Wednesday 21 April 2021

I am so excited to be hosting #YoungAdult author, Josephine Greenland, on I got lost in a book, today!! #excerpt @greenland_jm @maryanneyarde

 


Embers
By Josephine Greenland


Two siblings, one crime. One long-buried secret. 
  
17-year-old Ellen never wanted a holiday. What is there to do in a mining town in the northernmost corner of the country, with no one but her brother Simon – a boy with Asperger’s and obsessed with detective stories – for company? 
  
Nothing, until they stumble upon a horrifying crime scene that brings them into a generations-long conflict between the townspeople and the native Sami. When the police dismiss Simon’s findings, he decides to track down the perpetrator himself. Ellen reluctantly helps, drawn in by a link between the crime and the siblings’ own past. What started off as a tedious holiday soon escalates into a dangerous journey through hatred, lies and self-discovery that makes Ellen question not only the relationship to her parents, but also her own identity.

Excerpt from Embers


‘He’s overwrought. He needs a holiday,’ Mum announced the next evening. She and Ellen were standing on the veranda in the back garden, laying the table. Dad was in the kitchen, chopping onions for the bolognese. ‘He could go with you, Ellen.’

‘Me?’

‘Mm-hmm.’ Mum brushed a stray lock of hair from her face. ‘You could both do with a week off. You’ve never had a holiday alone together. Dad and I can’t always trail behind you like guards. Simon is fourteen and a half, he needs a chance to stand on his own two feet.’

‘But where would we go?’

‘To Svartjokk.’

‘Svartjokk?’ Ellen froze in her movements, a plate in her hand. She put it down slowly. ‘Why?’

‘You know why, we’ve talked about going north for ages.’

‘As a family, yes. Not as… not as a way to punish Simon.’

Her mother gave her a wide-eyed stare. ‘It’s not a punishment, Ellen! You agreed, before, it would be good to go. And you did that school project on the Sami this year. You said yourself you’d like to see where your granddad grew up, and the Sami…’

Ellen bit her lip. It was true. She was curious about her granddad’s people. The Sami, the indigenous people of northern Scandinavia, were originally nomads who made their livelihood from reindeer herding. The Swedish settlers who’d arrived in the 1700s claimed the land, pushing the Sami away from the ancient grazing areas. Later, a rigorous assimilation had taken place in an attempt to integrate the Sami with the Swedes. Families had been separated, communities pulled apart, the reindeer herding business decimated. Only a minority of the Sami people kept the tradition going now. Ellen had done her school history project on the assimilation, and the horrid race biology studies that took place in the 1900s, where university professors had measured the skulls of living people to determine whether ethnic groups such as the Sami were biologically different from the Swedes. It was part of a unit her class had done on ethnic minorities. She’d spent hours and hours poring over the Sami collection at the Nordic Museum in Stockholm.

‘It would be interesting,’ she admitted. ‘But why now? Why not next summer?’

‘Well, it won’t be right now, Ellen. By the time we get tickets and accommodation sorted out it will be mid-July.’ Her mother straightened and tucked a lock behind her daughter’s ear. ‘You know how things have been, Ellen, between your father and me… This incident didn’t make it any easier.’

‘You mean…’ 

‘It will be good for you. And you’re good with Simon – you’ll manage.’

‘Yes, yes, of course…’ Ellen had done excursions with her brother before. The beach, the park, museums, canoeing. At Svartjokk they’d be doing pretty much the same, just further away from home. All you needed with Simon, really, was patience and an open mind. But that would be more easily said than done when they’d be so far from home, and Ellen would have to be responsible for making sure her brother didn’t get himself in trouble. ‘I have a summer job,’ she said. ‘They might not give me time off at such short notice.’

For a moment, Camilla seemed about to apologise for something. Her lips fixed into a forced smile. Then her face smoothened, back to business. ‘We’ll figure that out somehow.’ She put her hands on the chair and leaned forward to her daughter. ‘Tickets up north sell out fast this time of year, Ellen. If I don’t book tonight, they will be gone. You need to decide now.’

