East End Angels by Rosie Hendry

9780751566819

I’m delighted to be part of the paperback launch celebrations for East End Angels by Rosie Hendry as I love historical fiction.

available in e-book and hardback, East End Angels is released by Sphere, an imprint of Little Brown, in paperback tomorrow, 14th December 2017 and is available for purchase here.

East End Angels

9780751566819

Strong-willed Winnie loves being part of the crew at Station Seventy-Five but her parents are less than happy. She has managed to avoid their pleas to join the WRENS so far but when a tragedy hits too close to home she finds herself wondering if she’s cut out for this life after all.

Former housemaid Bella was forced to leave the place she loved when she lost it all and it’s taken her a while to find somewhere else to call home. She’s finally starting to build a new life but when the air raids begin, it seems she may have to start over once again.

East-Ender Frankies sense of loyalty keeps her tied to home so it’s not easy for her to stay focused at work. With her head and heart pulling in different directions, will she find the strength to come through for her friends when they need her the most?

Brought together at LAAS Station Seventy-Five in London’s East End during 1940, these three very different women soon realise that they’ll need each other if they’re to get through the days ahead. But can the ties of friendship, love and family all remain unbroken?

My Review of East End Angels

Three women from very different backgrounds find common interests when they become ambulance drivers during the Blitz.

What a lovely story East End Angels is. Rosie Hendry’s style is effortless to read making for a heartwarming and feel good reading experience, perfect for lovers of what is traditionally termed women’s fiction.

The settings make East End Angels so authentic. I thoroughly enjoyed the insight into the way women supported the London Auxiliary Ambulance Service in the desperate days of bombing and through perfectly chosen language found myself transported to that era with the sound of the bombs, the smells and the dust. I thought the details had been meticulously researched, beautifully handled and woven into the narrative with enormous skill.

There’s a great plot too, with a few surprises along the way that draw in the reader completely. I know there is to be a sequel to East End Angels and will be first in the queue to read it as I both want, and need, to find out what happens next. As I read about the events I found myself questioning my own personality and wondering how I would have coped and behaved in similar circumstances. The themes of the book such as friendship, values and family mean there is something for every reader to identify or empathise with. I found the dynamics of the class structure of the era and the way it was altered by the war extremely interesting too.

However, it is the characters that make East End Angels such a compelling story. I completely forgot that these are fictional people. Partly, this effect comes through the direct speech. Frankie, in particular has a voice I could hear in my head as if I were listening to a friend speaking. I most identified with Winnie and despised Ivy with every fibre of my being. Is it awful of me to hope throughout that she would get a direct hit from a bomb? All three of the main characters, Bella, Frankie and Winnie, felt real and vivid, but so too did the more minor individuals, even Trixie. I believed in them all completely.

I finished East End Angels feeling I had been thoroughly entertained and drawn in to the worlds of Bella, Winnie and Frankie. I’d love to see this book taken up for Sunday night television as I think it would be classic material for such viewing. I’m highly impressed by Rosie Hendry’s historical writing and look forward to more in the future. I really recommend East End Angels.

About Rosie Hendry

Rosie Hendry

Rosie Hendry lives by the sea in Norfolk with her husband and two children. East End Angels is the first book in her uplifting and heart-warming saga series that follows the lives and loves of Winnie, Frankie and Bella, who all work for the London Auxiliary Ambulance Service (LAAS) during the Blitz. Listening to her father’s tales of life during the Second World War sparked Rosie’s interest in this period and she loves researching further, searching out gems of real life events which inspire her writing.

You can find out more about Rosie by following her on Twitter @hendry_rosie, finding her friend on Facebook or visiting her website.

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Clare Vine and Solitaire Concept: A Guest Post by Jane Thynne, Author of Solitaire

Solitaire cover

I know we shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, but Solitaire by Jane Thynne is so gorgeous that I’m thrilled to be part of this blog tour to support it. My thanks to Sian Divine for inviting me to take part and for my review copy of Solitaire which I’m saving up to read over Christmas.

It gives me great pleasure to find out a little more about the concept of Solitaire and its protagonist Clare Vine today. I’m doubly lucky as I have an extract to share as well as Jane’s super guest post.

Published by Simon and Schuster, Solitaire is available for purchase here.

Solitaire

Solitaire cover

To save her own life, will she sacrifice another?

June 1940: the first summer of the war. Berlin is being bombed and nightly blackouts suffocate the city. Then France falls and a shadow descends.

A shadow has fallen over Clara Vine’s own life, too. She is an Anglo-German woman in a country that hates England. Then she is summoned to meet the Propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, who has decided that Clara should adopt a new role – as his spy.

Much as she dislikes the idea, Clara realises this might be the chance to find an escape route to England. But Goebbels has other ideas and soon Clara is drawn into a web that threatens to destroy her. As everything she holds dear is taken as ransom, she must fight to protect her family – and to survive…

The Clare Vine and Solitaire Concept

A Guest Post by Jane Thynne

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Jane. Would you talk to us a little about the inspiration for the Clare Vine Series? Where did the concept for the Clare Vine Series come from?

