#Bitten by Dan O’Brien @AuthorDanOBrien #BookBlast

Bitten Cover

Synopsis:

A predator stalks a cold northern Minnesotan town. There is talk of wolves walking on two legs and attacking people in the deep woods. Lauren Westlake, resourceful and determined FBI agent, has found a connection between the strange murders in the north and a case file almost a hundred years old. Traveling to the cold north, she begins an investigation that spirals deep into the darkness of mythology and nightmares. Filled with creatures of the night and an ancient romance, the revelation of who hunts beneath the moon is more grisly than anyone could imagine.

 

What readers are saying about Bitten

“Bitten is an extremely well-balanced and engaging novel. It contains mystery, suspense, horror, romance, and best of all – a creative, genre-bending twist on werewolf mythology. The story is quick-paced and dark without being too heavy or overdramatic. The protagonist is a strong and courageous FBI agent who is able to assert herself without casting aside her femininity. She reminds me of Sue Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone and Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum…. If a sequel follows, I will definitely read it.”

“Author Dan O’Brien left his mark with Bitten. I’ve now read three books by O’Brien, but BITTEN is by far my favorite. It not only showcases his literary skills, but leaves the reader wanting more. What else could an avid reader ask for?”

If you love supernatural fiction, a good mystery, and a fun story, then you’ll want to give Bitten a look. Releasing in July as well is the follow-up novella, Drained. The third novella in the series, Frighten, will be released in early 2019.

Get it today on Kindle!

 

Dan O'Brien

Dan O’Brien has over 50 publications to his name––including the bestselling Bitten, which was featured on Conversations Book Club’s Top 100 novels of 2012. Before starting Amalgam Consulting, he was the senior editor and marketing director for an international magazine.

You can learn more about his literary and publishing consulting business by visiting his website at: www.amalgamconsulting.com.

Follow him on Twitter at @AuthorDanOBrien.

 

The Summer Getaway by Tilly Tennant @TillyTenWriter @bookouture #BlogBlitz #BookReview

I am absolutely OVER THE MOON to be joining in with Tilly Tennant’s blog blitz for The Summer Getaway 🙂

Many thanks to Noelle at Bookouture

The Summer Getaway cover

The Summer Getaway is such a heart-warming story, with the loveliest of character’s, some of whom have not always had it easy.

Ashley and her teenage daughter, Molly, have only ever had each other as Molly has never known her dad. The result of a holiday romance, with the handsome Haydon, when Ashley was just 18, a simple misunderstanding kept them from finding each other when they returned home. Ashley has always assumed he wrote the wrong number on purpose and he had always assumed she must have wanted nothing more to do with him. Who would have thought an invite to a relatives 100th Birthday would bring them face to face once again!

I warmed to Ashley instantly. I have to admit that I pictured her as looking like the author and I couldn’t imagine her as looking any different throughout the whole story. I think she and Haydon, who I imagine to be very easy on the eye and naturally likeable, make a very cute couple and I was praying that they could re-ignite the spark they obviously felt all those years ago. It was never going to be straight forward though, with teenagers (and well meaning, but meddling mothers) involved!

I did find myself wanting to shake Ashley at times, but I could totally sympathise with the sensitivity of the situation, but I can’t believe Haydon didn’t twig sooner.

It was evident that they had both been hurt in the past and almost didn’t dare believe that they could have a happy ending together, but the chemistry between them is undeniable.

Set in France in what sounds like the most beautiful town, The Summer Getaway is a fabulous read which is perfect for this glorious weather we have been having. If you’re going on your holiday’s take a copy of this with you. It’s just so lovely. Tilly Tennant has a way of drawing you in to her stories from the very first page and I always love the character’s. I was totally immersed in Ashley’s story and I hope she gets the happily ever after she deserves.

Many thanks to the author and Bookouture for my ARC and for the opportunity to be a part of this fabulous blog blitz! 🙂

Publication Day:  July 11th 2018

 

Amazon Link:  mybook.to/TSGTTSocial

Description:

Ashley Moon is all set for a dream holiday with her daughter in the glittering French Riviera. But nothing can prepare her for the shock of discovering who’s staying in the villa next door… 

Ashley Moon got much more than a suntan on her first ever foreign holiday; one whirlwind romance and nine months later she had a daughter, Molly.

Too heartbroken and proud to ever contact the father, Ashley made a decision to go it alone and raise her daughter herself. Fifteen hard and lonely years later, she finally has the chance to take Molly on her first ever holiday; a gorgeous, all-expenses-paid trip to the charming French resort of St. Raphael.

It is the perfect setting for a week of quality time together; they plan to cycle through the sun-drenched vineyards, lounge by the glistening pool and practise their French on friendly locals. And just when Ashley thought things couldn’t get any better, comes the news of a handsome new occupant in the villa next door.

But fate has other plans for Ashley. One look into her neighbour’s dark hazel eyes is all it takes to give her the shock of her life. Standing in front of her is Haydon, Molly’s long-lost father and the holiday fling she thought she’d never see again.

