As Good As Gold by Patricia Furstenberg

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I’m so pleased to be starting off lovely Patricia Furstenberg’s As Good As Gold blog tour today. Patricia was my first Staying in With… guest here and has been on the blog several times. Patricia wrote a super guest post for Linda’s Book Bag about the importance of reading that you will find here, and another about celebrating diversity in children’s fiction here. I was also privileged to review another of Patricia’s children’s books, Puppy: 12 Months of Rhymes and Smiles, here.

As Good As Gold is available for purchase on Amazon UK , Amazon US and Amazon Canada.

As Good As Gold

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As engaging as a tail wag

Celebrating the simple things in life as seen through the eyes of our old time favourite furry friends, As Good as Gold is a volume of poetry revealing the talent and humour we always knew our dogs possessed.

Dogs are full of questions, yet they are famed sellers of innocence especially when it comes to explaining their mishaps and often foolish effervescence through ponderings such as “Why IS a Cat Not Like a Dog”, “As Brown as Chocolate”, “Silver Stars and Puppy Tail” or, best yet, “Dog or Book?”

A book with an enormous heart for readers of all ages, it includes 35 poems and haiku accompanied by expressive portraits of our canine friends.

My Review of As Good As Gold

I have a confession to make. I’m not much of a dog lover. I’m more a cat person so I wasn’t sure if I would enjoy As Good As Gold, celebrating dogs.

I needn’t have worried. I thoroughly enjoyed this charming collection of verse and as a result of reading it I think I understand dogs so much better. I did rather enjoy the poems with cats in them too though! One element that particularly appealed to me was the range of nature and animals included. This isn’t just a collection of poems about dogs, but affords an insight into other creatures and nature too. My favourite was the personification of the wind in One, Two Three. I loved all the Haiku as little gems of brilliance.

As well as being an enjoyable read, I think As Good As Gold has huge potential as a family or school collection. There’s a lot that can be learnt about rhythm and rhyme and language but, even better, there’s so many voices present in the poems that they would make great mini plays and performance pieces to be read aloud. I could easily envisage Yellow as a play for small children. There’s considerable fun to be had beyond just reading and enjoying the poems.

As well as fun and engaging poetry in As Good As Gold, there are some utterly heart melting photographs of dogs in this collection too so that I think the book would make a wonderful gift for all dog lovers regardless of age.

About Patricia Furstenberg

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Patricia Furstenberg came to writing through reading. She always carries a notebook and a pen, although at times she jots down her ideas on the back of till slips or types them on her phone.

Patricia enjoys writing for children because she can take abstract, grown-up concepts and package them in humorous, child-friendly ideas while adding sensitivity and lots of love. What fuels her is an exhilarating need to write and… coffee:

“How many cups have you had this morning?”

“None.”

“Plus?”

“Five cups.”

Between her books you can find the beloved Joyful Trouble, The Cheetah and the Dog, Puppy, 12 Months of Rhymes and Smiles.

She is a Huffington Post contributor and pens the Sunday Column for MyPuppyclub.net as well as dabbing in freelancing. After completing her Medical Degree in Romania she moved to South Africa where she now lives with her husband, children and their dogs.

All of Patricia’s children’s books are available here.

You can follow Patricia Furstenberg on Twitter, find her on Facebook and visit her website. She’s also on Goodreads.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

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Staying in with Greg Payan

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I think most people who are regular Linda’s Book Bag visitors know in the last two or three years my husband has had a mini stroke and my Dad has died from a massive one so you’ll understand why I have invited Greg Payan onto the blog to tell me about his book.

If you’re an author who’d also like to stay in with me to tell me about one of your books, please click here for more details.

Staying in with Greg Payan

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Greg. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me. Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

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I’ve brought along, Please Stay, my recently published memoir.  It tells the story of my then girlfriend (now wife) who was stricken at the age of 39 by a near fatal brain aneurysm.  She endured a Grade IV brain hemorrhage and was brought the hospital with heart and lung failure.  Through texts, emails and social media messages, I documented her ordeal of 24 days in the ICU, and her journey to recovery. While the beginning of the book starts out pretty scary, I can assure the reader it does have a happy ending.  One person called the book more of a love letter, than an actual memoir.

(I think this is a wonderful way to celebrate a life returned Greg.)

What can we expect from an evening in with Please Stay?

I think the reader will experience a range of emotions, from laughter to tears.  I think the book is very unique in that it’s a memoir told in real time as things were happening and my wife was battling for her life.  Since so much communication happens through texts and e-mails these days, when she eventually recovered two years after her bleed, I had a diary of everyone I was in correspondence with the entire time.  The notes were not just updating friends of her condition, but because my wife was a teacher, she had beautiful letters from former students and friends about how she impacted their lives, letting her know she was not allowed to die yet in notes that I read at her bedside in her various states of consciousness.

(I’m sure those messages must have helped her recovery too.)

I love reading the reviews that have been published because as with any form of art, you put it out there because you’re proud of it, but you wonder if others are truly moved by your story.  Some of the reviews have really validated what I thought was a really interesting book.  One review I liked noted that the book “calls readers to question their own legacies and to celebrate their lives and the love of the people in them,” but I think my favorite review was “Please Stay grabs you immediately with its raw vulnerability and humor sprinkled throughout such an uncertain time in this couple’s life. This story will challenge you on every page. Not just by compelling you to reflect on life’s biggest themes of death and love – but also a hundred micro reflections nestled in between.”

(You must be so pleased with those reader responses Greg.)

When you put something out there that moves people, I think that’s succeeding.  I hope I did that with Please Stay.

What else have you brought along and why?

