Fiction for Over Fifty: A Guest Post by Apple Gidley on Finding Serenissima Publication Day

Lovely Apple Gidley always seems to have a new book out just when I’m in the middle of some personal crisis and can’t manage to fit in reading and reviewing for her. So it is with Finding Serenissma! However, I’m delighted to welcome Apple to Linda’s Book Bag with a guest post to celebrate today’s publication of Finding Serenissima.

Apple has previously featured here on the blog and I’m delighted to welcome her back with a super post considering those of us not in the first flush of youth. Before that, though, let’s find out about Finding Serenissima.

Published today 11th March 2025 by Vine Leaves Press, Finding Serenissima is available for purchase in all the usual places including directly from the publisher here.

Finding Serenissima

With the help of a feisty hotel owner, an attractive water-taxi driver, and a gondola full of Italians who call Venice home, Amelia, a widowed Australian, begins her search for serenity. As the island city works its magic, she comes to realize her life has been overshadowed by her famous American husband, Leo, well before his decline into Alzheimer’s.

As Amelia navigates Venice’s winding canals and its language, she gracefully confronts the joys and challenges of aging, discovering that love and laughter can come at any stage of life. Balancing long-distance parenting and familial obligations, she redefines what it means to live fully as an older woman, all while the magical city slowly helps her reclaim her identity.

Finding Serenissima is a heartwarming tale of second chances, exploring the complexities of long marriage, independence, and rediscovering love in the most unexpected places.

Fiction for Over Fifty

A Guest Post by Apple Gidley

Who cares about fiction representing more mature women as the leading lady? Perhaps a good proportion of the eleven or so million women aged over 55 might, and that’s just in the UK. Too often older women feel invisible, sidetracked, bypassed and, based on a survey by BookBrowse, that would appear to be a mistake. Of more than 3,600 people questioned, the average age of women in book clubs is over 45, that’s a lot of readers who shouldn’t be dismissed or forgotten.

No wonder, then, the huge success of novelists like Elizabeth Strout and her 2008 book, Olive Kitteridge; or Rachel Joyce’s Miss Benson’s Beetle. Both depict strong mature women. Women want books that speak to the real universal issues they might face, like in Kate Morton’s The Secret Keeper; or Elizabeth Gilbert’s memoir, Eat, Pray, Love.

Conflict resolution is something many have learned from childhood. Watch a little girl telling teddy not to lord it over rabbit. Or a teenager giving comfort to a friend’s heartbreak. The trials become greater at university—perhaps a lecherous tutor, or amorous jock—then workplace inequities as men are promoted over female colleagues, and sometimes above their abilities.

As we ladies-of-a-certain-age continue to age, we want to read of others who have overcome whatever has tried to stop us in our tracks. Not just those who have made it to the top of their chosen tree, but about strong women leading ordinary lives who don’t always get the recognition they deserve. How satisfying lives can be led without children; or how each stage of children’s lives are juggled and navigated. Perhaps how any, or all, of the three ‘d’s—divorce, dementia, death—are managed, and how clambering out of the hole that sense of abandonment has opened can lead not only to survival but adjustment and, as the pain eases, gives access to maybe a different, yet still fulfilling life. 

Amelia Paignton, in Finding Serenissima, is such a woman.…

 Exhaustion prickled Amelia like scalding water as she stood under the shower and washed off the travel grime. Wrapping a towel around her chest, she stepped over to the window and looked out at the people sauntering along the canal. Snatches of Italian drifted up, adding to her disorientation, her sense of displacement. Untethered.

         “Well, that’s what you wanted.” Her words jarred loud in the calm of the room. “But Italy? You don’t speak the language. You don’t know anyone.” She could almost hear the words coming from Leo’s mouth, see the petulant tilt of his lips.

         She shook her head, and clutching the towel, replied. “No, Leo, I don’t, but I can learn. And Leo, who was it that had to make a life for us while you painted? I can do this.” The threat of tears dispersed as anger replaced rootlessness. Swapping the towel for a sarong, she lay down on the bed. Sleep. That would help. But not too long.

         The ping of the phone alarm woke Amelia and, prizing her eyes open, it took her a moment to remember her surroundings.

         “Oh, my God, I’m in Italy!” Laughter followed her pronouncement. Shadows playing a different dance to earlier in the day told her hours had passed. And the grumble in her tummy. She had to go out. Take the plunge. And her dictionary.

         Pulling on a pair of jeans,she tucked a green shirt into the waistband, then stuck her feet into ankle boots. A slash of eyeliner and mascara, a jacket and scarf, and she felt ready.

         “I can do this.” She repeated her new mantra.