As the temperature on the Cote D’Azure steadily rises and Ashley and Haydon begin to spend more and more time together, will Ashley find the courage to tell him who she is – and more importantly, who Molly is?

A wonderfully heart-warming story of first love and second chances for fans of Jenny Oliver and Lucy Diamond.

Author Bio:

Tilly Tennant 

Tilly Tennant was born in Dorset, the oldest of four children, but now lives in Staffordshire with a family of her own. After years of dismal and disastrous jobs, including paper plate stacking, shop girl, newspaper promotions and waitressing (she never could carry a bowl of soup without spilling a bit), she decided to indulge her passion for the written word by embarking on a degree in English and creative writing. She wrote a novel in 2007 during her first summer break at university and has not stopped writing since. She also works as a freelance fiction editor, and considers herself very lucky that this enables her to read many wonderful books before the rest of the world gets them.

Hopelessly Devoted to Holden Finn was her debut novel; published in 2014 it was an Amazon bestseller in both the UK and Australia. In 2016 she signed to the hugely successful Bookouture and is currently working on her next Tilly Tennant novel. She also writes as Sharon Sant, where she explores the darker side of life, and Poppy Galbraith, where things get a little crazier.

Author Social Media Links

 

FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/TillyTennant/

TWITTER: https://twitter.com/TillyTenWriter

WEBSITE: www.tillytennant.com

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

The Summer Getaway - Blog Tour

Enjoy!

Gone to Ground #KayHunter6 by @RachelAmphlett #BlogTour #BookReview #damppebblesblogtours

I am absolutely OVER THE MOON to be joining in with Rachel Amphlett’s Gone To Ground blog tour! 🙂

Many thanks to Rachel Amphlett and Emma at #damppebblesblogtours

damppebbles blog tours

Gone To Ground cover

What a brilliantly light-hearted last couple of pages to what is a horrifying serial killer thriller! An awesome addition to the excellent Detective Kay Hunter series. If you haven’t read this series as yet then I highly recommend that you do. You don’t know what you’re missing out on.

Gone To Ground is the sixth book in the Kay Hunter series and they just get better. I have thoroughly enjoyed it! I warmed to Kay and her team from book one, but they have really grown on me over the series. They are dedicated to their jobs and to each other, but we do get to see a personal side to them also.

In this book Kay and her team find themselves investigating the discovery of a severed foot. This gruesome discovery leads them to a victim who has been cut in to pieces and it isn’t long before they realise they have a serial killer on their hands. But what connects these victims and what possible motive could someone have to commit such horrific crimes?

What starts off as a somewhat frustrating case, with no apparent leads, soon ramps up when things start clicking in to place and the brutal truth left me absolutely gobsmacked. This killer is a whole new level of psycho! My skin was literally crawling. Rachel Amphlett knows how to create despicable human beings!

This is a compelling murder mystery, full of suspense, twists and turns. The story flows perfectly and as a reader I felt every frustration as well as the delight of every positive lead as the investigation progresses. Brilliantly written! If you like a good crime thriller you will love it. I love Rachel Amphlett’s writing style. Short chapters add to the tension and the fast-paced storyline. A true example of a gripping page-turner. I LOVED it and I highly recommend.

Many thanks to Rachel Amphlett for my ARC. I am thrilled to be a part of the blog tour 🙂

Book Blurb:

While attending a crime scene on the outskirts of Maidstone, DI Kay Hunter makes a shocking discovery.

The victim has been brutally cut to pieces, his identity unknown.

When more body parts start turning up in the Kentish countryside, Kay realises the disturbing truth – a serial killer is at large and must be stopped at all costs.

With no motive for the murders and a killer who has gone undetected until now, Kay and her team of detectives must work fast to calm a terrified local population.

When a third victim is found, her investigation grows even more complicated.

As she begins to expose a dark underbelly to the county town, Kay and her team are pulled into a web of jealousy and intrigue that, if left unchecked, will soon claim another life.

Purchase link…..

https://payhip.com/b/71ye/af5b3d2b8972e61

(please note this is an affiliate link)

About Rachel Amphlett:

rachel-amphlett

Before turning to writing, Rachel Amphlett played guitar in bands, worked as a TV and film extra, dabbled in radio as a presenter and freelance producer for the BBC, and worked in publishing as a sub-editor and editorial assistant.

She now wields a pen instead of a plectrum and writes crime fiction and spy novels, including the Dan Taylor espionage novels and the Detective Kay Hunter series.

Originally from the UK and currently based in Brisbane, Australia, Rachel cites her writing influences as Michael Connelly, Lee Child, and Robert Ludlum. She’s also a huge fan of Peter James, Val McDermid, Angela Marsons, Robert Bryndza, Ken Follett, and Stuart MacBride.

She’s a member of International Thriller Writers and the Crime Writers Association, with the Italian foreign rights for her debut novel, White Gold sold to Fanucci Editore’s TIMECrime imprint, and the first four books in the Dan Taylor espionage series contracted to Germany’s Luzifer Verlag.

