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Thursday, January 28, 2021

My review of The Other Cipher (Soli Hansen Mysteries Book 2) by Heidi Eljarbo #HistoricalMystery #HistoricalFiction #WW2 @HeidiEljarbo @maryanneyarde

 



The Other Cipher
Soli Hansen Mysteries Book 2
By Heidi Eljarbo



In the captivating second book of the Soli Hansen Mysteries, two women—separated by more than three hundred years—are connected through their love of art.

1613. Fabiola Ruber is been wed to a man she does not know and must live in a country with a new language and different customs. The memories of a lost love in her hometown Malta haunt her, and she sets out to find an artist who can do her portrait and recapture the feelings she had when she once modeled for a renowned Italian master painter.

1944. Four years into World War II, art historian Soli Hansen works with the Norwegian resistance to locate significant artwork and safeguard the pieces from the Nazis. When she finds out the Germans are after a hidden baroque depiction of a seventeenth century woman, she must muster all her courage and skills to decipher encrypted codes and preserve the mysterious art before it’s too late.

Both women are determined to do what they can to bring healing and redemption to their otherwise ominous future. Through tangled, bewildering clues and an eye for detail, Soli’s bond to Fabiola grows closer by the day. She must find the missing painting before the enemy does.

Ranging from a privileged life in seventeenth century Antwerp to Oslo during the German occupation of the second world war, this dual timeline is a historical mystery thriller that will keep you guessing until the very end.


Publication Date: 2 December 2020
Publisher: Independently Published
Page Length: 200 Pages
Genre: Historical Mystery


MY THOUGHTS!

I adore stories about the Resistance during World War Two, and I thought the premise of this novel sounded fabulous. Soli Hansen lives in Oslo, and she is an art historian and dealer, she also works undercover for the Resistance snatching priceless artwork right from under the Nazis noses. There is a rumour that the Nazis are looking for a painting, possibly painted by Rubens in the early 17th Century. Soli will not allow that painting to be taken by the Nazis, but finding the painting turns out to be far more problematic than she had first envisaged. For the owner of the painting, a prominent member of the Jewish, community has hidden his painting from those who wish to take it from him. The race is one, can Soli and her Resistance friends find the painting before the Nazi’s do?

There is so much excitement and tension in this novel that I simply could not put it down. In fact, I read it in one sitting! The characters screamed realism, and the story was filled with non-stop action and intrigue. The Resistance is always one step in front of the Nazis, but the Nazis are closing in fast every step of the way – talk about nervous excitement, this book had bucket loads of it!

This isn’t however just the story of a treasure hunt to find a lost painting before the bad guys do, it is also a story of a few very brave individuals who cannot stand ideally by and submit to Nazis control. These brave men, women and children, risked their own lives every single day. It was a very sobering thought.

Soli, the main character in this story, is a woman who is strong, determined, but there is also a sense of vulnerability about her. She is at times, completely out of her depth as she finds herself shoulder to shoulder with men that she despised, and at times, it is only the comfort of her friend Heddy Vengen and Nikolai Lange that give her the courage to forge forever onwards. I really enjoyed reading about Soli. She came across as very real in the telling.

Heddy was also another character that really intrigued me. I don’t want to give away any spoilers but oh is Heddy hiding a dark and shameful secret from her Resistant friends. But shhh! I have said enough. You will have to read the book to find out what that is!

This novel is told through two different timelines. The majority of this novel is set in Norway in the 1940s, but the author also takes her readers back to when the painting was commissioned in 1613 in  Antwerp. I thought this was a wonderful way of giving this painting that everyone is looking for, a sense of history. I thought the two time-lines really complimented each other.

I really enjoyed this novel, and I shall certainly be going back and reading book one very soon.




Heidi Eljarbo

Heidi Eljarbo is the bestselling author of historical fiction and mysteries filled with courageous and good characters that are easy to love and others you don't want to go near.

Heidi grew up in a home filled with books and artwork and she never truly imagined she would do anything other than write and paint. She studied art, languages, and history, all of which have come in handy when working as an author, magazine journalist, and painter.
After living in Canada, six US states, Japan, Switzerland, and Austria, Heidi now calls Norway home. She and her husband have a total of nine children, thirteen grandchildren--so far--in addition to a bouncy Wheaten Terrier.

Their favorite retreat is a mountain cabin, where they hike in the summertime and ski the vast, white terrain during winter.