 This desire for strong female protagonists, of any age, can extend to non fiction. We want to learn of women who have led remarkable lives. Women like, Elżbieta Zawacka, the Polish WWII resistance fighter whose life is documented in Clare Mulley’s latest book, Agent Zo. Or Bloody Brilliant Women by Cathy Newman, described as “a fresh, opinionated history of all the brilliant women you should have learned about in school but didn’t.”

As a teenager, the travels of Mary Kingsley and Dervla Murphy enthralled me. I was lucky, I was already seeing the world, but their words made me want to see more and, sometimes, I’d wish I had been born into an earlier time, so I could join them in their adventures. Although I doubt I’d have had the courage to pack my bags and go, certainly not solo, as did Gertrude Bell who mapped, physically and metaphysically, the Middle East. She was far better described as the Queen of the Desert rather than, as some suggested, the female equivalent of Lawrence of Arabia.

When I read, I want characters, real and imagined, to inspire me. Characters like Janet Pimm, the seventy-year old, in Helen Paris’s The Invisible Women’s Club to remind me that 50, 60, 70, 80 are all just a numbers—particularly on the days when I glance in a mirror and wonder who is that older woman looking out at me.               

When I write, strong women slip onto the pages. Not consciously created. They just appear. Perhaps, somewhere in my subconscious, I want my granddaughters, when they are old enough to read my books, to recognise their own potential, their strength, even when things don’t go according to plan. Or my grandson to respect the line of strong women on both sides of his family.

And sometimes it is a reminder that women need women. Rather as Amelia, in Finding Serenissima, comes to rely, both for friendship and guidance, on the older determined hotelier, whose words will not be brooked and who says with regal bearing, “I am Bria Valentina Scutari”.

We want to read about them. Those friendships that transcend age, distance, and occasionally, the men in their lives! Who would argue that eleven million women are wrong?

****

Certainly not me Apple! Thanks so much for this fabulous guest post – and for representing those of us who still feel we have a place in the world!

About Apple Gidley

Apple Gidley has lived all over the world. Her roles have been varied – editor, intercultural trainer for multinational corporations, British Honorary Consul to Equatorial Guinea, amongst others. She started writing in 2010. 

You can find out more about Apple on her website and by finding her on Facebook or following her on Instagram and  Twitter/X @ExpatApple.

Staying in with Kim Smejkal

It’s my absolute pleasure to welcome Kim Smejkal to the blog today to stay in with me and to tell me all about her latest young adult novel. My huge thanks to Vicki Berwick at Pushkin Press for putting us in touch with one another.

Let’s see what Kim had to say:

Staying in with Kim Smejkal

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Kim 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?

The Dandelion Riots is my latest young adult fantasy and I brought it because it holds a special place in my heart. I’ve always loved classic fairy tales—full of curses, evil sorceresses, and the magic of true love’s kiss—but I wanted The Dandelion Riots to be fresh, exciting, and unexpected. I had a lot of funflipping familiar tropes upside-down!

That sounds great. What can we expect from an evening in with The Dandelion Riots?

The Dandelion Riots is about forming community and fighting back against injustice and hate. 

That sounds like something we could do with in the real world Kim, never mind fantasy fiction!

In this world, some girls are cursed at birth by powerful witches as preemptive punishment for future misdeeds. These cursed girls are the dregs of society: shunned, feared, and often hunted.

That doesn’t sound fair at all. Do they deserve the curse?

They are frightening and dangerous, it’s true! But they’re born innocent, and then they’re vilified. They become the scapegoat so everyone spends time fighting against them instead of the true villains…

Interesting. Tell me more about the curses.

As an aside, crafting the various “flavours” of curses was one of my favourite parts about writing this book! The curses can take many forms, and some examples include transforming food into dust, ruling armies of cockroaches, bringing plague and pestilence, and, in some cases, unintentional murder.

And what about your protagonist?

The main character, Drinn, is a naïve and kind-hearted girl who’s been hidden away her entire life for a very good reason: her curse is the most powerful of them all. When Drinn discovers the nature of her curse, she is stunned: “The destruction I was destined to cause was unfathomable.”

So her life seems inevitable – is that how it pans out for her?

Despite what everyone tells her, Drinn refuses to accept this fate. Instead, she rallies other cursed girls to her side and vows to fight back against both the witches who cursed them, and the world that hates them.

These girls sound like great role models.

The Dandelion Riots celebrates the strength of girls, friendship, compassion, and community. These girls show us that there is power in the riot, there is hope in the fight.

I think The Dandelion Riots sounds very pertinent to today’s society. How is the book being received?