Ellen opened her mouth, closed it again. An image of Svartjokk grew in her mind. Open-air mines, deep forests, the lonely mountain Dundret looking down on the tiny buildings and streets below… Reindeer, scampering through the forests and along the moors. Never more than pictures in her imagination. Here was a chance to make those a reality. She felt a tugging sensation in her gut. A curious sense of longing.

‘What does Dad think?’

Camilla averted her gaze. ‘He agrees.’

‘Really?’ Camilla usually came up with the ideas, while Niklas went along with them, after a good deal of nagging.

‘We think it would be a chance for you to explore your roots. And it would make up for the fact you couldn’t go with him to your great-grandmother’s funeral.’

Ellen gripped the back of the chair. ‘It’s quite a lot to take in.’

Camilla leaned over the table and put her hand on Ellen’s. ‘It’s going to be all right, sweetheart.’

Ellen moved her hand away and looked over her mother’s shoulder, through the window. She saw her own reflection in the glass: the apple-cheeked face, the line of freckles under her corn-blue eyes and her yellow-white, slightly wavy hair reaching down to her shoulders. Her short, soft frame. Often, she was taken for fifteen rather than seventeen, and Simon… With his skinny arms and legs and knobbly knees, his voice which still hadn’t broken, people often thought he was twelve. Ellen tried to imagine the two of them on a train with their rucksacks, on their way to a part of Sweden that was as distant and unknown as another continent.

She shook the thought away, looked beyond her reflection to her father’s tall, hunched-over figure, and went into the kitchen. ‘Dad?’

Her father turned to her with red-rimmed eyes. ‘Just the onion,’ he said. Before his face could betray him, he turned back to his work. The knife cleft an onion in two. Chop, chop-chop.

So he’d heard everything they’d said, Ellen thought.

‘Please, Ellen, speak to Simon,’ Mum called from outside. ‘He doesn’t want to talk to me right now.’

Ellen was quite certain it was the other way around.


Josephine is a Swedish-British writer from Sweden, currently working as an English teacher in Edinburgh. She has a BA in English from the University of Exeter, and an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Birmingham. She started writing novels at the age of nine, but only began writing seriously in English while at university, for her first creative writing course (2015). Since then, she’s had 14 short stories published, won two competitions and been shortlisted twice. Embers is her first novel, inspired by her travels in northern Sweden with her brother, and was her dissertation project for her MA. When not writing, she enjoys playing music, jogging, hiking, and discussing literature with her cat. 

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Thank you to The Coffee Pot Book Club for giving me the opportunity to feature Josephine Greenland new book.




I am exciting to be hosting the blog tour for Two Fatherlands (A Reschen Valley Novel Part 4) by Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger #BookReview #HistoricalFiction #WW2 @ckalyna @maryanneyarde

 


  Two Fatherlands
 (A Reschen Valley Novel Part 4) 
By Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger 
 

It's a dangerous time to be a dissident...

 

1938. Northern Italy. Since saving Angelo Grimani's life 18 years earlier, Katharina is grappling with how their lives have since been entwined. Construction on the Reschen Lake reservoir begins and the Reschen Valley community is torn apart into two fronts - those who want to stay no matter what comes, and those who hold out hope that Hitler will bring Tyrol back into the fold.

 

Back in Bolzano, Angelo finds one fascist politician who may have the power to help Katharina and her community, but there is a group of corrupt players eager to have a piece of him. When they realise that Angelo and Katharina are joining forces, they turn to a strategy of conquering and dividing to weaken both the community and Angelo's efforts.

Meanwhile, the daughter Angelo shares with Katharina - Annamarie - has fled to Austria to pursue her acting career but the past she is running away from lands her directly into the arms of a new adversary: the Nazis. She goes as far as Berlin, and as far as Goebbels, to pursue her dreams, only to realise that Germany is darker than any place she's been before.