Heidi's favorites are family, God's beautiful nature, and the word whimsical.
Sign up for her newsletter at https://www.heidieljarbo.com/newsletter

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Wednesday, January 27, 2021

My review of Ninja Girl Adventures (Ninja Girl Adventures Series, #1) by MG Wilson and Phil Elmore #YoungAdult #BlogTour #NinjaGirlAdventures #BookReview @XpressoTours


Ninja Girl Adventures
(Ninja Girl Adventures Series, #1)
By MG Wilson and Phil Elmore




Sister Power at It’s Best

Moira Mackenzie is just 14 years old. Her sister Mindy is 15, and their younger sister Marci is 9. The girls have lived their lives until now believing their father, Scottish billionaire Stephen Mackenzie, is simply a businessman whose KogaTech Consolidated (KTC) is the world’s most successful technology company. Their father was married to a Japanese woman, Kameko, whom the girls are told died in a car accident.

The girls’ idyllic existence in New York, where KTC headquarters is located, is shattered when their father disappears. He is legally declared dead by their Uncle Jiro Akiyama, Kameko’s brother. Uncle Jiro wants to possess the company for himself. What he doesn’t know is that Stephen Mackenzie changed his will so that Moira inherits the entire corporation.

An overwhelmed Moira must contend with the unraveling of her family. She has the help of Morton Gerardi, Stephen Mackenzie’s best friend, but he’s not the girls’ father and there’s only so much he can do. While Mindy rebels and Marci, a child genius, disappears deeper into her computer, Moira is further frightened by an intruder who invades the girl’s Manhattan apartment. Not long after this, Moira is visited by Uncle Jiro himself, who offers to provide for the girls financially as long as Moira signs the company over to him. 

Moira considers giving in but doesn’t. Suddenly, out of nowhere, black-clad figures, who can only be the mythical ancient ninja of feudal Japan, attack the Mackenzie sisters. The girls are saved by an elderly Asian woman who heads a ninja clan of her own. That woman removes her face mask to reveal that she is Aiko Akiyama, the girls’ grandmother. Moira immediately has many questions. Why has Aiko only now revealed herself?

Aiko explains that Kameko, as Aiko before her, was a member of a Koga ninja clan of Kunoichi — a female ninja. Aiko was forced to fake her own death because of Jiro’s ambitions. She vows to teach Moira to become a ninja warrior and fulfill her family destiny. As Moira beings to learn the ways of the ninja, Aiko’s Yoda-like lessons give her greater self-confidence as well as physical martial arts skills. She passes these lessons to her sisters… but there’s more. Legends claim the ninja were shape-changing tengu, forest spirits with magical powers. Aiko reveals that these stories are true. If Moira wishes, she can learn these mystical abilities. Jiro himself can become a wolf and other ferocious beasts. Moira can learn these same skills, just as Aiko has.

As Moira trains and learns more about herself, she helps her sisters to grow more confident and more disciplined as well. Soon, Mindy is using her gymnastics skills to have ninja-style adventures of her own, as genius Marci helps both of her sisters using her knowledge of computers.

As they grow in their abilities, the girls uncover a plot by Uncle Jiro to misuse “sleep learning” technology developed by KTC. This is why Jiro wants the company. He believes the technology can be used to control minds, ultimately giving him control over the city — and perhaps, one day, even more than that. As the girls use their new abilities to chase down clues that point them to Jiro’s sinister ambitions, Jiro grows tired of holding back. He instructs his ninja to kidnap Mindy and Marci. He then tells Moira she has no choice but to sign KTC over to him if she ever wants to see her sisters again.

To get her sisters back, Moira will have to face her greatest fears. With only partial training, she must conquer her own doubts and apply the lessons of empowerment and confidence that Aiko has given her. The story climaxes in a battle between the two rival ninja clans wherein Moira must first save her sisters and then defeat Jiro himself. The fate of New York City hangs in the balance, as does the fate of Moira’s family and of her father’s company.

Publication date: November 1st 2020
Genres: Thriller, Young Adult


MY THOUGHTS


When your father is the owner of the world’s most successful technology company, and you live in a New York penthouse apartment, life may appear to be perfect. However, Moira’s father, Stephen, has disappeared – his plane was lost as he flew overseas. Having lost their mother six years previous, Moira and her sisters were now orphans, dependant on Morton Gerardi, their late father’s best friend. When their mother’s brother, Uncle Jiro, shows up to inherit Stephen’s business, he arrives to find changes to Stephen’s will, which will mean Jiro is in for a nasty surprise…

With hidden agendas, the battle over the ownership of a company and ninja training, Ninja Girl Adventures is a fabulously fast-paced book. The action of the ninja training was glorious to read about and makes one want to learn the ancient ways of the ninja and join in the fight against Uncle Jiro. With hidden files and harmless people committing crimes, only to forget ever having done them, there is a mystery afoot and, as it would be foolish to get the police involved in a ninja war, it falls to Morton to solve it.