Her novels are available in eBook, paperback and audiobook formats from worldwide retailers including Amazon, iBooks, Kobo, and Google Play.

A keen traveller, Rachel holds both EU and Australian passports and can usually be found plotting her next trip two years in advance!

Social Media:

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RachelAmphlett
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rachelamphlett.author/
Website: https://www.rachelamphlett.com/
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rachel-Amphlett/e/B005EK7TRI/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1528972893&sr=8-1

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

Gone to Ground blog tour

Enjoy!

My reviews for the previous books in the Kay Hunter series…..

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2017/06/17/scared-to-death-detective-kay-hunter-series-book-1-by-rachelamphlett-bookreview/ 

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2018/03/07/will-to-live-detective-kay-hunter-crime-thriller-series-book-2-by-rachel-amphlett-rachelamphlett-bookreview/

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2018/06/06/one-to-watch-a-detective-kay-hunter-mystery-book-3-by-rachelamphlett-bookreview/

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2018/06/11/hell-to-pay-kay-hunter-british-detective-crime-thriller-series-book-4-by-rachel-amphlett-rachelamphlett-bookreview/

https://chataboutbooks.wordpress.com/2018/06/15/call-to-arms-kay-hunter-british-detective-crime-thriller-series-book-5-by-rachel-amphlett-rachelamphlett-bookreview/

 

Needle Song by Russ Day @rfdaze @fahrenheitpress #BlogTour #Interview @damppebbles #damppebblesblogtours

Hiya!

I am delighted to be joining in with Russell Day’s blog tour for Needle Song today. I have a fab interview with the author himself to share with you.

damppebbles blog tours

Many thanks to Emma at #damppebblesblogtours

Interview with Russell Day…..

Russell Day

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

I’m very much a city boy, raised in north London, I don’t trust air that I can’t grind between my teeth. I was born the year England won the world cup, young enough to not remember the sixties and old enough to be embarrassed by the seventies. I’ve spent a lot of the intervening time avoiding work, riding motorcycle and getting tattooed.

Most of what I write is either set in London or in a big anonymous city. I like the way the urban setting can be crowded and chaotic but still leave the characters isolated.

I’ve been writing since I was a teenager, which a long time ago now, but I only really knuckled down and started putting the hours in when I turned forty.

All of my work is based around crime of one sort or another, though I like to take a fairly board view of the genre. One of the first things I had published was a heist story, set in a world where the church had taken over policing. I suppose you could class it as science fiction, but for me the heist was the real focus of the story, and the subsequent double-cross of course.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

Usually I get one small scene pop into my head or some throw away line will lodge in my brain. With my novel, Needle Song, I had this picture in my head of a man, in broad daylight, sneaking away from someone else’s house. It bothered me that he would make such a hash of trying to be clandestine, so I began to wonder if, maybe, he was meant to be seen. Eventually the idea turned into a story line.

Funnily, the picture I had in my head didn’t make it into the finished book.

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

My grandmother had a martyr’s complex, she couldn’t rest unless everyone knew she was suffering. In Needle Song the narrator’s father is much the same.

How do you pick your characters names?

I start with the character’s age, work out the year they were born and google: popular names in 19__. Then I work down the list until one feels right. Quite often, with main characters, I use nicknames because I like tagging a bit of back story to them.

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

I find it hard to rough out a draft in one big piece, so I tend to edit as I go along. One thing I try not to do is develop a ritual. I think is you convince yourself you can only write at a certain time, in a certain chair, on a certain keyboard, then you’re setting yourself up to fail.

For me the most important thing is to just sit down and write, no matter how little or how bad. A couple hundred words of edit fodder is better than a blank page, at worst it gives me a chance to practice my proofreading.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Joolz Denby, Micheal Connelly, Lionel Shriver, David Nicholls and Paul Torday.

To be honest that list could go on for miles.

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

I think, Lionel Shriver. I’d like to know if she based the character of Kevin on someone she knew.

Were you a big reader as a child?

I came to reading quite late, if you exclude comics, though I’ve always loved stories. We had a neighbour, when I was a kid, who used to come for coffee twice a week. She was a really lovely woman, kind, generous, a diamond through and through. She was also a pathological liar who never stopped talking. Without drawing breath (I swear she could breathe through her ears) she’d spout complete bullshit for hours on end.

I loved it, I could have listened to her all day. The fact not one word of it was true didn’t matter, I just liked hearing the stories.

I didn’t start reading novels until I was about fifteen. Once I started I couldn’t stop.

When did you start to write?

I started in my teens. Unfortunately, I thought writing was something you either could or couldn’t do. I wasted years, making the same mistakes over and over, because I didn’t go looking for help. And I was lazy, that didn’t improve things.

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

I’m going to cheat here, if I may, and use a film. At the end of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, I think Paul Newman should be heard to shout: Missed!

Is there a book you wish you had written?

Elizabeth is Missing by Emma Healey. It’s a murder mystery where the crime is being investigated by a woman with dementia. As the book progresses so does her condition, the more of the plot is revealed, the less the protagonist can comprehend it. The way it’s plotted is incredibly clever.