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I have brought a large glass of red wine which is how I like to unwind at the end of a long day.  I think some background music is needed as I’m not a fan of reading in total silence.  I’d probably put on some Eva Cassidy or some Cassandra Wilson.

(That was clever as I don’t drink ordinary wine so you won’t have to share. I love your taste in music though.)

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Lastly, I’ve also brought along this great photo of my wedding day.  Holly and I dated for over 10 years before her aneurysm ruptured.  Once she was well enough, she immediately wanted to get married, although she never did before.  Almost 5 months to the day after her bleed we went to City Hall and got married.  A photographer friend took this photo which hangs in our living room next to my reading chair that I look at and give thanks to every day.

Oh my goodness. What a glorious photo. I’m so pleased life has worked out for you now. Thanks so much for explaining the inspiration for Please Stay Greg. I hope it does really well for you.

Please Stay

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Please Stay is the story of a healthy 39-year old college professor struck down by a sudden, near fatal brain aneurysm. After a short prologue, the book begins as Holly wakes up with a debilitating headache as readers feel the panic in those initial moments of confusion before a brain bleed is diagnosed at the hospital. Readers learn about her through letters sent by close friends and former students, who sent memories to be read at her bedside while she was on a respirator, fighting for her life, about the impact she had on their lives. They plead with her not to die through their words and share what she means to them.

Please Stay is both an extremely compelling story and an interesting story-telling methodology. A multiple-perspective take on a life-threatening situation, it documents love and luck in a hospital in New York in a real-time narrative as things unfolded. The story is told through actual correspondence which updated friends, colleagues and loved ones through long emails at the end of each of 24 ICU days; text messages sent back and forth to Holly’s sister as things unfolded; and photos documenting events as Holly fought to live. The reader experiences the fears and prayers of Holly’s loved ones who come to the realization that she may eventually recover but be left compromised, potentially losing her writing and teaching career and altering irrevocably her myriad relationships.

Please Stay is a book that one person described as ‘more of a love letter at times, than a standard memoir.’ Another noted that it is ‘honest, vulnerable and unflinching.’ It’s a unique story of love and survival that speaks to people across boundaries of health and wellness. It’s a story of faith and hope and love. Replete with tender anecdotes, the book calls readers to question their own legacies and to celebrate their lives and the love of the people in them.

Please Stay is available for purchase here.

About Greg Payan

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Greg Payan was born and raised in Queens, NY. While currently working full time as a journalist, fate intervened when his then partner, now wife, was struck by a sudden brain hemorrhage. He detailed the health crisis in his memoir, Please Stay (2018), his only full-length book. Employing actual correspondence which updated friends, colleagues and loved ones through long emails at the end of each of 24 ICU days; text messages sent back and forth to family as things unfolded; and photos documenting events as they happened the reader experiences the fears and prayers of all involved in a medical crisis.

Annual Bloggers Bash Awards 2018

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Oh my goodness! Yesterday was the 4th Annual Bloggers Bash Awards and I can’t believe it but Linda’s Book Bag actually won best overall blog! I mean really – I genuinely had no expectation of winning and was completely thrilled and delighted to have done so.

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If you were one of the people who either nominated me, or voted, may I just thank you from the bottom of my heart. I honestly feel a little bit emotional at and incredibly humbled by this win.

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All the winners received a certificate and a wonderful stone notebook from OurGreenStory. I’m looking forward to receiving my award winner’s Amazon voucher too as I’m sure there’s a book or two I don’t yet have on my TBR!

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I have been attempting to attend the Annual Bloggers Bash Awards for a while. Having begun blogging in 2015 I was nominated for, and won, the Best Book Review Blog in 2016. I’d have loved to be at the awards that day but I had already booked tickets to see Bryan Ferry at Burghley House and you all know my obsession with him!

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(I know you’re all sick of this photo but I just couldn’t resist adding it in again!)

Last year I was nominated again and had intended to go. I bought my ticket and was all set. Then came whatever it was that had me passing out and hallucinating at the drop of a hat and I didn’t leave the house for six weeks. Sadly I didn’t make it to the awards.

This year I thought ‘third time lucky’ – and how lucky it was. I hardly knew anyone there and it was a brilliant opportunity to meet bloggers and make new friends.

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Having lunch with fellow bloggers

There were some excellent presentations, particularly from Sacha Black who came up with the idea of the Awards in the first place and spoke about targeting readers through mailing lists. Sacha has a full list of all this year’s nominees and winners here. Do take a look as there are some smashing blogs to follow and it was thrilling to see so many bloggers I know both online and personally recognised for their efforts.

Last year’s Overall Best Blog winner and this year’s runner up Ritu of But I Smile Anyway gave a smashing talk about managing time as a blogger – a commodity we could all do with increasing!

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The day concluded with an excellent panel discussion before lots of lovely informal chat around the courtyard and bar. I was disappointed I had to dash off for my train as I’d have loved to stay longer. At least I made it this year!

If you’re a blogger and haven’t yet become part of the Blogger’s Bash, do get involved. There’s a Facebook group here you can join and it doesn’t matter whether you are nominated for an award, win or just enjoy blogging – it’s a wonderful community to belong to.

My enormous thanks to all the committee who work so hard to put this all together. Roll on 2019!

Staying in with Emma Salisbury

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I’m delighted to welcome back Emma Salisbury to Linda’s Book Bag. A couple of years ago I met Emma in person and she then wrote a fantastic guest post for the blog, all about Location, Location, Location that you can read here. Today Emma has agreed to stay in with me to tell me about another of her books.

If you’re an author who’d also like to stay in with me to tell me about one of your books, please click here for more details.

Staying in with Emma Salisbury

Welcome back to Linda’s Book Bag, Emma. 