Angelo puts aside his prejudices and seeks alliances with old enemies; Katharina finds ingenious ways to preserve what is left of her community, and Annamarie wrests herself from the black forces of Nazism with plans to return home. But when Hitler and Mussolini present the Tyroleans with “The Option”, the residents are forced to choose between Italian and German nationhood with no guarantee that they will be able to stay in Tyrol at all!

 

Out of the ruins of war, will they be able to find their way back to one another and pick up the pieces?




 

I do enjoy reading books set in this era, and the blurb of this novel really intrigued me. A small community facing the threat of annihilation because of their countries need for electricity. Stuck between a rock and a hard place, Tyrol, has Mussolini on one side and Hitler on the other. The future does not look too bright!

This story centres around a small group of characters who are connected in ways that some of them do not even understand. On the one hand, there is the lovely Katharina, who has a very unruly son and an equally determined daughter. There is Angelo, is he a bad guy, is he the good guy, who knows? But he is stuck in the middle of it all, trying to find a way to protect Katharina (because he had an affair with her many years ago and fathered a child with her). There there is
Annamarie, the said daughter, who is desperate to become an actress but somehow ends up being swept away by Nazie ideology. So, as you can see, there is a lot going on.

I thought this story was brilliant from start to finish. This is undoubtedly one of those books that once started, you have to finish, and I certainly became really invested in the characters. At times I groaned aloud at their choices, and wept for their community. The author certainly knows how to pen a compelling plot.

If you like to read a story from multiple perspectives and enjoy a novel that has been meticulously researched, then I think you will enjoy Two Fatherlands very much!
 
 
 
 

Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger is an American author living in Austria. Her focus is on historical fiction. She has been a managing editor for a magazine publishing house, has worked as an editor, and has won several awards for her travel narrative, flash fiction and short stories. She lives with her husband in a “Grizzly Adams” hut in the Alps, just as she’d always dreamt she would when she was a child.

 

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  Thank you to The Coffee Pot Book Club for giving me the opportunity to read this book.
 

 

Monday 19 April 2021

I am exciting to be hosting the blog tour for Thunder on the Moor by Andrea Matthews #BookReview #TimeTravel @AMatthewsAuthor @maryanneyarde

 


Thunder on the Moor

By Andrea Matthews

 


Maggie Armstrong grew up with tales of blood feuds and border raids, so when her father takes her back four hundred and fifty years to his Scottish home, she is enchanted. Enchanted, that is, until her uncle announces his intentions to betroth her to Ian Rutherford, the son of a neighboring laird. Maggie’s twentieth century sensibilities are outraged, but refusal to agree could ignite a blood feud. Maggie’s worlds are colliding. Betrayal, treachery, and a tragic murder have her questioning whether she should remain or try to make her way back to her own time. To make matters worse, tensions escalate when she stumbles across handsome Englishman, Will Foster. But could he be the hero she’s always dreaded of or will his need for revenge against Ian shatter more than her heart?

 

Maggie Armstrong cannot remember a time when she had not been enthralled by her father’s stories. But what if there “stories” were not actually stories? What if they were happening right now? Well, not quite right now, but… Instead of going with her father on another archeological dig, he takes her back in time to the sixteenth century.

I adore time-travel novels and I am always fascinated with how authors come up with original ideas as to how the time-travel is accomplished. I adored how this story played out. Maggie’s father was born in the 16th Century only to be transported to the future—25 years later, and the reverse happens. Only this time, he is taking Maggie with him.

This novel really captured my attention, and I also highlighted how vastly different this time was to our own. Time-travel always sounds so wildly romantic, but in reality, especially if you are a woman, the past could not have been, well, more in the past. Imagine a world with no woman suffrage, where women’s rights were few, where there were different expectations. Maggie has to come to terms with what has happened, and she has to find away to live in this strange world that her father has taken her to.

I loved everything about this story. The characters were larger than life. The historical setting was masterfully portrayed, and at all times the story seemed plausible. Sometimes time-travel novels can be a little hit and miss, but in the case of Thunder on the Moor it is certainly a hit. 