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

Are You Sure the Statute of Limitations is up?

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

Harry Bosch, Michael Connelly’s LA detective. I’d take him to the Ace Café, on the North Circular road. I don’t see him as a tea-at-the-Ritz type.

Tell us a random fact about yourself.

I was once bitten by a mouse.

What are you working on right now?

A slightly odd-ball heist novel set in the aftermath of a pandemic. It’s going to be told from three or four different viewpoints.

Tell us about your last release?

Fahrenheit Press signed me up for two novels, Needle Song, is the first. It’s a murder mystery set in north London, and it introduces my almost anti-hero, Doc Slidesmith. Doc’s a highly eccentric tattooist, biker and Miss Marple fanatic. He’s smart, but he’s also underhand, devious and manipulative. If you like clean cut protagonists he’s probably not for you.

Do you have a new release due?

Ink to Ashes, the second novel featuring Doc Slidesmith, should be out later this year.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

I’ve got a very sweet-tooth, along with rest of my family, so celebrations of any kind generally involve a chocolate cake.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I’m on twitter: Russ Day @rfdaze

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

You’re welcome.

Needle Song cover

Book Blurb:

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

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

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

No one except Doc.

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

Purchase Links:

Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Needle-Song-Russell-Day-ebook/dp/B07CR9SJ5T/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1526549901&sr=1-1

Amazon US: https://www.amazon.com/Needle-Song-Russell-Day-ebook/dp/B07CR9SJ5T/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1526549972&sr=8-1&keywords=needle+song

Fahrenheit Press: http://www.fahrenheit-press.com/books_needle_song.html

About Russell Day:

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

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

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

Russell’s Social Media Link:
Twitter https://twitter.com/rfdaze

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

Needle song banner

Enjoy!

#FlashbackFriday with @KatyHogan @ConradDebby @MishaHerwin #BookReviews

Happy first Friday of July!

I hope you’re all having a lovely summer, so far.

Welcome to my Flashback Friday feature 🙂 On the first Friday of each month I like to have a little look back at what I was reading during the same month in previous years, since starting my blog.

Here are my reviews from July 2017 (& a link to July 2016)…..

Out Of The Darkness by @KatyHogan #BookReview

Out Of The Darkness

LOVE, LIES AND HIGH HEELS (LOVE, LIES AND MORE LIES Book 1) by @ConradDebby #BookReview

Love Lies and High Heels

Picking Up The Pieces by Misha M. Herwin #BookReview @MishaHerwin @penkhullpress

Picking Up The Pieces

#FlashbackFriday with @HattieHEdmonds @Fab_fiction @hollieoverton @CarysBray

Have you read any of the above? Would you add any to your TBR list?

What were you reading this time last year?

Feel free to join in with Flashback Friday 🙂 Don’t forget to share your link in the comments if you do. x

Social Media Break

Hi to all you lovely people!

I just wanted to let you know that I’ll be taking a social media break, from today until 14th July, to spend some quality time with my family whilst everyone has time off work, school & college 🙂

I do have scheduled posts though and any shares whilst I’m away from my computer (and trying to stay off my phone!) will be very much appreciated. I’ll catch up with you all soon.

Thank you!

Kerry x

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#CoverReveal #ForgiveMeNot by Samantha Tonge @SamTongeWriter @canelo_co @rararesources

My apologies for being late to the party, I have been out all day with family, but I am delighted to join in with Samantha Tonge’s cover reveal for Forgive Me Not.

Forgive Me Not Cover Reveal

Will be published on 23rd July by Canelo

Forgiveness can be hard to come by… An unputdownable new novel from bestseller Samantha Tonge

How far would you go to make amends?
When Emma fled her home at Foxglove Farm, she’d let down and hurt those who cared for her most. But now, two years later, she’s ready to face up to her past; she’s ready to go back.
But Emma’s unannounced return causes more problems than she could have foreseen. The people she knew and loved aren’t ready to forget, let alone forgive. And the one person she wants to reconnect with the most, her mother, can’t remember who she is.
Just as Emma starts to rebuild trust, an uncovered family secret and a shocking past crime threaten her newly forged future…
Sometimes simply saying sorry isn’t enough.

Perfect for readers of Ruth Hogan or Amanda Prowse, this is an extraordinary and unforgettable novel about running away from yourself – and finding a way back.

Check this out ⇓⇓⇓

Forgive Me Not 2

About the author…..

Sam Tonge - Canelo

Samantha Tonge lives in Manchester UK and her passion, second to spending time with her husband and children, is writing. She studied German and French at university and has worked abroad, including a stint at Disneyland Paris. She has travelled widely.
When not writing she passes her days cycling, baking and drinking coffee. Samantha has sold many dozens of short stories to women’s magazines.
In 2013, she landed a publishing deal for romantic comedy fiction with HQDigital at HarperCollins and in 2014, her bestselling debut novel, Doubting Abbey, was shortlisted for the Festival of Romantic Fiction best Ebook award. In 2015 her summer novel, Game of Scones, hit #5 in the UK Kindle chart and won the Love Stories Awards Best Romantic Ebook category.