Hi Linda, thanks for having me.

Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me. Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

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I’ve brought along my latest DS Coupland novel, ABSENT, published 19 May.

(Oo. Happy publication day for yesterday Emma!)

I’ve chosen it because of what it now symbolises. I was widowed suddenly part way through and for a long time I couldn’t eat, sleep or get dressed, let alone write. Several months down the line I thought the time was right to see if I could continue with the story. Everything about me had changed, you see, it changes you as a person, and for a while you can see only negative changes and I worried that this would impact my main character, DS Kevin Coupland. He was always going to be angry in this story because of what happens in the previous book, but I didn’t want him to behave out of character. It took a while to find his ‘voice’ again but when I did it felt very natural, and even in his darkest moments he retains his humour and pig headedness that readers have come to love. ABSENT took twice as long as any other book I’ve written to complete, but the fact that it is now here brings be immense joy.

(I was so sorry to hear about you loss Emma. I know many other Linda’s Book Bag readers, me included, have suffered grief in recent months. I’m so glad you managed to find your authorial voice again and that writing can bring you joy.)

What can we expect from an evening in with ABSENT?

ABSENT is a gritty police procedural set in Salford, Greater Manchester, featuring DS Kevin Coupland. Overweight, overworked and over forty he worships his wife and daughter and tries his utmost to separate them from the world in which he inhabits. Unfortunately for him he discovers that something that happened during an investigation into a serial killer case that he’d worked on the previous year comes back to bite him in his personal life, while at the same time trying to discover the identity of a child found in a bag.

(This sounds brilliant.)

The over-riding theme is about people who go missing without anyone noticing – and the book explores how that can happen. It is also about loss in many its forms, and forgiveness, and hope.

(I’m always amazed at how easy it is for people simply to disappear. I’m sure we all know loss in some form too so I think ABSENT would appeal to all of us.)

What else have you brought along and why?

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Well I’ve brought along my pestle and mortar. I had one years ago and didn’t use it but find I’m using this one all the time. I think that makes me a grown up.

(I’m sure it does. Though with four D.S. Coupland novels under your belt I think you’re probably pretty grown up already!)

I’ve brought my new favourite sneakers, comfy as anything but look stylish too. They’re from a lovely boutique in North Berwick and I find it impossible to come out empty handed.

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(*Sighs. I love shoes but with a foot problem I can only wear a couple of styles now. I’m so envious of these Emma. They look great.)

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I also brought bubbly. I think it’s important to celebrate the good times, gives us something to look back on and smile. And what girl doesn’t like a glass of fizz!

Couldn’t agree more! I’ll get the glasses. Thanks so much for staying in with me to tell me all about ABSENT Emma. I’ve really enjoyed our chat.

Thank you for having me, Linda.

ABSENT

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The worst things happen in plain sight.

When he stopped a serial killer in his tracks earlier in the year he thought that would be the end of it, but for DS Kevin Coupland his nightmare has just begun.

A child’s body is discovered hidden in a bag, kicking off a major investigation for Salford Precinct’s murder squad. Soon the National Crime Agency roll into town and Coupland is under strict instructions to play nice.

He’s got enough on his plate to worry about politics. A shock discovery in his personal life is starting to take its toll, causing him to make decisions that bring him to the attention of the powers that be for all the wrong reasons.

DS Alex Moreton returns from maternity leave to find her partner deeply troubled, but with a cold case to review she’s in no position to prevent him hitting the self-destruct button.

As he hunts down the child’s killer Coupland is forced to reflect upon his own life and find an answer to the question he’s been avoiding. Is it possible to accept the things you cannot change?

ABSENT is available for purchase here.

About Emma Salisbury

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Emma Salisbury writes gritty, crime fiction that focuses on the ‘why’dunnit as well as the ‘who’. Emma worked for a housing association supporting ex-offenders into work which provided her with a lot of inspiration. Her novels have regularly been in the top ten Hardboiled chart and she was awarded an Amazon All-Star bonus for being one of their most read authors.

You can find Emma onTwitter @emmasauthor and Facebook. Emma’s website can be found here. All of Emma’s books are available for purchase here.

Staying in with Rebecca Bradley

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I’m always thrilled when I can feature authors I’ve actually met in real life so it gives me enormous pleasure to welcome back Rebecca Bradley to Linda’s Book Bag today. Rebecca has previously written a couple of wonderful guest posts for me; one on A Sense of Place that you can read here when Made To Be Broken was published and another about Consequences when Three Weeks Dead was released that you can read here.

Today I’m staying in with Rebecca to hear about her latest book.

Staying in with Rebecca Bradley

Welcome back to Linda’s Book Bag, Rebecca. Lovely to see you here again. Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it?

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Thank you for inviting me to stay in with you, Linda. I have brought Dead Blind with me. Dead Blind is the most recent of my novels and was only released on 8th May. This book means a lot to me because both the main character, DI Ray Patrick and I have had to deal with life-altering medical conditions that have affected our time in the police service. Ray’s desire to stay in the job was a need I felt but was unable to fulfil. But I was able to put my emotions into the page.

(I know you’ve struggled with your health Rebecca so I’m thrilled for you that you’re able to write such great books. Congratulations on Dead Blind.)

What can we expect from an evening in with Dead Blind?

As well as being a crime novel Dead Blind is also a very character driven book as we are with Ray as he struggles to cope with his face blindness in the work environment and in his personal relationships. He’s keeping a huge secret and it takes a toll on him. He’s desperate to resolve the situation he feels he has put the team in but he doesn’t quite know how to do it and he’s backed himself into a corner by not coming clean in the first place. In reading this story you will be in for a tense evening, so if you fancy a page-turning read, with characters you care about, then this might be the book for you.

