exploding treacle tins in Biddulph? A policeman caught short on duty? Naked constables in the back of van! Find the missing body!
It was all in a day’s work.

Buy your copy HERE

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Q&A with author, Alison Lingwood

Today I have the pleasure of welcoming the very lovely Alison Lingwood to my blog. Alison is a local-to-me author and we’ve met a few times. Thanks for joining me, Alison.

Diamond Do 9

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

My name is Alison Lingwood. I am an ex-lecturer and businesswoman living in north Staffordshire. I began writing when I retired and published my first book in 2012. My novels comprise a series of detective stories set in my home area, and explore crimes alongside the life of my detectives, their friends and families.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

The ideas come from all sorts of places. The first novel arose from a post on the internet, which led to me thinking about how information shared on social media can be used and abused. The second book came from a phrase – which subsequently became the title – that I came across when planning a holiday to Bridport. Research showed me that the Bridport Dagger was a name given to a hangman’s noose and so the story began. Subsequent novels have been prompted by such topical issues as Equity Release and the proposed HS2 Rail Link, although such issues tend to provide the backdrop for the story rather than the main narrative of the plot.

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

Some characters, I think inevitably, are loosely based on the appearance, mannerisms and/or lifestyles of people I know. This is after all our own experience of life and the building bricks of making up a character – what they would look like, how they would act in certain situations etc. I haven’t based a character entirely on anybody specific – it tends more to be details I borrow from them. Sometimes too I have found that people “recognise” themselves in my characters – often wrongly.

How do you pick your character’s names?

The names are selected on a fairly random basis. I try to avoid names of family and friends for unpleasant characters so I don’t cause offence. My books tend to contain a lot of characters, and I now have lists of both Christian and surnames I have used already, and I do jot down ones I think of or see – perhaps on TV credits for example – that I may use in the future. I try to reflect the age of my characters where relevant, so older characters are Mavis or Queenie rather than Chantelle or Kylie! I like to include local names, so I’ve used Hanchurch, Bloor and Chell as surnames.

My leading detective is called Christopher Timothy, which name of course coincides with that of a well-known actor. Both are fairly common names so I kept them, but subsequently regretted this. The use of a Christian name as a surname prevents me from using the literary device of changing from one to the other to represent personal and professional strands of the storyline. For example in Lewis or Frost, the surname is used in the workplace situations but Robbie or Jack in a social context. I thought it would be too confusing for the reader if I sometimes referred to my detective as Chris and sometimes as Timothy.

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

The writing process is erratic. I have no agent or commercial publisher to pressure me with deadlines so I simply write when I have an idea for where I want the story to go. Sometimes this means I write 1000+ words in a day, sometimes I don’t touch the manuscript for a week or two. It’s a hobby and I want it to stay like that without the pressure imposed by commercial need.

Do you have a favourite author?

This is a difficult question for me to answer. I have some perennial favourites that I go back to time and time again, like comfort food. These include WJ Burley, Colin Dexter, Ruth Rendell, Agatha Christie and Elizabeth George. Other favourites vary from time to time. I’ve recently enjoyed reading Victoria Hislop, Mel Sharratt, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Shakespeare is a perennial favourite too, the plays by him and biographies about him. Next week my favourites may be different.

Were you a big reader as a child?

I was a keen reader as a child, and much more so as a teenager. One of my lasting memories is as a ten year old being read Prester John by John Buchan at school and being fascinated by the Afrikaans place name Blaauwildebeestefontein. I asked for my own copy for Christmas. Perhaps that started for me a love of playing with words.

When did you start to write?

I wrote and published my first novel when I was sixty. Prior to that I had often felt that I would like to try my hand at a novel, but the time, energy and inspiration never coincided until after I retired.

What are you working on right now? / When can we look forward to a new release?

I have just released the fifth Christopher Timothy novel in the series so it will be a while before the next! At the time writing the sixth consists of about twelve thousand words and a lot of half-baked ideas.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I am quite a private person and don’t share a lot of personal information, but the books are available from amazon.co.uk in paperback and on Kindle. New releases are announced to friends on Facebook and on the Book Club page.

You can find all of Alison’s books on her AmazonUK author page HERE

I read Portal To Murder before I was blogging, but if you haven’t already and would like to, you can read my review for The Bridport Dagger here  The Bridport Dagger by Alison Lingwood

Many thanks again to Alison for answering my questions.

Q&A with author, Alex Marsh

Today I have the pleasure of welcoming Alex Marsh to my blog. Thanks for joining me, Alex.