Links
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SamTongeWriter
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SamanthaTongeAuthor
Website: http://samanthatonge.co.uk/

Forgive Me Not long

 

 

#Interview with #author Ruth Estevez @RuthEstevez2 @ZunTold

Hi all!

I have the pleasure of welcoming Ruth Estevez to Chat About Books today.

Ruth Estevez

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

My name is Ruth Estevez. I was born in Bradford, in West Yorkshire but moved when I was two to a village in the country, where I had a free childhood, playing on local farms, making dens and exploring. At the same time, I went to the Methodist Sunday School, took part in Eisteddfods, which are festivals of song, dance, drama and all things creative. From a young age I learned ballet and fell in love with dancing.

After a degree in Drama and English, I’ve worked first in theatre, then television, followed by associate lecturing in short film making and now at The Portico Library. I live in Manchester and feel completely at home here. I’ve written scripts for drama workshops in remote schools in North Yorkshire for a Theatre-in Education Company, for stop-frame puppet animated Bob the Builder and for one off short films.

Meeting Coty was my first novel, published in 2007 about my great aunt who worked in the perfume industry in the 1920s.

My first YA novel, Jiddy Vardy has just been published. It is set at the end of the 18th century in a remote and secretive smuggling community in North Yorkshire and follows a young girl as she tries to come to terms with where she belongs and who she is while also learning about smuggling. It’s a tale of growing up but also questioning the rules and rule makers.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

I got my idea for Jiddy Vardy from a local book on smuggling in Robin Hood’s Bay. I tend to find ideas in newspaper and magazine articles or even photographs. My novel Erosion came from a photograph in The Yorkshire Post newspaper showing a chalet toppling on the edge of a collapsing cliff.

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

Me, if anyone!

How do you pick your characters names?

Jiddy Vardy was a real person, so I kept her name. I collect names from graveyards and any I hear and think, oh, I like that! Otherwise, if a name doesn’t come immediately to a character, I don’t worry about it, but know the right name will come as I’m exploring the character and the story.

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

Make notes – characters – location – map out the plot – start writing – plot changes – edit – edit – edit.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

My top favourite authors change. Right now, they are Daphne Du Maurier, Tracy Chevalier, Simone de Beauvoir (who I need to re-read) Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Isabel Allende.

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

I’m a member of a Writers’ Group with some great authors and I love talking with them. I can ask them anything and I know I will get a considered answer. I don’t think I want to meet any other author I admire because I feel everything I need to know is in the books they have written. Asking questions would spoil the magic.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Yes!

When did you start to write?

I enjoyed writing at school from a young age though didn’t quite realise what it was about it. After visiting The Bronte Museum in Haworth (we lived nearby) and seeing the small books the children made, I made my own and began writing more. A friend and I wrote some little books called The Adventures of Ruth and Clara while we were at Primary School.

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

I wouldn’t presume to do that though there are a few books where I’ve felt let down by the ending.

Is there a book you wish you had written?

No. I’m glad I’ve read them and I can learn from them.

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

Saying Yes.

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

I’d invite Robert Kinkaid from The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Waller. We’d bring a flask of fresh coffee and I’d take him to photograph abbeys and bridges and rivers in Yorkshire. We’d sit by the water, in hot summer and talk. And photograph. And just be. It will be September, and an Indian summer, reflecting the end of our time together. He’s the last of the cowboys, the last roaming individual representing freedom and open spaces and lack of materialism. I’m getting all nostalgic thinking about our time together before it’s begun!

Tell us a random fact about yourself.

I have a scar under my chin from when I had an abscess removed when I was 10.

What are you working on right now?

I’m working on my next YA Novel called The Monster Belt. It’s set on the island of Formentera and in Yorkshire. One character attracts monsters, the other is desperately seeking one. The Monster Belt is an area between two latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere where the majority of monsters and mythical creatures are found.

Tell us about your last release?

My last release was Erosion. It is set in a remote chalet park on the North Yorkshire Coast. The local council is going to evict the remaining residents but they have nowhere else to go. They have been given a deadline and they are desperate. The question is, what would you do when everything around you is eroding and you have nothing left to lose?

Do you have a new release due?

I’m aiming to finish The Monster Belt by October, then start the edits for a release June 2019. That’s the plan.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

For Jiddy Vardy we had a private launch at The Portico Library in Manchester which was wonderful. It was in the middle of my Book Blog Tour and Becca of Pretty Little Memoirs made a playlist of tunes I sent her from when I was approximately 17, and we played that. There are flowers and bubbles and cards too. And conversations.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

My website: http://www.artgoesglobal.wordpress.com

Email: ruthestevezauthor@gmail.com

Twitter: @RuthEstevez

Facebook: @RuthEstevezM

Instagram: ruthestevezwriter

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

That I think Historical Fiction is important because it gives stories another layer. It can also keep people and their stories alive. After The Monster Belt, I’m writing a ghost story, but after that, I want to write a story based on a small incident that happened to my grandmother. I think these stories that take us into a different world need telling. Recently, Ruta Sepetys’ Salt to the Sea reminded me of that.