(I certainly do fancy a page-turner with characters I can invest some emotional response into. Dead Blind sounds just my kind of read.)

What else have you brought along and why? 

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I’ve bought the old game of Guess Who from the 80s. Ray might not be able to recognise faces but I’m sure he could play a game of Guess Who – after all, he can identify individual characteristics on a face, like a moustache or spectacles, he just can’t put the face together and put a name to it and luckily with Guess Who the names are written on the cards! 🙂

(And now you’ve made me feel very old Rebecca! Guess Who is after my time so I’ve never played. I think we should settle down to a game and put that right immediately.)

Thanks so much for staying in with me Rebecca, to introduce Dead Blind. And congratulations on this latest novel.

Dead Blind

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How do you identify a ruthless killer when you can’t even recognise your own face in a mirror?

Returning to work following an accident, Detective Inspector Ray Patrick refuses to disclose he now lives with face blindness – an inability to recognise faces.

As Ray deceives his team he is pulled into a police operation that targets an international trade in human organs. And when he attempts to bring the organisation down, Ray is witness to a savage murder.

But it’s a killer he will never remember.

The pressure mounts as Ray attempts to keep his secret and solve the case alone. With only his ex-wife as a confidant, he feels progressively isolated.

Can he escape with his career and his life intact?

Dead Blind is available for purchase here.

About Rebecca Bradley

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Rebecca Bradley is a retired police detective. She lives in the UK with her family and her two cockapoo’s Alfie and Lola, who keep her company while she writes. Rebecca needs to drink copious amounts of tea to function throughout the day and if she could, she would survive on a diet of tea and cake while committing murder on a regular basis, in her writing of course.

She writes the DI Hannah Robbins police procedural series and has also released a standalone novel, Dead Blind, about a cop who acquires prosopagnosia, also known as face blindness.

You can follow Rebecca on Twitter @RebeccaJBradley, find her on Facebook and visit her website where you may even find a free book!

Miss Moonshine’s Emporium of Happy Endings by Authors on the Edge

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You know how life can be a bit of a challenge at times and we all need a bit of a feel-good factor? Well, when lovely Helena Fairfax got in touch about a brand new collection of stories from nine author friends, Miss Moonshine’s Emporium of Happy Endings, I just had to add to the pressure of today’s publication and ask each of the authors involved to come on the blog and tell me a bit more by asking them ‘What would you most like to find in Miss Moonshine’s shop?’

I’ll hand over to Helena and the others to tell you more once I’ve given you the important book information! Miss Moonshine’s Emporium of Happy Endings is released today and is available for purchase here.

Miss Moonshine’s Emporium of Happy Endings

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Sometimes what you need is right there waiting for you…

Miss Moonshine’s Wonderful Emporium has stood in the pretty Yorkshire town of Haven Bridge for as long as anyone can remember. With her ever-changing stock, Miss Moonshine has a rare gift for providing exactly what her customers need: a fire opal necklace that provides a glimpse of a different life; a novel whose phantom doodler casts a spell over the reader; a music box whose song links love affairs across the generations. One thing is for certain: after visiting Miss Moonshine’s quirky shop, life is never the same again…

Nine romantic novelists from Yorkshire and Lancashire, including best-selling and award-winning authors, have joined together to create this collection of uplifting stories guaranteed to warm your heart. This intriguing mix of historical and contemporary romances will make you laugh, cry, and believe in the happy-ever-after.

Helena Fairfax Introduces

Miss Moonshine’s Emporium of Happy Endings

Miss Moonshine’s Emporium of Happy Endings is a collection of feel-good stories put together by a group of us Yorkshire and Lancashire authors. We’re all members of the Romantic Novelists’ Association, and we began meeting regularly for lunch in Hebden Bridge a few years ago. We’ve since become great friends, and putting together this collection of stories has been great fun from start to finish. Because we meet on the border between our two counties, we call ourselves ‘Authors on the Edge’ 🙂

The central character in our collection, the wonderful Miss Moonshine, appears in each one of our stories. Miss Moonshine owns an ‘Emporium’ – really just a shop with a jumble of bric-a-brac. But Miss Moonshine and her shop seem to exert a magical quality over whoever enters. As we write in our blurb: ‘With her ever-changing stock, Miss Moonshine has a rare gift for providing exactly what her customers need…One thing is for certain, after visiting Miss Moonshine’s shop, life is never the same again.’

Life is certainly never the same again for any of our heroines!

When I started putting this post together for Linda, she suggested we all of us answer the same question: ‘What would you most like to find in Miss Moonshine’s shop?’ When I put the question to the other eight authors, they thought it was a brilliant idea!

(I’m relieved to hear that Helena!)

Here is what we Authors on the Edge would each love to find in Miss Moonshine’s Wonderful Emporium:

Melinda Hammond: I write a great deal about Regency society and I would love to find a ticket for the legendary Almacks, which was the venue for a regular exclusive society ball. I’ve seen a ticket in a museum in LA, of all places, but they are very rare. They were highly prized amongst the young ladies of the Regency, who went there to find themselves a husband. However, the patronesses were incredibly strict (today we might say snobbish) and not everyone was allowed access. Even the Duke of Wellington was turned away once, for not wearing the correct evening dress!

Mary Jayne Baker: What I’d love most to find would be a beautiful vintage fountain pen that would help me write the perfect book…

Marie Laval: I’d like to find one of those paperweights with a tiny landscape, a park and a manor house. At night, I would imagine that I can see some light in the windows of the manor house… And perhaps escape to a dream world in there!