Alex in Waterstones

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

Hello! I’m Alex Marsh. I live in a small village near the North Norfolk coast, with my family and eight chickens; my wife travels a lot, so you’ll generally find me juggling writing, my other job (which is also writing), school runs, cooking dinners, etc.

When we first came here – around fifteen years ago – I was in a bit of an enforced career break, so I started a blog which became a big success, then it became a book: ‘Sex and Bowls and Rock and Roll’, which was published by HarperCollins.

My new book, ‘The Resurrection of Frederic Debreu,’ follows Ted, newly-retired but still a big kid at heart, and his stoical wife Daisy.

Ted’s dream is to spend a ‘gap year’ living the good life in the French countryside. It’s a final fling of youth before they settle down together in a respectable bungalow for the rest of their days. But, of course, things don’t go to plan. Ted finds himself at the mercy of events over which he has very little control, and the village of Mailliot le Bois becomes as much a prison as it is a paradise.

This is a good time to say ‘thank you’ for your review – I’m genuinely chuffed that you enjoyed it.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

I tend to think that ideas just appear; sitting down and thinking ‘must have an idea!’ is hopeless. ‘Debreu’ came to me out of the blue when I heard some French chanson; there’s a richness and atmosphere about that type of music that seemed to fit the sort of book I wanted to write – a book that gives you a big hug, whilst also having depth. And there’s also a hint of the disreputable, which I like…

Here’s Georges Brassens singing on YouTube, for some background music for the rest of the article… https://youtu.be/lQRgym8IDGM

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

There’s a character who has a knack of bringing every conversation, however irrelevant, back to their own achievements – I think we’ve all met one of those…

How do you pick your character’s names?

Setting something in a different country is a challenge in terms of getting the little social details right; I have a friend who has lived in France for many, many years; she gave me a huge amount of help on names and place-names. (‘No – so and so isn’t right; it’s slightly too old, or too middle-class, etc.) And then I became friendly with Damien Cabanis, who owns the most unbelievably fantastic and chilled out wine shop in Norwich – Les Garrigues. I’d ask him daily questions about regional specifics and idiosyncrasies.

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

I lie in the bath. Honestly. I do a lot of writing like that, just in my head; not just ‘big picture’ plotting, but writing dialogue, and getting to know the characters, and looking at things from different angles until they work. I’m always telling my kids to spend a bit of time thinking about their homework before they grab a pencil and start writing. But they ignore me, because that’s what kids do.

Aside from that, I have an office in my garden – or I take my laptop up to a café on the coast, if I feel I need some human company.

Do you have a favourite author?

It changes every day!

Of books of a similar genre to ‘Debreu’, the one which I’ve most enjoyed recently has been Matt Haig’s ‘The Humans.’ I sent him a slightly bashful email afterwards to say that I thought it was great. Not expecting a reply or anything, but because very occasionally I’ve had nice emails pop up out of the blue, and I don’t think people realise how much things like that can mean to an author – especially if they’re having a bad day.

Were you a big reader as a child?

MASSIVELY MASSIVE. The public library every Saturday afternoon to pick up my full quota; then returning them the following week to get more. Reading, to me, was just – amazing.

When did you start to write?

I was very young – I used to write stories at home. Then school magazines and the like, and, because I was the geekiest of geeks as a teenager, I had a column in a short-lived computer magazine. I picked writing up again when I started the blog, and started to get emails from all over the world, most of which went along the lines of: ‘oh, your poor, poor wife…’

What are you working on right now?

I’m mulling over what happens to the occupants of Mailliot le Bois! Without any spoilers, there’s a lot more to find out about them…

When can we look forward to a new release?

That depends on how ‘The Resurrection…’ goes! It’s very early days, but I’ve been utterly bowled over by the response to it so far, so…

How can readers keep in touch with you?

Visit my website: privatesecretdiary.com (there’s an email sign up for news posts); find me on Twitter at @jonnyb. Please do say hello!

I very recently read and reviewed The Resurrection Of Frederic Debreu. If you haven’t already and would like to, you can read my review here The Resurrection of Frederic Debreu by Alex Marsh

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Publisher: RedDoor Publishing (5th May 2016)

Who wants a respectable retirement anyway?

Not Ted Prescott, genial visitor to Mailliot le Bois, here on an impulsive mission to seek out his past whilst heroically diminishing the sleepy French town’s stocks of red wine.