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

Jiddy Vardy cover

Jiddy is a survivor. Rescued at birth, she grows up in Robin Hood’s Bay, a village harbouring a dangerous secret. Just as romance blossoms and Jiddy finally feels like she belongs, figures from the past threaten to tear her world apart… A thrilling tale of one girl’s search for identity and love, set against a backdrop of smuggling…..

Buy link…..

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Jiddy-Vardy-Ruth-Estevez/dp/1999863305/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1530276909&sr=1-1

Enjoy!

One Week To Wed by Laurie Benson @LaurieBwrites #PublicationDay #BlogBlitz #Interview & #Giveaway @rararesources

Happy Publication Day, Laurie 🙂

One Week To Wed banner

Many thanks to Rachel @ Rachel’s Random Resources

Interview with Laurie Benson…..

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

Hi Kerry, Thanks for having me. My name is Laurie Benson and I write fun and frisky Regency romances about men in boots and the women who fall for them. I began my writing career as an advertising copywriter, and learned more than you could ever want to know about hot dogs and credit score reports. When I’m not at my laptop avoiding laundry, I like going to museums and taking ridiculously long hikes with my family.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

I write historical romances and most of my story ideas are inspired by a historical tidbit that I’ve uncovered. The idea for my first book, An Unsuitable Duchess, came to me because I wanted to write the story of the first American woman who married in to the English aristocracy. The idea for An Uncommon Duke came to me after I read about an assassination attempt that was made on George IV when he was the Prince Regent, and An Unexpected Countess is a treasure hunt romance involving the missing French crown jewels.

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

Lady Charlotte Gregory, my heroine in my new book One Week to Wed, is a widow that believes she will never find love again. The idea for her character came to me one night after I went out to dinner with a friend who is a widow. While we were having dessert, she started to tell me some of her recent dating horror stories. That night, I decided I wanted to write a story about a widow that believed it was impossible to find love twice in a lifetime but was proven wrong.

How do you pick your characters names?

This may sound odd, but a lot of my character names have come from gravestones in an old colonial era cemetery near my home. I also have a reader group on Facebook and sometimes they’ll help me come up with a character’s name.

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

My creative brain works best early in the morning, so when I am writing a book I wake up around 5am to write or edit what I have written the day before and I’ll usually continue to write until the ideas for that day stop. Sometimes that could be late morning. Other days, I’ll write until late at night. Once I’ve written about half of the book, I will usually send it off to one of my critique partners to read through and let me know if the characters are relatable and if there is anything about the story that doesn’t make sense. Once I have their feedback, I finish writing the book. I write a fairly clean first draft, so I usually do one round of revisions before I send it off to my editor.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Jane Austen
Elizabeth Boyle
Suzanne Enoch
Karen Marie Moning
Washington Irving

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

If I could travel back in time, I’d love to have tea with Jane Austen and ask her what really happened between her and Mr. Tom LeFroy, the Irish gentleman that is suspected of being the one man she loved but never married.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Actually, I didn’t enjoy reading when I was a child. I’m glad that changed when I was in high school. Now, I can’t image my life without books. The best way for me to relax at the end of the day is with a cup of tea and a good book. Reading before bed helps lull me to sleep.

When did you start to write?

I majored in advertising in college, and began writing advertisements, commercials, and other promotional material shortly after that. It wasn’t until my boys were in school that I started to write historical romance.

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

I’d call it Life Is In the Details. I think it is the little everyday moments in life that can stand out the most and are the things that we remember years later. I still have memories of walking home from school with my mom and that was a lifetime ago.

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

Without a doubt it would be Mr Tilney from Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey. This is a man who appreciates women’s fashion, so I’d like to think we would have a lot of fun shopping together.

What are you working on right now?

I am currently writing a Regency romance series called The Sommersby Brides. These three stand-alone stories are about the three Sommersby sisters who find themselves in three scandalous situations that lead to three very different proposals. I’ve just turned the last book of the series into my editor. It’s entitled His Three-Day Duchess and it is a road trip romance.

Do you have a new release due?

The first book in The Sommersby Brides trilogy entitled ONE WEEK TO WED will be released on July 1st. It’s about an independent widow and a dangerous Lord who share one unexpected night of passion that leads to an unknowing betrayal, divided loyalties, and a marriage of convenience.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

I love any excuse to celebrate. On publication day, I kick it off with cake and champagne for breakfast. My favorite bakery sells these lovely tiny cakes that are perfect for just one person. I usually settle in with one and a glass of champagne after my boys head off to school and the house is quiet. Then after dinner, I serve a larger cake that I can share with my entire family. They know all the time and hard work it takes to write a book. The cake is my way of thanking them for all the support and love they’ve given me during the writing of that book.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I love to hear from readers and they can send me an email through my website: http://www.lauriebenson.net.