Moira is a wonderful protagonist and a powerful and clever young woman. She steps into the shoes of both her mother and father, looking after her sisters and trying to keep her father’s business out of Uncle Jiro’s hands. While it was a little unrealistic that she would act as a parent to her older sister, or more so that her older sister would allow her to act as such, Moira takes on the role beautifully. Whereas Morton, Uncle Mort to the girls, can make sure they are looked after, he is ill-prepared to look after the children that have been thrust into his care. He also looks to Moira, for she knows her sisters better than anyone. She had expected to go to college, work alongside her father and maybe even take over the business one day. Ninja training was not a part of her life plan, nor was getting caught up in a war between two rival ninja clans. However, she embraces this unexpected change and, with her sisters’ help, focuses her determination on stopping Uncle Jiro.

Moira’s sisters, Mindy and Marci, both have their own strengths, meaning that when the three sisters work together, there is very little they cannot achieve. Mindy is struggling at school, as she is being bullied and more often than not, she loses her temper, and she is the one who gets in trouble. Marci, while excelling at school, is too smart for her advanced classes. Instead of getting in trouble at school, like Mindy, she is getting in trouble with the police, as although she is only nine years old, she can hack into practically anything. Not that she uses it to do wrong, but Enterprise Games has spent too much money trying to increase their security to stop this mystery hacker breaking into their system to play their games for free! With Marci’s intelligence, Mindy’s gymnastic skills and Moira’s ninja training, the three are practically unstoppable.

The two men that the sisters refer to as ‘Uncle’ are quite possibly the most opposite people ever to exist. Uncle Mort may not be the best at dealing with the situations associated with looking after children, but he does his best, and the girls love him. He is kind, loyal to Stephen and the girls, and deserves the title, despite having no blood relation to Moira and her sisters. Uncle Jiro, however, is the opposite. He is cruel, manipulative, and everything he does is in his own best interest. If he is capable of love, he does not show it, and his actions towards the girls are despicable.

With twists, turns, a massive plot twist and nine ninja rules that can apply to everyday life, this is a novel that not only tells a story, but addresses issues such as bullying and how love conquers evil. In a world where there is conflict behind every corner, even when you are a ninja, fighting is always a last resort. This book was delightful to read and, while it is a Young Adult book, that should not put anyone off reading it, for it is exciting and the has been expertly weaved into a story of good versus evil, love versus hate, ninja versus ninja.

Amazon • Goodreads


Melissa G Wilson

Hello! I’m Melissa G Wilson and my top passions are writing, helping new authors who want to make a difference through their writing, and mentoring women and at-risk youth to become authors.

My company Networlding Publishing, focuses on assisting thought leaders to write, publish, and launch “books that make the world better.”I’ve been growing my company for the last ten years and have helped 120 thought leaders write, publish, and launch their “make-a-difference” books.

I’ve consistently used proceeds from my authors’ book sales to help mentor new adults to help them learn this “new world of publishing.” So far, I’ve mentored more than 30 new adults through an organization called Dream Careers and I can’t wait to help more young people get better starts in their lives. My mentees have gone on to create stellar careers in publishing, marketing, and social media.

I’ve had the honor and pleasure of writing five best-sellers, one that held a #10 on Amazon for year and also had a book on Oprah that turned into an opportunity to travel the country and hold community leadership events with kids, adults, and city leaders. One other major honor was getting to be one of 70 people who helped Seth Godin, one of the best marketing leaders in the world, reinvent publishing through his initiative called “The Domino Street Team.” My goal now is to keep helping new author thought leaders get their important books out to the world and into the hearts of others, especially youth, who can use the insights from these books to make the world better for all.


Phil Elmore 

Phil Elmore is a bestselling author, freelance journalist, and technical writer who lives and works in Upstate New York. He has contributed extensively to “Tactical Knives” and “Survivor’s Edge” magazines as well as several other self-defense and “tactical gear” trade publications. He is the Senior Editor of League Entertainment (an IP development company based in Florida) and the owner of Samurai Press, an independent small-press publisher. Through Samurai Press, Elmore has published a variety of non-fiction and self-help works, including the self-help bestseller “Ten Things Doctors Won’t Tell You About Your CPAP Machine.”