But once the locals discover Ted’s authentic renditions of regional hero Frederic Debreu’s songs, life is suddenly not so straightforward for the stage-shy Derbyshire guitar-maker.

Reluctantly persuaded that he might help put their town back on the map, Ted finds himself billed as humble French farm labourer ‘Edouard Prescote’. Nonplussed as his self-conscious performances strike a chord, Ted finds himself drawn into a web of well-intentioned deceit that he finds increasingly hard to unravel.

Haunted by the loss of his missing brother, and with the hopes of an entire community riding on him, it soon becomes clear that there are other, more important things that he hasn’t mentioned to his loved ones…

Purchase your copy HERE

Added to my TBR list…..

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Publisher: The Friday Project (2nd July 2010)

The story of a man who gives up the rock ‘n’ roll dream… to play bowls.

Alex Marsh wanted to be a rock star – but it didn’t work out. Instead he toiled away in the big city – only to give up his career, move to rural Norfolk, and become a househusband. Only he isn’t a very good one. Whilst his pride won’t let him admit it, he struggles with the cooking, the cleaning and the isolation. He hires a cleaner without telling his wife, his repertoire of baked potatoes exhausts quickly. He becomes hooked on daytime television and computer solitaire. He is in danger of becoming weird.

So he takes up bowls. In Sex & Bowls & Rock and Roll we follow a season in the life of the village bowls team, a group of amateur sportsmen and mild eccentrics. In doing so we see this unfashionable pastime in a whole new light, and very funny it is too. But Alex hasn’t quite given up on his dreams of rock stardom. Discovering that some of his mates down the pub are a bit handy with bass and drums he makes one final stab at being in a band, with an eagerly awaited local gig. It is a complete disaster.

Join Alex has he comes to terms with life as a domestic disappointment, attempts to learn the fine art of bowls and finally realises that supporting the Sultans Of Ping at the Pink Toothbrush in Rayleigh really was the highpoint of his musical career. Sex & Bowls & Rock and Roll is a hilarious account of the life of a genuinely modern man. Everyone will recognise themselves (or their husbands) and you will be hard pressed not to laugh out loud.

Many thanks again to Alex for joining me on my blog.

Also to Anna at RedDoor Publishing for introducing me to Alex and his work.

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Q&A with author, Glen Craney

Thanks for joining me on my blog today, Glen.

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

Thanks for inviting me to your blog, Kerry. I’m a novelist, screenwriter, and journalist. I practiced trial law for a few years before joining the Washington, D.C. press corps to cover national politics and the Iran-contra trial. Now I write historical novels and mystery-thrillers. My books have taken readers to Occitania during the Albigensian Crusade, to the Scotland of Robert Bruce, to Portugal during the Age of Discovery, to the trenches of France during World War I, and to the American Hoovervilles of the Great Depression.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

Strange as it seems, the inspiration for my first three books came in dreams. These dreams are always very vivid and contain names, symbols, and images that tend to lead me on quests to solve the mysteries of their meanings.

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

Not consciously. Because my books are historical, I try to stay true to what I can learn about the real persons I’m writing about. When I weave in historical elements into thrillers, I have a bit more leeway. Occasionally I’ll look back at what I’ve written and see aspects or personalty traits similar to people I’ve known, but that’s rarely done intentionally.

How do you pick your character’s names?

History usually chooses the names for me. My first novel, set in 13th-century France, featured several characters whose real names were challenging for English readers: Folques of Marseilles and Esclarmonde de Foix, as examples. Those don’t exactly roll off the tongue. In those rare instance when I need to create names, I try to find ones whose pronunciation invokes their personalities and emotional qualities.

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

When I’m in writing mode, I usually write in the morning and edit in the afternoon. I spend months on research, and I always try to travel to the locations of my novels. Authors tend to divide into plotters–those who like to outline and plan their books in detail–and “pantsers,” who sit down at the computer and spill out whatever comes to them. I’m a confirmed plotter; I think one almost has to be if writing historical fiction.

Do you have a favourite author?

Although I write historical fiction, I tend to read more non-fiction, largely because I’m always doing lots of research. Historians I admire are Robert Caro, William Manchester, and David McCullough. My favorite historical novelists are Nigel Tranter, Gore Vidal, and Sharon Kay Penman.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Yes. My mother was a high-school English teacher, and she would bring home the Classics Illustrated comic books that told the famous works of literature in dramatic drawings. I got hooked on history early on when my great uncle took me to American Civil War battlefields and told stories of how his father, a Union captain, fought there.

When did you start to write?

