Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Book Review: A Plethora of Phantoms (Spirited Encounters Book 2) by Penny Hampson




A Plethora of Phantoms 
(Spirited Encounters Book 2)
By Penny Hampson


Whose footsteps in the dark?

He is heir to the earldom of Batheaston and lives in an elegant, stately home, but handsome twenty-something Freddie Lanyon is not a happy man. Not only is he gay and dreading coming out to his family, but he’s also troubled by ghosts that nobody else can see.

When Freddie’s impulsive purchase of an antique dressing case triggers even more ghostly happenings with potentially catastrophic consequences, he has to take action.

Freddie contacts charismatic psychic Marcus Spender for help and feels an immediate attraction to this handsome antique dealer –– a feeling that is mutual. But the pair’s investigations unearth shocking, long-buried secrets, which prove a major challenge to their task of laying unhappy spirits to rest and to their blossoming relationship.

Being brave isn’t one of Freddie’s standout qualities, but he’ll need all the courage he can muster to rid himself of wayward phantoms and get his life on track.

A Plethora of Phantoms is an uplifting ghostly tale about love, friendship, and acceptance.



From the very first pages, A Plethora of Phantoms feels less like a straightforward ghost story and more like stepping into a house where something has been waiting far longer than anyone realises. Lanyon Park is not simply a setting — it feels settled, layered, and quietly resistant to being fully understood.

What makes the opening chapters so effective is how firmly they are rooted in Freddie himself. He isn’t introduced as someone particularly decisive or in control, but as someone returning to a life that already carries expectation and weight. There’s a sense that he is returning to something that never really paused in his absence, rather than beginning anything new, and that feeling shapes everything that follows.

His early experiences are not dramatic in any obvious way. Instead, they are marked by small disruptions — objects moved, spaces that feel subtly altered, moments that don’t quite align with how things should be. None of it is immediately overwhelming, which makes it easier to question, to dismiss, or to explain away. It’s only as those moments begin to repeat and overlap that the unease becomes harder to ignore. The story relies on that accumulation rather than sudden shock, and it gives the atmosphere time to settle in properly.

Marcus enters the narrative within this uncertain space, and his presence shifts the tone almost immediately. Where Freddie hesitates, Marcus engages, bringing a different kind of energy into the story. He feels more willing to confront what is happening, even when it doesn’t make sense, and that contrast between them creates a dynamic that feels both balanced and quietly tense.

What develops between them is not isolated from the rest of the narrative. Their connection grows within the same atmosphere of uncertainty, shaped by the same questions and pressures. It doesn’t feel separate from the haunting, but intertwined with it, as though both are unfolding alongside each other rather than in parallel.

As the story progresses, the sense of scale begins to change. What initially feels contained within the house gradually expands outward, drawing attention to objects, histories, and connections that reach beyond a single place. The dressing case becomes particularly significant in this respect, acting as a point of focus that leads the narrative into something broader and more complex than it first appears.

Importantly, this expansion does not simplify the story. Instead, it adds layers to it. Each new piece of information deepens the mystery rather than resolving it immediately, shifting the focus from what is happening to why it has remained unresolved. The past does not feel distant or settled — it continues to shape the present through what has been left incomplete.

Running alongside this is a strong sense of place. Lanyon Park is not just a backdrop, but an active presence within the story, shaping the way events unfold and how the characters respond to them. Even as the narrative moves beyond it, the house remains central, as though everything continues to return to it in some way.

The emotional core of the story sits in its relationships. Not just between Freddie and Marcus, but within the family, and in the way the past continues to affect the present. These connections are rarely straightforward, often shaped by hesitation, misunderstanding, or things left unsaid. That gives the story a quiet emotional weight that sits alongside the supernatural elements.

By the final chapters, the story has shifted once again. What began as something contained and uncertain moves towards a clearer sense of understanding. The truth behind the haunting is uncovered, and with it comes a sense of release that feels both earned and necessary. It isn’t dramatic or overstated, but there is a quiet completeness to it — the sense that what has been left unresolved has finally been acknowledged, allowing the past to settle and the present to move forward with a little more clarity.

It’s this combination — of atmosphere, character, and gradual expansion — that gives A Plethora of Phantoms its strength. It trusts its pacing, allows its mystery to unfold naturally, and never rushes towards easy answers.