Angela Wren: I’d like Miss Moonshine to stock a silver bracelet, exactly like the one my parents bought me for my 18th birthday. Very sadly I lost it some years later and despite every effort to trace it again, I was unsuccessful. And no matter where I am I always look in jeweller’s shops in the hope of finding an exact copy of it – but alas that has proved to be fruitless as well.

Sophie Claire: What I’d wish to find would be a box of inspiration to fuel a lifetime of story-writing. If anyone could conjure up something as magical and exciting as that, Miss Moonshine could!

Kate Field: I’d like to find a jar that I could fill with all my worries and doubts. As there’s a touch of magic about Miss Moonshine, it would be a special jar so that once a worry was in there it could never trouble me again!

Helen Pollard: I would love it if Miss Moonshine sold me some kind of talisman that she sensed was meant just for me; something to soothe my spirit!

Jacqui Cooper: I love stationery and I have special notebooks I use to jot down all the ideas I have for stories. I’d love to find a beautiful notebook in Miss Moonshine’s shop – one that, when I opened it, had just a phrase or a random thought on every page for story inspiration.

And as for me, Helena Fairfax, what would I most like to find? Jacqui Cooper has a story in our collection that I loved. It’s about a necklace that transports the heroine to another life whenever she wears it. My daughter lives in New Zealand. I would love to find a necklace that would transport me there whenever I put it on. That would be wonderful!

(These are wonderful responses Helena. Thanks so much to you all for taking past and a VERY happy publication day for Miss Moonshine’s Emporium of Happy Endings.)

Thank you so much for having us, Linda, and for the fun question!

We’d love to put the same question to you and your readers. What would you most like to find in Miss Moonshine’s Emporium? We’d love to hear from you!

Oh – there’s a challenge. Do respond in the comments! I think I’d quite like to find way to get good night’s, dream filled, sleep as I seem to have forgotten how to do that.

As well as having met some of these lovely authors in real life, some have featured on Linda’s Book Bag before so here are some links:

An extract from The Honey Trap by Mary Jayne Baker 

An interview with Marie Laval and an extract from her Little Pink Taxi

A Trick or Treat guest post from Helena Fairfax and what happened when we stayed in together!

My review of Felicity at the Cross Hotel by Helena Fairfax

Staying in with J. Mercer

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It gives me very great pleasure to welcome another new to me author, J. Mercer, to the blog today to stay in and tell me all about one of her books.

Staying in with Joanna Mercer

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Joanna.

Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

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Hi Linda 🙂 I’ve brought my contemporary women’s fiction novel After They Go because it was just released this week.

(Oo – belated happy publication day!)

It’s a large family saga set in a small tourist town, with sister rivalry, family legacy, teenage angst, love, and loss. Following two generations of women in the Aaldenberg family, this novel tackles the chasm between what we think life is going to be and how it sometimes ends up.

(Ha! I think that’s a theme we can all relate to!)

What can we expect from an evening in with After They Go?

You can expect to get cozy, make friends and enemies, and feel like you’re fifteen or twenty-three or even fifty again 🙂

(I remember every one of those ages!)

Early readers are saying:

I had a hard time putting this down! The story follows one family on the brink of financial ruin in a coastal vacation town. It is a place of contradictions–homey and inviting for some, a stifling source of tradition and responsibility for others. What I found most engrossing was the story’s central characters: three sisters and their mother. Like the town, they are full of contradictions: self-absorbed and self-sacrificing, reckless and wise. They are flawed and hurting, every one–keeping secrets, nursing grudges, indulging their obsessions. Through it all, their love for each other is like the flame that both guides and sears them. It is the engine behind their actions as well as the source of their greatest limitations. After They Go explores how the people we love most can both help and hinder us on the journey to become our true selves. An absorbing read!

After They Go is an intriguing story about how a family tradition, while supposed to be the foundation they’re built on, can actually be the one thing to break them apart. Reading the three sisters’ journeys as they navigate life and struggles is fascinating and feels authentic to how sisters fight, bond, and support each other. Great small town setting! Just the perfect amount of romance!

(Smashing responses. You must be so pleased.)

But really, here’s a summary so you have a better idea:

Gwen is the oldest of four children in the Aaldenberg family, and the one who seems to have it all. She’s also most desperate to escape. Betta, having nursed their dying grandpa for the past three years, is anxious for Gwen to go, so she can finally have reins to the family business. And Esmerelda, viciously determined to follow in Gwen’s footsteps, vies for popularity as a freshman in high school, only to learn she must sell her soul, reputation, and most prized possession for acceptance.

As their father struggles with retirement and their mother with depression, Gwen discovers the debt her grandfather’s passing left them in—and during a time of year when their coastal town, dependent on tourists, can barely sustain itself. Gwen and their father agree Betta can’t take over the store under such stressful circumstances, not when she’s been carrying the load for so long, and to protect Betta, they play it off that she needs some time to rest.

When Gwen’s fiancé moves to town, Gwen does her best to resign herself to a local life, while Betta struggles for meaning without the store. In order to carve out a place for herself, Betta must decide to what lengths she’ll go in order to become her own person, and Gwen must decide what’s more important: her sister or her future.

Can this family pull through their disappointment, jealousy, and regret? Or will they cling so tightly to their desires that it ruins them?

(Sounds great!)

What else have you brought along and why? 

recipe first

recipe

First I want to share my Great Grandma’s caramel recipe, because Shelby makes them in the book, and I promise homemade caramels are better than any you can buy – way easier than you think, too!

(That looks EXACTLY my kind of recipe Joanna!)

street

Then I have some images of the places that inspired me to write about a coastal tourist town. The east coast spot in the book doesn’t technically exist, but I pulled from Naxos in Greece and Door County, Wisconsin, then threw in a little New England flair.

boats

boats distance

sunset

(They look wonderful.)