They can also find me on these various social media platforms.
Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/laurie-benson
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LaurieBensonAuthor
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15139231.Laurie_Benson
Pinterest at https://www.pinterest.com/lauriebensonauthor/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/LaurieBwrites

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

Thanks for having me on your blog, Kerry. If any of your readers enjoy historical romances, I hope they check out my books and find me on social media to say hi.

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

OneWeekToWed cover

One Week to Wed

One Stolen Night…leads to unexpected wedding vows!

Widowed Lady Charlotte Gregory believes she’ll never love again after losing her husband, until meeting dashing Lord Andrew Pearce brings her respectable, lonely world back to vibrant life! Left alone one night, they give in to their desires only to find their secret passion leads to shock, scandal…and a sudden marriage of convenience.

Purchase Links

Amazon: myBook.to/OneWeekToWed B&N: http://bit.ly/2na4khQ Google Play: http://bit.ly/2E4ql9I iBooks: https://apple.co/2E76BSO Kobo: http://bit.ly/2n78JlJ

 

Author Bio –

One Week To Wed - Laurie Benson

Laurie Benson is an award-winning author who writes flirty and frisky Regency romance novels. She began her writing career as an advertising copywriter, where she learned more than you could ever want to know about hot dogs and credit score reports. Her novel An Unexpected Countess was voted Harlequin’s 2017 Hero of the Year by readers.

When she isn’t at her laptop avoiding laundry, Laurie can be found browsing antique shops, going on ridiculously long hikes, or sitting in her car on the school pickup line. She lives with her husband and two sons in a house filled with testosterone—even her bunny is a boy.
To learn about her upcoming books, visit her historical blog, and to sign up for her newsletter go to www.lauriebenson.net.

Social Media Links –

Twitter: https://twitter.com/LaurieBwrites

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

Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/benson2762/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15139231.Laurie_Benson

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Laurie-Benson/e/B01DMAOAA0

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/laurie-benson

Website: http://lauriebenson.net

Giveaway –

Win a signed copy of One Week To Wed (Open Internationally)

One Week To Wed PB

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

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Good luck!

 

 

The Heat Is On by Helen_Bridgett @Helen_Bridgett @RedDoorBooks #BlogTour #Interview & #GuestPost #LoveBooksGroupTours

Hi everyone!

Today I have the very great pleasure of bringing you an interview with Helen Bridgett as part of her The Heat Is On blog tour 🙂 I absolutely LOVED Helen’s first book, The Mercury Travel Club (I’ll add the link to my review at the bottom of this post), and The Heat Is On is firmly on my TBR list. 

The Heat Is On Blog Tour

Many thanks to Kelly at #LoveBooksGroupTours for arranging the following interview…..

 

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

 

 

Hi there, my latest novel The Heat is On is the sequel to The Mercury Travel Club. They’re both comedies based around a group of friends – Angie, Patty and Charlie – who run the Travel Club and have fabulous chaos-filled adventures as a result. 

 

In this sequel, things seem to be going extraordinarily well for the gang; they’re expanding the business, Patty is back from her job as a cruise-ship singer and Angie is in love. It looks as if things simply can’t get better but then a new competitor opens up on the high street and starts to jeopardise everything. It’s time for these friends to show what they’re made of.

 

I started writing three years ago; I’d always wanted to write a novel so instead of all the usual diet and exercise resolutions that I would traditionally make and break at New Year, instead I made one promise – that I’d actually write. I planned to give the finished manuscript to my sister for Christmas and that’s what I did. Who knows – she might have preferred a box of home-made biscuits!

 

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

 

I have been to most of the places featured in the novels and so they do inspire some of the storylines. Now whenever I travel I find myself wondering what could possibly go wrong if Angie and Patty were here. I’m a great people watcher and I love to eavesdrop so the simplest of conversations can be exaggerated and turned into a story. There is inspiration everywhere if you look for it.

 

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

 

Yes – definitely although they’re often an amalgamation of a few people. Patty is loosely based upon an Auntie of mine whereas Angie, Charlie and Peter are completely fictional. When I visited Russia, I met an Aussie called Josie who I’m still in touch with so I used the name and nationality although the character is very different. Angie’s mum – who many people rate as their favourite character – is also great fun to write and she’s based on two people and they know who they are!

 

 

How do you pick your characters’ names?

 

I don’t really know, unless they’re based on real people (like Josie and Patty), they just either feel right or they don’t. I might write the first draft using one name but by the end, I simply know they wouldn’t be called that – I play with names and then one fits. I can’t imagine Charlie being called anything else.

 

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

 

I usually know where it all starts and where it will end. I also have scenes based upon the travel adventures they’ll have and these have to add to the narrative somehow. I write most days and when I begin I just keep going until I’m 10-15k into the first draft, then I review it and plan where it is going. I use post it notes to keep tabs on what each character is doing and what I need them to do next. If I’m ever stuck, I walk the dog and simply think about what is happening, when I go to bed I plan the next day’s writing – the story tends to be with you every waking hour. On some days you wake up and delete everything you wrote the day before but you just keep going. 