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Andrea Matthews is the pseudonym for Inez Foster, a historian and librarian who loves to read and write and search around for her roots, genealogical speaking. In fact, it was while doing some genealogical research that she stumbled across the history of the Border reivers. The idea for her first novel came to mind almost at once, gradually growing into the Thunder on the Moor series. And the rest, as they say, is history…

Thank you to The Coffee Pot Book Club for giving me the opportunity to read this book.
 

 

 



 

 

 

Tuesday 13 April 2021

I am excited to be hosting the blog tour for The Year We Lived by Virginia Crow #HistoricalFiction #BookReview @DaysDyingGlory @CrowvusLit @maryanneyarde



The Year We Lived

By Virginia Crow

 


It is 1074, 8 years after the fateful Battle of Hastings. Lord Henry De Bois is determined to find the secret community of Robert, an Anglo-Saxon thane. Despite his fervour, all his attempts are met with failure.

 

When he captures Robert’s young sister, Edith, events are set in motion, affecting everyone involved. Edith is forced into a terrible world of cruelty and deceit, but finds friendship there too.

 

Will Robert ever learn why Henry hates him so much? Will Edith’s new-found friendships be enough to save her from De Bois? And who is the mysterious stranger in the reedbed who can disappear at will?

 

A gripping historical fiction with an astonishing twist!

 

 

Set eight years after Hastings, Lord Henry De Bois will stop at nothing to find the hidden community of Robert, an Anglo-Saxon thane. De Bois’ brother, Philip, will stop at nothing for peace. The result of both desires is the kidnapping of Robert’s sister and, although it isn’t exactly what Philip wanted, he can do nothing to stop the abuse that Edith suffers by Henry’s hand.

I really liked reading about Edith, and Robert. I can’t quite decide who is my favourite, for they are very different people. Edith is very kind, used to the outdoors and miserable inside. The horrors she experiences are dreadful to read about and I was sat hoping, as I read, for Robert to find her and to figure out a way to help her escape.

The ending of this book is so incredible, I couldn’t actually believe the turn that the story took. If there was ever a prize for best plot twist, I think I would give it to this book! I loved reading it and am going to go on the search for more books by this author!



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Virginia grew up in Orkney, using the breath-taking scenery to fuel her imagination and the writing fire within her. Her favourite genres to write are fantasy and historical fiction, sometimes mixing the two together such as her newly-published book "Caledon". She enjoys swashbuckling stories such as the Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas and is still waiting for a screen adaption that lives up to the book!

 

When she's not writing, Virginia is usually to be found teaching music, and obtained her MLitt in "History of the Highlands and Islands" last year. She believes wholeheartedly in the power of music, especially as a tool of inspiration. She also helps out with the John O'Groats Book Festival which is celebrating its 3rd year this April.

 

She now lives in the far flung corner of Scotland, soaking in inspiration from the rugged cliffs and miles of sandy beaches. She loves cheese, music and films, but hates mushrooms.

 

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Thank you to The Coffee Pot Book Club for giving me the opportunity to read this book.

 


 


 

Monday 12 April 2021

The Custard Corpses by M J Porter #HistoricalFiction #Excerpt @coloursofunison @maryanneyarde

 

 The Custard Corpses

By M J Porter


A delicious 1940s mystery.

Birmingham, England, 1943.

While the whine of the air raid sirens might no longer be rousing him from bed every night, a two-decade-old unsolved murder case will ensure that Chief Inspector Mason of Erdington Police Station is about to suffer more sleepless nights.

Young Robert McFarlane’s body was found outside the local church hall on 30th September 1923. But, his cause of death was drowning, and he’d been missing for three days before his body was found. No one was ever arrested for the crime. No answers could ever be given to the grieving family. The unsolved case has haunted Mason ever since.