We’ve gotten some encouraging feedback from early readers that the messages in The Dandelion Riots are resonating. One bookseller had this to say: “This story rockets along and is full of amazing characters that all make an impression, bringing surprises at every turn. An empowering story of people sticking together no matter the odds, even when everything appears broken. I loved every word.”

That’s brilliant. You must be thrilled.  And what else have you brought along and why have you brought it?

I brought along a bouquet of fresh, spring dandelions for you! (I bet you’ve never received weeds before…)

Er… I’m not so sure about that! But why dandelions?

Dandelions are important in the book for a number of reasons. First of all, our main character, Drinn, lives with an unfortunate side-effect from her curse: dandelions sprout out of her neck when she’s anxious. They tangle in her hair, scar the nape of her neck, and make it quite difficult to hide the fact that she’s cursed.

That explains the cover image – it fits perfectly.

The cursed girls adopt the dandelion as their symbol. It’s a persistent weed, able to grow and thrive in neglected soil and abandoned spaces. Many people hate them and spend a lot of time and effort trying to get rid of them.

I confess I have tried to eliminate them from my lawn. Maybe I need a rethink…

But the dandelion is also one of the first flowers to bloom in spring: a beautiful sunshine-yellow. You can eat the greens, make wine or tea or jelly (dandelion jelly doesn’t just look like sunshine, it tastes like sunshine too!) And when the blooms are spent, we blow on the seed heads and make wishes, sending them off on new adventures.

I’m definitely seeing them differently now.

I really hope you like your dandelion bouquet, and hopefully you’ll look at the yellow flowers and serrated green leaves and see beauty instead of nuisance!

I will indeed Kin. Thank you so much for staying in with me to chat about The Dandelion Riots. I’m delighted to have a copy waiting for me on my TBR. I think you should make us a dandelion tea and I‘ll give readers a few more details about the book.

The Dandelion Riots

A breathtaking queer fantasy in which girls are cursed at birth with terrible powers.

She believed I was meek and unassuming, because for sixteen years, that was all I’d ever been…

Cursed at birth, 16-year-old Drinn has been kept away from everyone – moved from house to house to ensure that she never finds love. But this year, she has decided to break free.  

Fleeing, Drinn finds herself in Oblison, surrounded by others just like her – cursed girls whose lives are dangerous and wild. They vow to free themselves once and for all. But rebellion is dangerous, and if Drinn finds love before the curse can be broken, a terrible fate could befall them all…

The Dandelion Riots is out in the UK on March 13, 2025 from Pushkin Press, and in Canada and the US on September 30, 2025. You can pre-order The Dandelion Riots through the Pushkin website, from Bookshop.org, Waterstones and Amazon.

About Kim Smejkal

Kim Smejkal writes fantasy for young adults and not-so-young adults, always with a touch of magic. Her books include The Dandelion Riots, Ink in the Blood, and Curse of the Divine. When she’s not writing, she’s often lost in the woods, wandering a beach, or puttering around in her garden, and she currently lives on Vancouver Island in Canada with her family and anxious dog, Pigeon.

 For further information about Kim, visit her website or find her on Instagram and Threads

Cover Reveal: The Woman in Ward 9 by Naomi Williams

I always find it exciting to be in at the start of a book’s life and so it gives me enormous pleasure to help reveal the details for The Woman in Ward 9 by Naomi Williams, especially as this is a book in one of my favourite genres – psychological thrillers. 

Let’s find out more:

The Woman In Ward 9 will be published by Headline on 17th July 2025 and is available for pre-order through the publisher links here.

The Woman in Ward 9

Victim. Witness. Killer?

Laura is found covered in blood that is not her own. With no memory of what happened, she is admitted to a high security psychiatric facility.

With no body and no other witnesses, it is down to psychologist Emma to gain Laura’s trust and understand her disturbed mind.

Beneath Laura’s stories of an idyllic life and a boyfriend almost too good to be true, Emma begins to unravel a darker truth. But as she listens to Laura’s story, she begins to draw chilling parallels between her patient’s life and her own. The man Laura describes sounds uncannily similar to Emma’s own husband…

Is she entering the mind of a victim, a witness – or a killer?

With tension you could cut with a knife and twists that will have your head spinning, The Woman In Ward 9 is sure to keep you reading late into the night.

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Doesn’t that sound fabulous? I can’t wait to get my hands on a copy.

About Naomi Williams

Naomi Williams started her career teaching English and Drama, and when she had a family, combined all three to write novels about family drama. Originally from Yorkshire, she now lives in a London suburb with her husband and two teenage daughters, so expects there’s plenty more drama to come.

Also writing as Lisa Timoney and Kate Storey, you can find out more by visiting Naomi’s website, finding her on Facebook and Instagram or following her on Bluesky and Twitter/X @LTimoneyWrites.