Last, but not least, there’s a song I heard while editing After They Go that struck me. I’m not one to make soundtracks, or listen to music while writing, but sometimes I hear something and it speaks to the story I’m working on. This one, All The Things Lost that you can listen to here, by MS MR, feels like the book to me, its mood. It’s a lovely, haunting song. I hope you enjoy it!

(It’s a really haunting song isn’t it?)

Thanks so much for staying in with me Joanna, to introduce After They Go. I think it sounds a super book.

After They Go

Cover

A large family saga set in a coastal tourist town:

One sister chained by family tradition.
The second stunted by her sister’s shadow.
The youngest propelled by desperation.

Published by Bare Ink, After They Go is available for purchase here.

About J. Mercer

j m

J Mercer grew up in Wisconsin where she walked home from school with her head in a book, filled notebooks with stories in junior high, then went to UW Madison for accounting and psychology only to open a dog daycare. She wishes she were an expert linguist, is pretty much a professional with regards to competitive dance hair (bunhawk, anyone?), and enjoys exploring with her husband – though as much as she loves to travel, she’s also an accomplished hermit. Perfect days include cancelled plans, rain, and endless hours to do with what she pleases.

You can find her on Facebook or visit her website.

@RomAndCozy Clothing for Book Lovers

RAndCBevelBlack_135x

This is a completely different post for me on Linda’s Book Bag today. Recently I was contacted by Rom and Cozy to see if I would like to feature their book related clothing on the blog.

Now, I’m often asked to do things like this and I usually turn them down because I am either not certain that the company is entirely genuine or if what they are asking me to feature is worth me putting together a blog post. I don’t want to endorse something I don’t have personal experience with.

However, this time I am more than happy to feature Rom and Cozy.

IMG_1864

My Once Upon A Time t-shirt arrived from America just 10 days after Rom and Cozy promised to send it and the image above is of it straight out of the packet so you can see how little it is creased after a flight and the UK postal system!

I had asked for a large size as this t-shirt is described as coming up small with the suggestion of ordering a size up to normal and I must admit I’m glad I did. I’m a UK size 14 and this is quite a snug fit, but with plenty of length which is great for me at 5’8” tall. I think if you were shorter and wider it would be able to accommodate you too – up to a UK 16 – quite happily. There is another version of this design which has a ‘relaxed fit‘ too.

The fabric is quite thin which is perfect for the summer and it’s very soft and comfortable on the skin.

As it only arrived today I can’t say how the top will appear after washing, but the instructions do suggest a ‘cold wash and hang to dry’ so I’ll bear that in mind.

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Rom and Cozy have lots of lovely designs on their site for both men and women. I rather fancy the items in their soon to be released  ‘Sherlock’ collection.

You can find out more about this book related clothing by following Rom and Cozy on Twitter @RomAndCozy, liking them on Facebook and visiting their website.

Also, the lovely folk at Rom and Cozy have offered Linda’s Book Bag readers a 20% off with the code LINDA2018 for a limited time!

The Betrayal by Kate Furnivall

The Betrayal

I have been meaning to read The Betrayal by Kate Furnivall since last November and, having met lovely Kate I was dying to get to the book. However, life got in the way and I simply didn’t have any reading time. I took The Betrayal to Uganda on holiday in February and it didn’t make it out of the bag. I took it to India in April and I still didn’t get to it so I promised myself as soon as I’d caught up with books for blog tours it would be my next read. It was so worth the wait!

The Betrayal is published by Simon and Schuster and is available for purchase through these links.

The Betrayal

The Betrayal

Could you kill someone? Someone you love?

Paris, 1938. Twin sisters are divided by fierce loyalties and by a terrible secret. The drums of war are beating and France is poised, ready to fall. One sister is an aviatrix, the other is a socialite and they both have something to prove and something to hide.

My Review of The Betrayal

With a shocking murder in her past, aviatrix Romaine finds her life spiralling out of control.

I have been meaning to read The Betrayal since it was released and my goodness was it worth the wait. The Betrayal was so much more than I was expecting. I had thought I was going to read a sweeping romance, and indeed there is great love and passion between its pages, but I hadn’t anticipated the exquisite intensity of emotion and the highly charged pulse racing thriller alongside it. There’s such skill in Kate Furnivall’s writing because she knows exactly how to ensnare the reader so that they couldn’t put down The Betrayal even if they wanted to – which I certainly didn’t. Every chapter has a hook, a surprise and a depth that is, truly, breathtaking. The depictions of grief and joy, of love and hatred, bigotry and compassion all thrum through the story so that reading it felt like a physical experience for me. The title is perfect. There are so many ways in which characters betray one another – and indeed themselves, but to explain more would be to spoil the read for others.

The plot steams along and at times I felt I almost couldn’t bear what was in front of me. Reading The Betrayal felt almost like being part of the action. I wasn’t just reading a fictionalised narrative, but living and breathing the events too. So many times I was taken aback by proceedings. The story itself was given greater depth and realism by being firmly rooted in brilliantly researched history with a cast of real minor characters from the era so that The Betrayal is highly evocative of 1930’s Paris. Even the city of Paris becomes like a living, breathing organism as Kate Furnivall writes so devastatingly well. The Betrayal is a superlative depiction of pre Second World War life making it completely convincing to read.

I adored the characterisation. Romy’s self-destructive nature is completely believable and the balance of vulnerability and feistiness in her so wonderfully portrayed that it is impossible not to experience her life with her. Similarly, all the other people in The Betrayal are authentic and utterly convincing. I loved the counterpoise of Florence and Romaine as twin sisters. There was something so visceral and poignant in their relationship that at times I could hardly withstand reading about them.