As a ghostwriter, Phil Elmore has been the author behind countless non-fiction and fiction works, including multiple action and science fiction novels, martial arts and fitness publications, survival and “prepper” ebook and print products, and even a survival-themed series of novellas. He has edited numerous novels, magazine articles, and other copy for inclusion in commercially published vehicles, as well as generating hundreds of thousands of words of content for Internet marketers across the Web.

With League Entertainment, Elmore co-created the Duke Manfist parody action series. The publisher of “The Martialist,” the online magazine “for those who fight unfairly,” Phil Elmore is also the author of twenty-one Executioner, Mack Bolan, and Stony Man novels for Gold Eagle/Harlequin Enterprises. His other work includes the “Augment,” “Monsters,” and “Detective Moxley” series, as well as the short story collection “The Thing in the Office and Other Tales of Terror” and the crowdfunded comedy-action novel “Spaceking Superpolice.”


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Sunday, January 24, 2021

Book Blast: The Danish King’s Enemy (The Earls of Mercia) by MJ Porter #HistoricalFiction #BookBlast #CoffeePotBookClub @coloursofunison @maryanneyarde

 


The Danish King’s Enemy
(The Earls of Mercia)
By MJ Porter


Every story has a beginning.

Leofwine has convinced his king to finally face his enemies in battle and won a great victory, but in the meantime, events have spiralled out of control elsewhere.

With the death of Olaf Tryggvason of Norway, England has lost an ally, and Leofwine has gained an enemy. And not just any enemy. Swein is the king of Denmark, and he has powerful resources at his fingertips.

In a unique position with the king, Leofwine is either honoured or disrespected. Yet, it is to Leofwine that the king turns to when an audacious attack is launched against the king’s mother and his children. But Leofwine’s successes only bring him more under the scrutiny of King Swein of Denmark, and his own enemies at the king’s court.

With an increase in Raider attacks, it is to Leofwine that the king turns once more. However, the king has grown impatient with his ealdorman, blaming him for Swein’s close scrutiny of the whole of England. Can Leofwine win another victory for his king, or does he risk losing all that he’s gained?

The Danish King’s Enemy is the second book in the epic Earls of Mercia series charting the last century of Early England, as seen through the eyes of Ealdorman Leofwine, the father of Earl Leofric, later the Earl of Mercia, and ally of Lady Elfrida, England’s first queen.

Publication Date: 20th December 2020 (please note this is a rerelease of Viking Enemy, which was a rerelease of Ealdormen)
Publisher: Independently Published 
Page Length: 211 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction


The Danish King’s Enemy is only 0.99 for a Limited Time Only.


The Danish King’s Enemy is free to read with #KindleUnlimited subscription. 

M J Porter  

I’m an author of fantasy (Viking age/dragon-themed) and historical fiction (Early English, Vikings and the British Isles as a whole before the Norman Conquest), born in the old Mercian kingdom at some point since AD1066. 

I write A LOT. You’ve been warned!

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My review of The Woodsman’s Rose (Donovan Family Saga, Book 2) by Gifford MacShane #BookReview #HistoricalFiction #HistoricalRomance @AuthorGMacShane @maryanneyarde

 



The Woodsman’s Rose
(Donovan Family Saga, Book 2)
By Gifford MacShane


1880s Arizona

Daniel Donovan wants nothing more than to get married, unless it's to restore his friendship with his closest friend, Alec Twelve Trees.

Alec is raging about his mother's murderer, whose identity Daniel knows but will not reveal, as the killer is dead and the family he left behind would be compromised if the knowledge became public. But Alec cannot recognize any needs but his own, and the rift between the friends grows wider every day.

Daniel's fiancée, Annie, is a delicate girl, her health frail and her future uncertain. Prone to vicious headaches that at times rock her to her knees, she’s accepted Daniel’s ring but is hesitant to name their wedding date, worried that marriage and possible pregnancy will exacerbate her physical problems.

Annie inherited the gift of insight from her Welsh mother and digs into the past, searching for a way to help Alec and Daniel mend their relationship. But when she discovers the secret behind the murder, it’s more horrifying than she could have imagined.
It may take more than Annie’s small strength and inherited skills to bring the friends together again. And that’s before a new enemy shows his face.

Publication Date: January 25th 2021
Publisher: Independently Published
Page Length: 329 pages
Genre: Historical Fiction / Western Romance


MY THOUGHTS!

What an evocative story Gifford MacShane has penned. This novel really does have it all—it is a sweeping family saga as well as being a beautiful and tender romance. I honestly lost all sense of time when I read this book.

