From the very first pages, The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven feels less like a traditional historical romance and more like stepping into a fairytale — but one that quickly turns uneasy. There’s a strong Snow White atmosphere at the beginning: a young princess being dressed and displayed, a watchful and unsettling queen, and a castle that feels as much like a place of confinement as it does of beauty.
What makes the book stand out is its voice. The Ringmaster steps in and out of the narrative, commenting, interrupting, confessing and occasionally scolding, so you never quite know where the line between storyteller and story lies. At times it feels like you’re watching events from the wings with him; at others you’re dragged right into the spotlight. It’s theatrical, self-aware and genuinely unlike anything I have ever read.
The characters are messy and complicated. They’re artists, dreamers and survivors caught between systems that all want something from them. Moments of wonder in the ring sit right beside fear backstage: immigration scares, political pressure, criminal investors, missing animals, empty seats. Through it all runs the stubborn belief that whatever happens, the show must go on.
I wasn’t sure at first what to expect from the musical references and the QR codes scattered through the story, but I ended up really liking that feature. Being able to scan and instantly hear the songs that inspired certain scenes made parts of the book feel almost cinematic, like stepping briefly out of the page and into the soundtrack of the moment.
The tone shifts boldly from satire to tenderness to outright shock, especially in the final chapters, where private desires and public consequences collide with brutal force. Nothing is neatly resolved. Instead, the ending hangs in the air like a performer at the top of the big top, leaving you suspended and slightly breathless.
Inspired by real events but openly fictionalised for satire, it reads like a distorted mirror held up to history. You finish with the sense that you’ve witnessed the beginning of something volatile rather than the end of something complete, and there is unmistakable room left for the second book to catch you when you fall.
This novel is available on Amazon.
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What Makes This Novel Different
Circus Bim Bom offers an innovative multimedia reading experience. The novel includes 45+ YouTube links to period music, historical speeches, and cultural moments embedded throughout—readers can listen to the actual songs characters dance to as they waltz, and watch Reagan's Brandenburg Gate speech as it's referenced in the text.
The companion website (www.bimbombookclub.com) extends the story beyond the page:
• Character Avatars: 25+ talking video introductions where characters speak directly to readers
• Re-Imagined Circus Posters
• Book Club Experience: Interactive forums, live chat, and community discussions
• Historians Room (under construction): A space for Cold War history buffs to fact-check the novel, explore primary sources, and debate historical accuracy









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