I had anticipated that The Betrayal would be a good read. I hadn’t realised just how amazing I would find it. I thought The Betrayal was outstanding and cannot recommend it highly enough.

About Kate Furnivall

kate-furnival

Kate Furnivall didn’t set out to be a writer. It sort of grabbed her by the throat when she discovered the story of her grandmother – a White Russian refugee who fled from the Bolsheviks down into China. That extraordinary tale inspired her first book, The Russian Concubine. From then on, she was hooked.

Kate is the author of eight novels, including The Russian Concubine, The White Pearl and The Italian Wife. Her books have been translated into more than twenty languages and have been on the New York Times Bestseller list.

You can follow Kate on Twitter @KateFurnivall, visit her website and find her on Facebook.

Staying In With Jacqui Lofthouse

2-Bluethroat Morning by Jacqui Lofthouse High Res

I’ve heard such good things about Jacqui Lofthouse’s writing that I’m delighted to welcome her to Linda’s Book Bag today to stay in and tell me all about one of her books. I’m especially pleased because Jacqui is being published by Blackbird Books and they always have such wonderful authors.

Staying in with Jacqui Lofthouse

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Jacqui and thank you for agreeing to stay in with me. Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it?

2-Bluethroat Morning by Jacqui Lofthouse High Res

I’ve chosen my novel Bluethroat Morning. I’m very excited because the novel was originally published by Bloomsbury in the year 2000, but there were no ebooks at that time – so I’m delighted that the first digital edition of Bluethroat Morning will be published by Blackbird on 22nd May. The novel is a literary mystery set on the North Norfolk coast. Back in 2000, the novel had several foreign editions and even became a bestseller in Holland – so it’s fantastic to think that this digital version might help the novel reach an entirely new English-speaking audience… The story means so much to me and I really can’t wait to share it afresh…

(What an exciting development for Bluethroat Morning. It seems hard to remember a time without e-books. I love the Norfolk Coast so I shall have to read Bluethroat Morning as soon as I can. I have an extract to share with blog readers too so we can all get a taste for it.)

What can we expect from an evening in with Bluethroat Morning?

I hope that readers will find it a very atmospheric story, fully of intrigue and steeped in history too. The moody Norfolk landscape is almost a character in the novel and I’m so pleased that the new cover of the novel really reflects this with the huge sky and the tiny cottage, dwarfed by it.

The tale centres around Harry Bliss, a schoolteacher, haunted by the memory of his wife Alison, a celebrity model and critically acclaimed writer who committed suicide by walking into the sea one ‘bluethroat morning’. Six years later, he returns to the town where she killed herself with his young lover, Helen – also obsessed by Alison. In Norfolk they meet ninety-eight year old Ern Higham, and a tale is revealed that has been generations in the making. Harry has to piece together a tragic history if he is ever to move forward with his own life…

(I love the sound of this. I’m even more excited to read it now.)

I’m quite a literary writer – I wrote the novel shortly after completing my MA in Creative Writing at UEA (University of East Anglia) under Malcolm Bradbury, back in the 90s – and I hope readers will really enjoy the language in the novel and the many layers. There’s a lot to unravel here and much to keep you guessing.

I was lucky at the time of first publication to get lots of lovely reviews from newspapers and writers that I really admire.

Tracey Chevalier wrote a review of the novel in the ‘Ham & High’ newspaper. She said,

There are many elements to savour in this novel: the intertwining of past and present; the struggle to write and the responsibility of writing about others’ lives. Best of all, Lofthouse has a fine eye for the bleak Norfolk landscape and how it both reflects and affects characters’ moods

(What an endorsement. You must be thrilled to have such a comment from such an esteemed writer.) 

And the Daily Mail called it “A thriller full of twists and turns that keeps the reader guessing. Every word is magical, almost luminous.”

Of course, I was very pleased at these reviews, but I also know that each reader has to make up their own mind about a novel and I do hope that new readers will enjoy it as much as many of the first ones did.

(I’m sure we will Jacqui.)

What else have you brought along this evening and why? 

gravelly stuff

Five years after the book’s first publication I returned to Norfolk to see Cley beach again (known as Glaven in the book) and also Holkham. I thought you might enjoy my photographs of the beach from that trip. Cley beach is indeed a bleak landscape: when you walk along that beach you can see nothing but the sea and the steep shingle bank – the sense of isolation there inspired the mood of my writing. When I wrote the novel, it was an image from an abandoned novel that first inspired me – a Victorian woman walks along that shingle beach in a bustle dress by the side of her dying uncle, who can barely catch his breath. That image wouldn’t leave me, but I’d sworn I’d now write a modern novel – how could I make sense of this? That was my starting point…

beach people

glowering sky

The Holkham shots give an idea of the vast Norfolk sky.

(These are wonderful photos Jacqui. They really transport me to an area I know and love so well.)

And finally I had a little fun with my children in the sand…

sand writing

(Quite right too!)

The title refers to a particular type of weather mentioned in my historical research – when the bird, the bluethroat is most likely to be spotted. In case you’re not familiar with the bluethroat, here’s a picture of one:

bird

(What a delightful looking bird. I’ve never seen one, though I’ve been to Titchwell Marsh Bird Reserve, not a million miles away from your book’s setting, many times.)

And here’s a link to its song.

We might fancy thinking about Norfolk holidays whilst we’re talking about the novel, so if you really want to ‘live’ the novel, then there’s no better place to stay than Cley Mill.