I never dreamed I’d be a writer. My first professional attempt at writing was as a law clerk drafting legal opinions for a state appellate judge. After my stint as a lawyer, I attended Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism and took jobs with newspapers and magazines. After that, I had a brief flirtation with movie writing after I won the Nicholl Fellowship, an award given by the Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Sciences for best new screenwriting. Then, a legendary Hollywood writer, Harry Essex, encouraged me to turn my screenplays into novels.

What are you working on right now? When can we look forward to a new release?

I’m writing a novel set during the American Civil War. I wish I could tell you when it will be published, but that’s in the hands of the muses.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I’m always happy to hear from readers. My author website is www.glencraney.com, and I can be contacted at gcraney@glencraney.com

Glen has very kindly sent me a review copy of The Virgin Of The Wind Rose which I will be reading as soon as possible.

You can find all of Glen’s books on his AmazonUK page HERE

Other links –
Barnes and Noble:
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-virgin-of-the-wind-rose-glen-craney
Itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/the-virgin-of-the-wind-rose/id1012780966
Kobo: https://store.kobobooks.com/en-us/ebook/the-virgin-of-the-wind-rose

Author bio:

Glen Craney is a novelist, screenwriter, and journalist. He holds degrees from Indiana University School of Law and Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He practiced trial law before joining the Washington, D.C. press corps to cover national politics and the Iran-contra trial for Congressional Quarterly magazine. The Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Sciences awarded him the Nicholl Fellowship prize for best new screenwriting. He is a Chaucer Awards First-Place Winner and a three-time Foreword Reviews Book-of-the-Year Award Finalist. His debut historical novel, The Fire and the Light, was honored as Best New Fiction by the National Indie Excellence Awards. His books have taken readers to Occitania during the Albigensian Crusade, to the Scotland of Robert Bruce, to Portugal during the Age of Discovery, to the trenches of France during World War I, and to the American Hoovervilles of the Great Depression.

Author social media:

Website: www.glencraney.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GlenCraneyAuthor
Twitter: @glencraney
Goodreads:
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1516207.Glen_Craney

The Resurrection of Frederic Debreu by Alex Marsh

Happy Publication Day to Alex Marsh and RedDoor Publishing…..

Publisher: RedDoor Publishing (5th May 2016)

4/5*

First of all, many thanks to RedDoor Publishing for my paperback advance review copy of The Resurrection of Frederic Debreu.

Ted Prescott and his wife Daisy are living in Mailliot le Bois, temporarily, before settling down to their retirement back in Derbyshire. Ted desperately wants to know what happened to his brother, who hasn’t been in touch for years. He’s also keeping a secret from Daisy, regarding their son, David. How long can he get away with not telling her the truth? I really warmed to Ted and Daisy, although I found Daisy to be quite harsh on Ted sometimes. I felt she was there for his sake, to let him get it out of his system, but didn’t much care for the place herself which is a shame because it sounds lovely. A small, close knit town with a relaxed pace of life, strong sense of community and plenty of red wine. What’s not to like?

Ted is a massive fan of Frederic Debreu and when the locals discover his talent for singing his songs he is soon roped in to more than he is comfortable with and again finds himself keeping it all from Daisy, knowing she wouldn’t approve.

The Resurrection of Frederic Debreu is an easy, light-hearted read, but very well written. It’s full of fabulous, larger than life characters, who are instantly likeable and very amusing, but it also has it’s share of sadness.

The Resurrection of Frederic Debreu is released today (5th May 2016) and you can buy your copy HERE

Description –

Who wants a respectable retirement anyway?

Not Ted Prescott, genial visitor to Mailliot le Bois, here on an impulsive mission to seek out his past whilst heroically diminishing the sleepy French town’s stocks of red wine.

But once the locals discover Ted’s authentic renditions of regional hero Frederic Debreu’s songs, life is suddenly not so straightforward for the stage-shy Derbyshire guitar-maker.

Reluctantly persuaded that he might help put their town back on the map, Ted finds himself billed as humble French farm labourer ‘Edouard Prescote’. Nonplussed as his self-conscious performances strike a chord, Ted finds himself drawn into a web of well-intentioned deceit that he finds increasingly hard to unravel.