 

This novel is available to purchase HERE.
Read with #KindleUnlimited


Penny Hampson


Penny Hampson writes mysteries, and because she has a passion for history, you’ll find her stories also reflect that. A Gentleman’s Promise, a traditional Regency romance, was Penny’s debut novel and the first of her Gentlemen Series. There are now four novels in the series, with the latest, An Adventurer’s Contract, released in November 2024. Penny also enjoys writing contemporary mysteries with a hint of the paranormal, because where do ghosts come from but the past? The Unquiet Spirit, a spooky mystery/romance set in Cornwall, is the first in the Spirited Encounters Series. Look out for A Plethora of Phantoms coming soon.

Penny lives with her family in Oxfordshire, and when she is not writing, she enjoys reading, walking, swimming, and the odd gin and tonic (not all at the same time).

If you’ve enjoyed any of Penny’s books please leave a review on Amazon, Bookbub, or Goodreads, and let other readers know!


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Thursday, 2 April 2026

Book Review: The Scald Crow (Beyond the Faerie Rath Book 1) by Hanna Park




The Scald Crow
(Beyond the Faerie Rath Book 1) 
By Hanna Park


Calla left her life behind, haunted by a curse she cannot control. She seeks refuge in the land of a thousand hellos, Ireland, for a fresh start—a place where no one knows who or what she is.

Colm fled from Clonmara seven long years ago, but now it’s his father’s birthday, and the clan has gathered to celebrate the ould one. Each day brings back the memories that ruined him.

Saoirse dwells in the shadows of a lost love, unwilling to move on and unable to forget. The crystals say one thing, but the cold, hard truth tells another.

CiarĂ¡n walked away from the woman he loved for the fun, for the craic. He didn’t realize that one rash decision would impact the lives of so many, least of all his own.

Four broken hearts, brought together by the thread of love.

From the very first pages, The Scald Crow feels less like a straightforward paranormal romance and more like stepping into a landscape where something old is quietly waiting. Ireland is not simply a setting here — it feels watchful, layered, and deeply rooted in stories that have never quite faded.

What makes the opening chapters so effective is how grounded they are in Calla herself. We meet her not as someone powerful or assured, but as a woman carrying the weight of a past she has not fully come to terms with. There’s a sense of dislocation about her — as though she has never entirely belonged anywhere — and that feeling follows her into Ireland. The inheritance that brings her there feels less like an opportunity and more like a pull, something drawing her into a life she does not yet understand.

Her early experiences are marked by a growing unease. Strange perceptions, moments that don’t quite align with reality, and an awareness that something is shifting just beneath the surface. These are not presented as dramatic shocks, but as quiet disturbances — the kind that are easy to dismiss at first, until they begin to accumulate. That slow build is what gives the novel its atmosphere. It never rushes to explain itself, allowing uncertainty to linger.

Colm enters the story within this unsettled space, and his presence immediately adds both warmth and tension. He is grounded in the world Calla has stepped into — connected to place, to family, to history — in a way she is not. Their dynamic works because of that contrast. Where Calla is uncertain and searching, Colm is steady, but not untouched by his own past. There is a weight to him, a sense of things unresolved, which makes their connection feel less like coincidence and more like something inevitable.

What develops between them is immediate, but not shallow. The intensity of their relationship mirrors the wider story — instinctive, difficult to explain, and not entirely within their control. It grows alongside the strange pull of the world around them, so that emotional and supernatural elements become increasingly difficult to separate.

As the novel progresses, the scope of the story begins to widen. What starts as a personal narrative — a woman dealing with an inheritance and her own uncertainty — gradually reveals itself to be something much larger. The questions Calla is asking about her present begin to lead backwards, into history, into identity, and into a version of the world where myth is not separate from reality.

Importantly, these revelations do not bring clarity so much as they bring complexity. Each answer shifts Calla’s understanding of herself, often in ways that are destabilising rather than empowering. Her journey is not about stepping neatly into a new role, but about adjusting to the knowledge that her life has never been as simple as she believed.

Running alongside this is a strong sense of place. The novel uses Irish folklore not as decoration, but as foundation. It shapes the tone of the story, the behaviour of its characters, and the boundaries of what is possible. There is a constant sense that the modern world sits lightly on top of something much older, and that Calla is beginning to slip between the two.

The emotional core of the story remains in its relationships. Not just the central romance, but the connections to family, to community, and to the past. These relationships are often complicated, shaped by things left unsaid or only partially understood. That gives the story a quiet weight, even in its more fantastical moments.

By the final chapters, the novel has shifted again. What began as a story of uncertainty and discovery becomes something more open-ended, as though the ground beneath the narrative has expanded. There is a sense of movement rather than resolution — of doors opening rather than closing.