Oh. I totally agree. Thanks so much for staying in with me Jacqui. I feel totally transported to the Norfolk coast by hearing about Bluethroat Morning.

It’s been a pleasure to share your company Linda!

Bluethroat Morning

2-Bluethroat Morning by Jacqui Lofthouse High Res

Alison Bliss, celebrity model and critically acclaimed writer, walks into the sea one ‘bluethroat morning’. In death she becomes a greater icon than in life, and the Norfolk village where she lived is soon a place of pilgrimage. Six years later her husband Harry, a schoolteacher, is still haunted by her suicide and faithful to her memory. Until he meets Helen and they fall in love.

Harry and Helen’s relationship initiates a return to the scene of Alison’s death where they meet ninety-eight year old Ern Higham, and a tale is revealed that has been generations in the making. As Harry pieces together a tragic history and finally confronts his own pain, he discovers that to truly move forward, first he must understand the past…

Bluethroat Morning is available for purchase in ebook here.

An Extract from Bluethroat Morning

I saw her, first, before the Piero. It was in the west wing of the gallery and I had been heading for the Bellinis, though I never actually reached them. It was late autumn, one of those grim, grey days when the rain drives one indoors and the east wing of the gallery, where the Impressionists were housed, was packed pretty full. I had come in on a whim, after lunching with a friend in the Crypt at St Martin’s. Before lunch, there had been no sign of rain, but as we emerged from the restaurant, the sky bore down on us and the clouds were yellow-edged and heavy.

My friend, an archivist, had to get back to work and he headed off, before the rain began. It was half term and I had no plans, so I wandered down into the square, hoping that the weather would hold a little longer. I suppose, at the time, I was enjoying my freedom, having recently split with a woman, a fellow teacher who had grown tired of waiting for a proposal. I felt relieved at the whole thing. Something about being single again made me feel carefree. I wanted to make the most of the city in which I lived.

I walked beneath Nelson’s Column, watching the pigeons scatter at my feet. It was then that the skies opened. There was nobody else about, none fool enough to risk the downpour, so I retraced my steps, took refuge, alone under the plane tree. I remember feeling happy, quite indescribably happy as I breathed the fresh, damp air and watched the rain drip from the leaves above and from the noses of the great bronze lions.

About me, above the pavements, black umbrellas blossomed. I knew I could not stay out for long and the gallery looked more than inviting. During a brief lull, I made a dash for it. I crossed the road, being nearly run down by a black cab, and headed towards my future.

I noticed her as soon as I entered the room. She was the only one before that particular painting, The Baptism of Christ. I remember halting, briefly, when I saw her. I did not recognise her, but rather, what impressed me, was her apparent communion with the painting. Not just her eyes, but her whole face, even her body seemed affected by what she saw, as if the whole of her attention was focused on the image before her. It was most remarkable. She lacked the distraction of ordinary people.

Oddly, I remember thinking that she was beautiful and that I wanted to get to know her. I said to myself, ‘It’s not the kind of beauty that most people would like, it’s a strange, surreal beauty.’ Of course, if I had guessed, at first, that it was Alison Oakley, I would never have approached her. But I didn’t see it. True, she had height and poise, but she had not fully recovered from her illness and she was far too thin. She was dressed in jeans and a loose sweater, which swamped her. Her hair was dishevelled and she wore no make-up. What attracted me, most of all, was her expression. She was captivated, almost as if she had never seen anything quite like that before. I didn’t want to break the spell, so I simply stood beside her and we looked together. I told myself this was ridiculous, a mere fantasy. I was aware of all the clichés surrounding such a meeting and I didn’t know how to avoid them. Instead, I allowed my attention to be drawn upwards, to the painting itself. And when I looked at the Christ-figure, so still and serene, I felt myself inadequate. I wanted to enter the painting, as she did, but I felt myself excluded.

In the end, it was her that spoke.

‘Is he famous, this della Francesca?’

I laughed, relieved. I had assumed she was an art critic or scholar.

‘Yes,’ I said. ‘Very.’

‘I thought so.’

‘What do you make of it?’ I asked.

She hesitated, looking at me a little strangely. Then she smiled, that huge, broad film-star smile that was instantly recognisable, despite her drawn face. Why had I not seen it before? I started, felt rather terrified, but somehow guessed that she didn’t want me to know who she was. In any case, it wasn’t Alison Oakley the model that I was interested in. It was the woman I had first seen before the painting.

‘It’s beautiful,’ she said at last. ‘But I can’t say why I like it.’

‘Try.’

‘The purity of it, I suppose. Oh, I don’t know much about art.’

‘You don’t have to know to enjoy.’

‘I remember we came here when I was in the sixth form. I haven’t been since. It makes me feel a bit ignorant. I suppose you know all about this stuff.’

Again, I laughed.

‘I know a little,’ I said.

And now, of course, we’re all even more desperate to get Bluethroat Morning onto our TBRs.

About Jacqui Lofthouse

Jacqui

Jacqui Lofthouse began her career in radio production and media training. In 1992 she studied for her MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia under Malcolm Bradbury and Rose Tremain. She is founder of The Writing Coach and the author of four novels, The Temple of Hymen (Hamish Hamilton/Penguin 1995/1996), Bluethroat Morning (Bloomsbury 2000/Blackbird 2018), Een Stille Verdwijning, (De Bezige Bij 2005) and The Modigliani Girl (Blackbird 2015). Her novels have sold over 100,000 copies in the UK, the USA and Europe and have been widely reviewed.

You can find out more about Jacqui’s novels here.

Follow Jacqui on Twitter @jacquilofthouse or on Facebook.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

1-Blog Tour Poster Bluethroat Morning by Jacqui Lofthouse