But, the chance discovery of another victim, with worrying parallels, sets Mason, and his constable, O’Rourke, on a journey that will take them back over twenty-five years, the chance to finally solve the case, while all around them the uncertainty of war continues, impossible to ignore.


✦ Excerpt 


“I saw the paper last night,” Sam confirmed. “I was expecting you. And no, I’ve nothing new to offer. It’s been many years now, and while I would hope one day to catch the perpetrator, I just don’t know if that’s possible. Not now.”

Rebecca nodded, almost too eagerly, her hand hovering over the mug of tea, waiting to pick it up until the movement had stopped. Her cheeks were flushed, and he wondered what else she’d come to tell him. 

“I don’t truly know what I’d do if we ever found who murdered my brother. I like to think I wouldn’t spit in their face, but I can’t make such a promise. He’d have been a man now, probably off fighting in the war and maybe with children of his own. He certainly wouldn’t be the brother I remember when I think about him, the one who used to pull my hair and laugh at my squint.”

He nodded. Rebecca was wise beyond her years. She always had been.

“And how is your sister?”

Rebecca lifted the mug to her lips to cover her feelings, but he knew that the younger sister had struggled through the death of her brother and mother. It was unlikely that she’d ever marry.

“Patricia lives with my Aunt now, in Weston. They, well, it pains me to say it, but they’re good for each other. Both of them live firmly in the past. My Aunt lost her husband in the Great War as well and her only son in the air raids a few years ago on Weston. She married a wealthy man, though, and has enough money to support them both without either needing to work. It’s just better this way, although I do miss her.”

There was both regret and relief in Rebecca’s voice, and he well understood it. Living with the embodiment of what had happened was a draining experience. It seemed right that at least one of Robert’s sisters were able to live a full life, as untainted as it could be, by what had befallen him.

“That’s why I’m here, actually,” Rebecca’s sudden change of tact startled him, and he realised she was fumbling in her petite blue handbag, the shade perfectly matching her coat. He almost groaned when she pulled a crumpled newspaper from its reaches and passed it across the desk, over the plate of untouched biscuits. He was just about to say that he already had one when his eyes focused on the headline.

“The Weston Mercury,” and then he scanned down, and he couldn’t help himself. His hand snaked the newspaper towards him, his eyes focused on the grainy image of the smiling boy who looked so much like Robert. He checked the date, a month old, and then he read the headline.

“Murder victim would have turned twenty-four today. Family still seeking answers.”

He glanced at Rebecca.

“What is this?”

“I found it on the train, on the way home. It reminded me of what happened to Robert.”

Sam was already nodding, his mind trying to filter through the possibilities. It was all too familiar.

“But we asked other forces, and none of them ever said they’d had anything similar.”

“This was after Robert’s death,” and her red-polished nail pointed out the date when the young lad had disappeared and been found murdered. There were few enough details, not so long after the fact, yet he could immediately see why Rebecca had brought him the newspaper.

“I’ll look into this,” he promised, already feeling a strange stirring of anticipation. After all this time, was it truly possible that their murderer had struck again? Had Robert’s death not been an isolated occurrence?

“I thought you might,” Rebecca nodded, relief on her young face. He had the feeling she’d been torn about whether to share the information or not. 

“You’ve done the right thing, thank you. I’ll get in touch with the police force in Weston and see what they can tell me.”


You can pick up your copy over on Amazon.


M J Porter writes historical fiction set before 1066. Usually.

This is M J's first foray into the historical mystery genre and the, relatively recent, twentieth century. 

M J writes A LOT, you've been warned.

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Tour Schedule


Thank you to The Coffee Pot Book Club for inviting me to be a part of the blog tour for The Custard Corpses.
 
 

I am excited to be hosting the blog tour for The Hearts of All on Fire by Alana White #HistoricalMystery #HistoricalFiction #BlogTour @alanawhite1480 @cathiedunn

The Hearts of All on Fire By Alana White Florence, 1473.  An impossible murder. A bitter rivalry. A serpent in the ranks. Florentine investi...