Set in Arizona in the 1880s The Woodman’s Rose tells the story of the Donovan family, but in particular, this story is centred on Daniel Donovan and his courtship of Annie. Daniel is a very honourable, very gentle man who has been in love with Annie since he was a little boy, but it is only recently that Annie discovers she has feelings for Daniel. Daniel’s patience, his unrequited love of Annie was heavenly to read about - talk about a dream man, I would have married him in an instant! However, I can understand Annie’s fear. She is plagued with ill health, and she also fears the marriage bed and what it could mean if she were to become pregnant—her mother died in childbirth. Annie is also gifted with the sight, which made her a really interesting character.

This story was filled with fascinating insights of the historical period it is set in, and it is also filled with a few plot twists, which is something I love in a book. I enjoyed reading about the everyday life of this family as well.

I thought the author has penned not only a very realistic story, but one in which you cannot help but fall in love with the characters. This story is a historical romance’s lover’s dream.

I now intend to go back and read book 1 of this series, because I really want to know more about Jessie’s and Adam’s courtship!

Grab a copy of this book HERE!

Gifford MacShane

Gifford MacShane is the author of historical fiction that celebrates the resilience of the human spirit.

Her novels feature a family of Irish immigrants who settle in the Arizona Territory in the late 1800s. With an accessible literary style, MacShane draws out her characters' hidden flaws and strengths as they grapple with both physical and emotional conflicts.

Singing almost before she could talk, MacShane has always loved folk music, whether it be Irish, Appalachian, spirituals, or the songs of the cowboys. Her love of the Old West goes back to childhood, when her father introduced her to the works of Zane Grey. Later she became interested in the Irish diaspora, having realized her ancestors must have lived through An Gorta Mor, the Great Irish Potato Famine of the mid-1800s. Writing allows her to combine her three great interests into a series of family stories, each including romance, traditional song lyrics, and a dash of Celtic mysticism. Having grown up in a large & often boisterous Irish-American family, she is intimately acquainted with the workings of such a clan and uses those experiences to good purpose (though no names will be named!)

MacShane is a member of the Historical Novel Society, and is an #OwnVoices writer. A self-professed grammar nerd who still loves diagramming sentences, Giff currently lives in Pennsylvania with her husband Richard, the Pied Piper of stray cats.

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My review of Rebecca’s Choice by Heidi Gallacher #BookReview #HistoricalFiction @HeidiGallacher @maryanneyarde

 




Rebecca’s Choice
By Heidi Gallacher


‘Can Rebecca find the love and passion she craves within a Victorian world that seems to be conspiring against her?’

It is 1887 and Queen Victoria is on the throne. Businessman and meteorologist Geoffrey de Roussier is passionate about his weather station and railways, yet little of his passion seems to filter through to his shy, naïve young wife, Rebecca. 

Following his tragic demise, Rebecca discovers that Geoffrey’s railroad investments have failed, leaving her penniless. As the past threatens to engulf her, Rebecca realises she has to make a choice. Gwilym Llewellyn, Geoffrey’s trusted friend and advisor, has an emotional debt to repay to Geoffrey and meets Rebecca to offer her a solution. Meanwhile Rebecca has found passion in another direction … 

One man will save her from destitution, the other will offer her the love and excitement that she aches for. Whom will she choose?  

This book has a beautiful setting in Cardiff, South Wales. If you like a good mix of an evocative depiction of the Victorian era and a modern-thinking heroine then Rebecca’s Choice is the novel for you. 

This is Heidi Gallacher’s debut novel, a compelling historical Victorian romance. Pick up ‘Rebecca’s Choice’ today to lose yourself in this wonderful story! 

Publication Date: 30th October 2019
Publisher: Independently Published
Page Length: 211 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction


MY THOUGHTS!

The blurb of Rebecca's Choice really piqued my interest, and I could not wait to read it. Set in Wales in the late Victorian period, Heidi Gallacher has presented her readers with a book that is next to impossible to put down—in fact, I stayed up to the early hours to finish this novel. It is really that good!

Married to an indifferent husband, Rebecca fools herself into thinking that she is content, and although at times she finds herself daydreaming about the kind of love her parents and her friends have, she comforts herself by remembering what a beautiful home she has. Rebecca is a character that I really came to care about. She is the kind of woman one would definitely want as a friend. She is a kind, caring woman who accepts the way things are and just gets on with it. At times her situation, particularly when it comes to her marriage, made me weep for her, and as the story progressed, as Rebecca’s life is turned upside down by a terrible tragedy, I found myself reaching for the tissues again and again.