It’s this balance — between intimacy and scale, between the personal and the mythological — that makes The Scald Crow stand out. It allows its story to unfold gradually, trusting the reader to sit with its uncertainty and follow where it leads.

Rather than offering neat answers, it leaves you with the feeling that this is only the beginning of something much larger — and that Calla’s story is far from over.


This novel is available to purchase HERE.

Hanna Park


 `I began my writing career in the pre-dawn of a winter morning while my husband snored like a train. We could call my husband the catalyst. If it weren’t for him, I would never have gone to the kitchen to make a pot of coffee, feed the cat, and sit on the loveseat in front of the fire. It was there, in those moments of wondrous quiet, that I did something I had never thought possible. I opened my laptop, and while the coffee went cold, I wrote a story. My husband had no idea that these sojourns to the loveseat in front of the fire would become a daily occurrence, that writing would become an obsession, but the cat knew. She knows everything.

I write stories that make you laugh, make you cry, and make you love. Thank you, friends, for reading!

In the beginning, there was an empty page.

I am a writer who lives in Muskoka, Canada, with a husband who snores, a hungry cat, and an almost perfect canine––he’s an adorable little shit.

Social Media Links:


 

Friday, 27 March 2026

Code of Honour (Soldier Spy, Book #3) by Rosemary Hayes




Code of Honour 
(Soldier Spy, Book #3)
By Rosemary Hayes




Publication Date: February 2nd, 2026
Publisher: Sharpe Books
Pages: 251
Genre: Historical Fiction


'A first-rate historical thriller, full of period detail, fascinating characters, unexpected twists, mystery, intrigue and action.
~ Peter Tonkin


1812


Britain’s war against Napoleon continues.


Will Fraser and Duncan Armstrong have served their country well as spies, exposing traitors and rescuing betrayed royalists.


Now they are asked to support military operations in the Peninsular War. The French are using a new code which is proving impossible to decipher. Will and Armstrong must work with Spanish guerrillas to intercept messages between French Commanders and pass them to Wellington’s codebreakers.


Will is reluctant, however. Portugal was where he was falsely accused of cowardice and desertion and forced to leave the army. And Captain Harcourt-Browne, the jealous and vengeful officer who caused his downfall, is still serving there.


But Will is given a compelling – and personal – reason to carry out the operation. If he does so, there’s a slim chance he could be reinstated.


Enemy agents are soon on their trail; agents who want them dead. Somehow Will and Armstrong must evade them and join the guerrillas in a daring attempt to uncover Napoleon’s battle plans.


But Will’s troubled past catches up with him. Four years ago he lied to protect the woman he loved. Now he must own up to that lie to save himself.


Rosemary Hayes has written over forty books across different genres, from historical fiction to chapter books for early readers and texts for picture books.



Praise for Rosemary Hayes:


Rosemary Hayes' Soldier Spy is a first-rate historical thriller, full of period detail, fascinating characters, unexpected twists, mystery, intrigue and action. It reminds me of Berrnard Cornwell's brilliant, Regency-set Gallows Thief. I am pleased to see that it is the first of a trilogy and look forward to reading more about the dashing Will Fraser.
~ Peter Tonkin, author of The Richard Mariner thrillers


One of the very best historical novels I have ever read.
~ Sandra Robinson, Huguenot Ancestry Expert


An absorbing tale told with sensitivity. The forgotten struggles of Huguenot refugees come to moving, heartrending life.’ 
~ Steven Veerapen, author of A Dangerous Trade




Soldier Spy Series Universal Buy Links:


Book 1 – Traitor’s Game

Book 2 – The King’s Agent

Book 3 – Code of Honour

This series is available to read on #KindleUnlimited


Rosemary Hayes


Rosemary Hayes has written over fifty books for children and young adults. She writes  in different genres, from edgy teenage fiction (The Mark), historical fiction (The Blue Eyed Aborigine and Forgotten Footprints), middle grade fantasy (Loose ConnectionsThe Stonekeeper’s Child and Break Out) to chapter books for early readers and texts for picture books. Many of her books have won or been shortlisted for awards and several have been translated into different languages.

Rosemary has travelled widely but now lives in South Cambridgeshire. She has a background in publishing, having worked for Cambridge University Press before setting up her own company Anglia Young Books which she ran for some years. She has been a reader for a well known authors’ advisory service and runs creative writing workshops for both children and adults.


Author Links:





Book Review: A Plethora of Phantoms (Spirited Encounters Book 2) by Penny Hampson

A Plethora of Phantoms  (Spirited Encounters Book 2) By Penny Hampson Whose footsteps in the dark? He is heir to the earldom of Batheaston a...