 

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

 

This is a really tough question and the answer would change depending on what I’m reading. I read very widely and always have done so the list would be eclectic.

I’m going to say:

Enid Blyton – for getting me into reading from the very start.

Emile Zola – for showing me how emotional writing could be

Armistead Maupin – for creating Mrs Madrigal

Marian Keyes – for always making me laugh

Erin Kelly – for the gothic mystery

 

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

 

Again – a toughie as I’d want to have a good time rather than a very serious time so I’d give Marian and Erin a call and ask if they fancied a night on the town.

 

Were you a big reader as a child?

 

Yes – I was one of those kids who never had their nose out of a book.

 

When did you start to write?

 

I truly love the act of writing so have kept a diary since I was a child and I also wrote all those embarrassing childhood poems that parents love to reveal. I did a little scriptwriting before turning to novels and even if I weren’t writing professionally, I’d still be drafting something. I can’t imagine ever stopping.

 

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

 

I might give Germinal a happy ending.

 

Is there a book you wish you had written?

 

Err – any multi-million pound best seller, that would be quite nice !! 

 

But no – I love reading and I am delighted to find something fabulous rather than wishing I’d written it. 

 

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

 

 A Sand Dancer’s Story – I can’t imagine ever writing an autobiography but I’m from a coastal town in North East England where locals are known as sand-dancers.

 

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

 

Ooh – I’d invite Mrs Madrigal and Mouse from Tales of the City and I’d want to visit them in Barbary Lane.

 

What are you working on right now?

 

I’m working on my fourth novel which again has a strong female lead but I’m trying out a switch of genre.

 

Tell us about your last release?

 

The Heat is On is the sequel to The Mercury Travel Club. It’s the next instalment in the adventures of Angie, Patty and Charlie. I can promise great laughs alongside a little insight into human nature. 

Each chapter is the title of a song and I had great fun deciding on them; you can try to remember the artist who sang them but I’ve also listed them at the back so you can cheat!

 

This book will simply make you feel better about life.

 

Do you have a new release due?

 

The ebook will be available on 5th July and the paperback on 2nd August.

 

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

 

I do get quite nervous waiting to hear what people think of it but I have some fabulous friends and this year we’re simply meeting to raise a glass and read a couple of excerpts.

 

How can readers keep in touch with you?

 

I’d love readers to get in touch – I’m on twitter @Helen_Bridgett and my website in www.helenbridgett.com

 

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

 

Just thank you for inviting me along and I hope you enjoy The Heat Is On.

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Helen 🙂 I can’t wait to read The Heat Is On!

And something extra from Helen, just for you…..

Difficulties & Strengths of writing the 2nd book

 

I wrote The Heat Is On whilst going through the publishing process for the very first time and I’d say that was one of the biggest challenges. A debut novelist gets loads of suggestions for promoting the book and knowing no better, I tried to follow up every one. It didn’t leave much time for actually writing. Eventually I gave myself a telling off, calmed down and got on with it.

 

The joy of writing a sequel is that you already know and love the characters – Angie and Patty were still in my head, I love them to bits and I enjoy spending time with them. However, readers of The Mercury Travel Club also came to love them and wrote to me about their expectations for the characters – what they’d do next and what they wouldn’t do. I have had some hilarious conversations about them and they certainly do make it into this novel.

Favourite character

 

My favourite character to write is Patty, who is my protagonist’s best friend. She is the loud, lively one in the group; the one who always creates adventure and usually her fair share of trouble. She’s loyal and funny but has had her own share of heartache. With Patty, I feel I can write almost anything as she’d give it a go. Angie is more reserved and sensible and although she does some crazy things she always holds back a little. Patty just lets it rip. Readers have asked if she’s based on anyone and as with most characters, she’s based on a few people  but mainly on an Auntie of mine who I always saw as quite outrageous. Compared to Patty though, my Auntie is quite tame!

The Heat Is On cover

Synopsis

 ‘And have you booked in your vejazzler?’
‘My what?’
‘You can’t roll up with your grey wire wool when he’s expecting rhinestone!’

Angie Shepherd is back and this time she means business!

Life is perfect for Angie Shepherd. Her dreams of becoming an entrepreneur have come true, business is booming, and her best friend Patty is back in town. So when the opportunity of investing in a luxury hotel comes up, it seems like a no-brainer. It’s all going swimmingly until a rival travel agency opens up across the street. Before long, The Mercury Travel Club is undercut, double-crossed and in deep trouble. It’s time for Angie to up the stakes. But with costs mounting up, sales going down, and her personal life suddenly in freefall, can Angie and her friends weather the storm?

Witty and charming in equal measure, this feel-good novel shows that when the going gets tough, the tough definitely get going.

My review of The Mercury Travel Club…..

The Mercury Travel Club by @Helen_Bridgett @RedDoorBooks #BlogTour #BookReview