Although her husband never physically abuses her, his determination to never fall in love again meant that Rebecca, although she fools herself into believing that she is happy, never really is. She feels endlessly grateful for the security her marriage has given her, but this is a woman that deserved to be loved.

I thought Rebecca’s Choice was a wonderful story. It really did draw me in and utterly enchanted me. This is a novel that most definitely has to be on your to-read list and on your bookcase, or better still in your hand! I will definitely be reading more books by this author.





Heidi Gallacher

Heidi Gallacher was born in London in the Sixties. She grew up in Cardiff and Swansea, South Wales. She jumped at the chance to move to Paris in her twenties to learn a new language and culture. 

Following the arrival of her first son she moved to sunny Switzerland where she has lived ever since. 

She completed her Masters in Creative Writing in 2018 and her first short story Changing Places was published in September of that year. Rebecca's Choice is her first novel.

When not writing, Heidi writes and performs music, swims in Lake Zürich and fundraises for a school in Tanzania. 

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Friday, January 15, 2021

My review of Beneath Black Clouds and White By Virginia Crow @DaysDyingGlory @maryanneyarde


Beneath Black Clouds and White

By Virginia Crow


Despite adoring his family and enjoying frequenting gaming tables, Captain Josiah Tenterchilt’s true love is the British Army and he is committed to his duty. As such, he does not hesitate to answer the army’s call when King Louis XVI of France is executed.

Accompanied by his wife to Flanders, Josiah finds his path crosses with a man who could not be more different from him: an apprentice surgeon named Henry Fotherby. As these two men pursue their own actions, fate and the careful connivance of a mysterious individual will push them together for the rest of their lives.

But it is a tumultuous time, and the French revolutionaries are not the only ones who pose a threat. The two gentlemen must find their place in a world where the constraints of social class are inescapable, and ‘slavery or abolition’ are the words on everyone’s lips.

Beneath Black Clouds and White is the prequel to Day's Dying Glory, which was published by Crowvus in April 2017.


Book Title: Beneath Black Clouds and White
Author: Virginia Crow
Publication Date: 11th April 2019
Publisher: Crowvus
Print Length: 637 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction/Military Fiction/Family Saga


MY THOUGHTS


A heart-wrenching story of loss, war and the inequality between black men and white, Beneath Black Clouds And White follows Henry Fotherby as he navigates his life through being an army surgeon, desperate to help people, and the relationships he builds with those he encounters at war.

What to say! When I initially sat down to read this book, I was not expecting what I received. My want to protect Fotherby from all that he experiences was so very immense, as he is a character that doesn’t deserve any of what he gets from life. His only desire is to look after people, to save lives, and what he is given in return is loss and pain, the very loss that he has prevented so often in his work. His friendships with the Tenderchilts and the Portlands were portrayed so beautifully that, at times, I felt like I was friends with them, alongside Fotherby, and I felt the losses and joy as if it were my own. The development of all the characters has been penned so wonderfully, that by the end of the story, it was clear to see how they had all grown and changed. The years of loss, war and friendship had shaped them as people that were barely recognisable from the people they were in the first few chapters.

Alongside Fotherby, the lives of Josiah and Elizabeth Tenderchilt and their three daughters, as well as the extended Portland family, are followed. Josiah Tenderchilt’s desire to be a part of the army and Elizabeth’s gentle and caring nature clash as she worries for his safety and Fotherby’s presence alongside them both leads to a deep friendship and a debt that can never be repaid. I felt deeply for the various members of the Portland family that Fotherby grows close to, especially Delphina and Rosanna, although the terrible curse that the family appears to be under brought heartache alongside the friendships.

The underlying impacts of racism that Fotherby encounters only enhance his character. Who is he to ignore the blatant ill-treatment of men no different than himself, except for in the colour of their skin? Sticking up for those who are used to the abuse is something that many people around Fotherby don’t expect. It is evident by the response of the black servants that Fotherby converses with that they aren’t used to being treated as an equal, much less having a white man talk to them as a friend, which is heartbreaking to read about as they question whether Fotherby is being genuine or not.

If there were ever a book that I would happily read again, as soon as finishing it, this book would be the one. Virginia Crow has written a book that I not only enjoyed every word of, but one that will stay with me for a long time. Don’t let the size of this book fool you, for the time will fly by, as it did for me as I struggled to turn the pages fast enough.

I Highly Recommend.