Haunted by the loss of his missing brother, and with the hopes of an entire community riding on him, it soon becomes clear that there are other, more important things that he hasn’t mentioned to his loved ones…

Reviews

‘Well-told, funny and full of expertly drawn characters. A classic outsider’s journey and a knowing examination of man’s need to rage against the dying of the light’ –Neil Forsyth

‘Joyously-written, a warm and poignant tale that sits effortlessly in the grand tradition of British comic novels.’ –Saul Wordsworth

‘Smart and funny – I love Alex Marsh’s writing. It makes me laugh, think and wish I live in England.’ –Jill Twiss, staff writer, Last Week Tonight with John Oliver’

About the Author

Born in Essex, Alex’s first writing job was as a teenage columnist for ZX Spectrum Adventurer magazine. Since then he’s written short columns for The Guardian, jokes for BBC Radio and articles for one of the UK’s biggest satirical news sites. As a commercial copywriter he has worked on everything from recruitment material for MI5 to advertising blurb for some of Britain’s best-loved board games.Alex’s alter-ego blog Private Secret Diary achieved Internet fame with its eccentric snapshots of English rural life and formed the backdrop to his first book, Sex and Bowls and Rock and Roll. His love of the music of Georges Brassens and Jake Thackray was the inspiration for The Resurrection of Frédéric Debreu.

He lives in Norfolk.

You can visit Alex Marsh’s Amazon author page HERE

 

Added to my TBR list…..

…..Week ending 1st May 2016.

From Netgalley…..

 Publisher: Cornerstone Digital (30th June 2016)

She kept moving forward. She didn’t stop. She didn’t look back.

Lily has been abducted from outside her high-school gates.

For eight long years she’s been locked away from the outside world. During that time she’s changed from a girl into a woman. She’s had a baby.

And now she has seized her chance and escaped.

Running for her life, with her daughter in her arms, she returns to her family and the life she used to know – to her much-loved twin sister Abby, her mum, her high-school boyfriend – and her freedom.

But is it possible to go back?

Lily’s perfect life as a teenager doesn’t exist any more. Since she’s been gone, her family’s lives have changed too, in ways she never could have imagined.

Her return, and the revelation of who took her, will send shockwaves through the whole community.

Impossible not to read in one sitting, Baby Doll is a taut psychological thriller that focuses on family entanglements and the evil that can hide behind a benign facade.

Purchased/Downloaded…..

The death of wealthy Elizabeth Doyle, a pillar of the local community, shakes the village of West Deering.

Who could hold a fatal grudge against such a woman – and act upon it in such quiet, sleepy surroundings?

She went missing, along with her car, whilst distributing food for the Meals on Wheels service.

The prime suspects are two London youths, in a clear-cut case of an outsider attack.

However, it appears that the evidence is misleading.

The killer is much closer to home – someone from the centre of this quiet community.

The local villagers offer little assistance for Detective Inspector George Hasted, their behaviour becoming increasingly wary and suspicious.

With so many stories surrounding the murder, which can Inspector Hasted believe?

He can trust no-one….

A Choice of Victims is a gripping murder mystery by master of the genre J F Straker

Praise for J F Straker

‘A perfectly plotted story that is both chilling and memorable.’ – Robert Foster, best-selling author of The Lunar Code.

J F Straker was born in Farnborough, Kent and lived in Sussex. During the war he served with The Buffs and on the General Staff and then became a schoolmaster. His interest in writing began at an early age but it was not until the war when he had to spend long periods in the desert with very little distraction that he completed his first novel. He was the author of twenty-five novels including Murder of Miss Emily and Death on a Sunday Morning.

Endeavour Press is the UK’s leading independent digital publisher. For more information on our titles please sign up to our newsletter at http://www.endeavourpress.com. Each week you will receive updates on free and discounted ebooks. Follow us on Twitter: @EndeavourPress and on Facebook via http://on.fb.me/1HweQV7

  Kindle first May freebie.

Publisher: Thomas & Mercer (1st June 2016)

Near an isolated mansion lies a beautiful garden.

In this garden grow luscious flowers, shady trees…and a collection of precious “butterflies”—young women who have been kidnapped and intricately tattooed to resemble their namesakes. Overseeing it all is the Gardener, a brutal, twisted man obsessed with capturing and preserving his lovely specimens.

When the garden is discovered, a survivor is brought in for questioning. FBI agents Victor Hanoverian and Brandon Eddison are tasked with piecing together one of the most stomach-churning cases of their careers. But the girl, known only as Maya, proves to be a puzzle herself.

As her story twists and turns, slowly shedding light on life in the Butterfly Garden, Maya reveals old grudges, new saviors, and horrific tales of a man who’d go to any length to hold beauty captive. But the more she shares, the more the agents have to wonder what she’s still hiding…

Added to my Wish List…..