Virginia Crow


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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Thursday, January 14, 2021

My review of A Rooster for Asklepios (A Slave's Story Trilogy, Book 1) By Christopher D. Stanley #HistoricalFiction #BookReview #CoffeePotBookClub @aslavesstory @maryanneyarde

 



A Rooster for Asklepios 
(A Slave's Story Trilogy, Book 1)
By Christopher D. Stanley


Marcus, a slave in the household of Lucius Coelius Felix, enjoys a better life than most slaves (and many free citizens) as the secretary and accountant of a wealthy aristocrat.  His master is rising in the civic life of the Roman colony of Antioch-near-Pisidia (central Turkey), and his responsibilities and income are growing as well. If this continues, he could soon earn enough to buy his freedom, set up a small business, and even marry.  

Then misfortune strikes, and his master falls into a deep depression that is exacerbated by a nagging illness that his physician is unable to cure.  The future looks bleak until the physician receives a dream from the healing god Asklepios calling Lucius to travel hundreds of miles across western Asia Minor to his sanctuary at Pergamon for treatment and, he hopes, a cure.
 
Accompanied by Marcus and his new wife Selena, Lucius embarks on a long and eventful journey in which both master and slave encounter people and ideas that challenge long-held beliefs about themselves, their society, and the world around them.  Values are questioned, loyalties tested, and identities transformed in a story that brings to life a corner of the Roman empire that has been neglected by previous storytellers.

Name of Book: A Rooster for Asklepios 
Series: A Slave's Story Trilogy (Book 1)
Author: Christopher D. Stanley
Publication Date:  May 23rd 2020
Publisher: Amelia Books
Page Length: 522 pages 
Genre: Historical Fiction


A Bull For Pluto
(A Slave's Story Trilogy, Book 2)
By Christopher D. Stanley


After a lengthy and eventful stay at the sanctuary of Asklepios in Pergamon, the time has come for Lucius and Marcus to return to Antioch.  Selena had been sent home earlier when Lucius learned that she was pregnant, and the impending arrival of the winter snows could soon make it impossible for them to reach their destination before the child is born.

To Marcus’s surprise, Lucius announces that he plans to stop for a while in Hierapolis to bask in the healing waters of the city’s renowned hot springs.  Here Marcus meets a young woman named Miriam who challenges him to embrace his long-hidden Jewish ancestry.  Marcus is torn between his budding love for Miriam and the cost of heeding her advice.

A tragic decision by Lucius seals their fate, as their full attention must now be devoted to preserving Lucius’s life.  They reach Antioch in time to learn that Lucius’s son Gaius has failed miserably in his management of the household while his father was away.  If Lucius should die, Marcus, Selena, and her unborn child will be at the mercy of this tyrant.  To fend off this danger, Lucius must tell Marcus the full truth about his past, a truth that will ensure Marcus's future at the cost of his master's honor.  Can he bring himself to act before his inevitable end?

Name of Book: A Bull for Pluto
Series: A Slave's Story Trilogy (Book 2)
Author: Christopher D. Stanley
Publication Date: June 17th 2020
Publisher: Amelia Books
Page Length: 325 Pages 
Genre: Historical Fiction


Praise for A Rooster for Asklepios and A Bull For Pluto

This compelling and enjoyable story offers the reader a superb 'insider' view of life in the first-century Greco-Roman world. I enjoyed traipsing around Anatolia with Lucius and Marcus!"
-Dr. Terence Donaldson, Academic Dean and Professor of New Testament, Wycliffe College, Canada

"The realism of this story reflects the author's deep first-hand knowledge of the landscape and culture where the narrative takes place."
-Dr. Mark Wilson, Director, Asia Minor Research Center, Antalya, Turkey

"This well-researched book really brings the Roman world to life!"
-Dr. Alanna Nobbs, Professor of Ancient History, Macquarie University, Australia

"The amount of research, imagination, and effort involved in crafting this story earned my admiration, and stirred my curiosity, too."
Dr. Mark Nanos, Lecturer, University of Kansas, USA


MY THOUGHTS ON A ROOSTER FOR ASKLEPOIS!  

I don’t think I have ever read a book that was so meticulously researched. I really got a sense of what life must have been like during this era. It is very obvious, from the very beginning of this novel, that the author, Christopher D. Stanley, has a clear understanding of the history - I guess being a professor at St. Bonaventure University who studies the social and religious history of the Greco-Roman world must help! The story itself was utterly engrossing. This is one of those books where I seemed to forget I was actually reading. Instead, it felt as if I was witnessing the events - watching as the plot plays out. It really is quite an extraordinary book.

Marcus was a character that really intrigued me. He is a slave, but he holds a significant position in his master’s household—and he is undoubtedly more dependable than his master’s heir. The complicated dynamics between master and slave during this era is portrayed with a great deal of skill and knowledge. The author has also taken great pains to demonstrate the different social structure in this era, and I was surprised to learn that the stigma of being a slave did not leave once the said slave was free. They were still regarded as second-class citizens. 

I thought the depiction of Lucius Coelius Felix was fabulous. Lucious has a mysterious illness, in which the physicians can seemingly find no cure for. It is his seek for a cure that really drives this story forward. His illness also demonstrates that superstition and the belief in the Gods were an extremely important part of the culture and how they really did dictate the lives of not only those who believed, but their neighbours as well.

I was also interested in reading about the treatment of the Jewish community during this era. I thought the insight into this community was fascinating.

A Rooster for Asklepios (A Slave’s Story Trilogy, Book 1) is a book that I thoroughly enjoyed from beginning to end. If you like your stories to be set in the Ancient World, then I think this is a book that you will enjoy.


CHRISTOPHER D. STANLEY 

CHRISTOPHER D. STANLEY is a professor at St. Bonaventure University who studies the social and religious history of the Greco-Roman world, with special attention to early Christianity and Judaism.  He has written or edited six books and dozens of professional articles on the subject and presents papers regularly at conferences around the world.  The trilogy A Slave’s Story, which grew out of his historical research on first-century Asia Minor, is his first work of fiction.  He is currently working on an academic book that explores healing practices in the Greco-Roman world, a subject that plays a vital role in this series. 

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Wednesday, January 13, 2021

My review of A Painter in Penang (Penang Series, Book 3) by Clare Flynn #HistoricalFiction #APainterinPenang #CoffeePotBookClub @clarefly @maryanneyarde




A Painter in Penang
(Penang Series, Book 3)
By Clare Flynn


Sixteen-year-old Jasmine Barrington hates everything about living in Kenya and longs to return to the island of Penang in British colonial Malaya where she was born. Expulsion from her Nairobi convent school offers a welcome escape – the chance to stay with her parents’ friends, Mary and Reggie Hyde-Underwood on their Penang rubber estate.
But this is 1948 and communist insurgents are embarking on a reign of terror in what becomes the Malayan Emergency. Jasmine goes through testing experiences – confronting heartache, a shocking past secret and danger. Throughout it all, the one constant in her life is her passion for painting.

From the international best-selling and award-winning author of The Pearl of Penang, this is a dramatic coming of age story, set against the backdrop of a tropical paradise torn apart by civil war.

Publication Date: 6th October 2020
Publisher: Cranbrook Press
Page Length: 362 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction


MY THOUGHTS

Malaya seems a world away for sixteen-year-old Jasmine, and try as she might, she just cannot seem to settle in Nairobi. With a sympathetic step-mother, Jasmine is allowed to return to her beloved Penang, where she will stay on Mary and Reggie Hyde-Underwood rubber plantation—little did any of them know what the future had install.

Oh, this book. There are some books, as I am sure you are aware of, that can sweep you away and take you back in time to a place that is beautiful, yet foreign. Add to this magnificent landscape the dreams of a young sixteen-year-old girl and a politically unstable climate. I guess it is no surprise if I say that this book enthralled me. This is a novel that once started cannot be turned away from. It is utterly engrossing from start to finish—the characterisation, the setting, and the story enchanted me.

The historical setting of this novel has been thoroughly researched, and I thought the author has really captured the rising political tensions and the nervousness of the plantation owners. But not only that, Flynn has given her readers a very honest account of a young woman’s take upon the situation.  I thought the setting, the historical context, and the characters were wonderfully portrayed.

Jasmine is a protagonist that I really came to adore—she is so young, in some cases naively so, but she knows what she wants and her heart beats for Penang.

This is a novel that kept me up well into the night, and although I have not read the first two books in this series, I did not feel at all lost. Saying that, however, I do feel a desperate desire to read the first two books in the series.

I thought this book was brilliant—and I think you will too.


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Clare Flynn 


Clare Flynn is the author of twelve historical novels and a collection of short stories. A former International Marketing Director and strategic management consultant, she is now a full-time writer. 

Having lived and worked in London, Paris, Brussels, Milan and Sydney, home is now on the coast, in Sussex, England, where she can watch the sea from her windows. An avid traveller, her books are often set in exotic locations.

Clare is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a member of The Society of Authors, Novelists Inc (NINC), ALLi, the Historical Novel Society and the Romantic Novelists Association, where she serves on the committee as the Member Services Officer. When not writing, she loves to read, quilt, paint and play the piano. She continues to travel as widely and as far as possible all over the world.


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