I knew I wanted to write a spy thriller, and I was fascinated by WW2, but I always found Nazi Germany a very male story. I wanted to know about the women – mothers, wives, brides and schoolgirls – whose lives were tightly controlled under the regime. The Third Reich was extremely gender segregated – there was even a female Führer, called Gertrude Scholtz-Klink – yet these women get very little attention from historians and their lives are largely hidden, so I decided to use a spy to penetrate their world. My heroine, Clara Vine, is Anglo-German and an actress, because actresses are accustomed to playing a role, and trained to observe detail. Clara’s entire life in Berlin is an act, but her glamour blinds the Nazi VIPs to her real purpose. Her adventures start in Black Roses, which is set in 1933, just after Hitler has come to power in Germany. She arrives in Berlin at the age of 26, hoping to make a career at the famous Babelsberg studios, and by chance comes into contact with Magda Goebbels, wife of the Propaganda Minister, and becomes privy to the gossip of the VIP Nazi wives. Later, she agrees to relay information to British Intelligence, and thus becomes actress by day, spy by night. Although Clara herself is not modelled on any specific historical character, I read a lot of letters and diaries by young British women who had visited Germany before the war, and observed the build-up of Nazism. They came back and warned people about the rise of the Nazis, but their warnings fell on deaf ears.

Without spoiling the plot for readers, would you tell us about the storyline for Solitaire?

It’s 1940, and Germany is now at war with Britain, so Clara’s life is more perilous than ever. Unaware that she is a British agent, Joseph Goebbels, the Propaganda Minister, summons her to carry out a mission for him. The job takes her to neutral Lisbon, where a flood of refugees, aristocrats and spies has congregated, waiting to escape Nazi Europe. Among them are the Duke and Duchess of Windsor – and Ian Fleming.

What’s next for Clare Vine? How many books do you see her series carrying?

The next Clara Vine story is set in 1941, with locations in Vienna, Hamburg, Berlin and London. Clara is filming the most expensive Nazi movie ever made, called The Sinking of the Titanic, when she is presented with a daunting task, to track down a rogue British agent. The only problem is, this man was once her lover. I enjoy so much writing the Clara stories and being in her world, that I have no desire to stop. But I do have another protagonist who is longing to be written about, and she’s a rather different character, so I may start another series soon.

And what’s next for Jane Thynne?

My next novel is a standalone, provisionally titled The Typewriter. It’s a split time narrative set in the 1940s and the present day featuring two English sisters, Cordelia and Irene Capel, who are divided by ideology and war. Part of it is set during the fall of Berlin, when Russian soldiers rampaged through the city, raping every woman in sight. After the war Cordelia Capel becomes a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist, yet she is never able to confront the secret that has created a lifetime rift with her sister. At the time I was writing it, the Brexit debate was raging and the potential for ideology to divide families was all around. The family rift in this novel features spies, love and lies, and its repercussions stretch right into the present day.

Thanks so much for telling us a bit more about your writing Jane.

An Extract From Solitaire

In this extract from the prologue of Solitaire, a glamorous German nightclub singer is in Lisbon, waiting restlessly outside the casino at Estoril  for someone to emerge.

The night was rich and dark, dense as a wedding cake, and the sky powdered with stars. The young woman stood to one side of the casino’s pillared door, trying to remain inconspicuous as knots of people drifted through the glass doors and across the thick red carpet to the gaming room. Inside, chandeliers hung on gold painted ropes, bored croupiers raked the tables and a layer of cigar smoke was intercut by musky drifts of Chanel, Lanvin and Worth. The atmosphere was the same as in any casino the world over: joyless, thick with alcohol and moneyed voices. Occasionally the woman would venture out of the shadow and peer past the porters and bellboys, trying to catch a glimpse inside, but each time she hesitated and withdrew again, drawing her silk jacket closer around her. A black, strapless evening gown, decorated with silver faux-Chinese motifs, hung on her like a negligee and a single strand of pearls circled her neck. She had a gleaming drape of charcoal-coloured hair, eggshell skin, a soft pillow of lips, and a face that had broken a hundred hearts.

The night air raised goose bumps on her flesh and she braced herself, as though she could shrug off the shadows like a sable stole. On the opposite side of the square the red neon sign of the casino expanded and contracted like an artery and a short way away the shivering glitter of the sea was advancing and receding, tugging the shingle outwards to America and back to Europe again. Raucous laughter and the crash of bottles rattled from a nearby bar. The splayed branches of pine trees fractured the dark sky and as she stood there shivering, a momentary waft of resin transported her hundreds of miles, back to the pine-scented Grunewald of Berlin.

Berlin. Nothing about her life in that city could have predicted her presence here, all alone, in an unfamiliar town on the far westerly edge of Europe. Not the ranks of teachers at school or the marching and massed parades and gymnastics in the Tiergarten. Not the dancing and singing, nor the nightclubs, nor the stint at the Haus Vaterland, draped across a grand piano, trying to be Marlene Dietrich. At the thought of it she instinctively flexed a leg with the toe pointed and circled it slowly, as though she was warming up for a performance.

It was love that had brought her here. Damned, inconvenient love. She had always imagined herself immune, as though she’d had an injection against it, like you had for a disease. She prided herself on her indifference. Her heart was as hard as a Wehrmacht helmet. Melting eyes and tender protestations glanced off her like raindrops from the windshield of a pale blue Mercedes convertible, the kind she had always dreamed of owning. But somehow, love had undermined her defences and left her stranded here, three countries away from home, frozen, uncomfortable and very afraid.

She shivered again, shuffling toes that were growing slowly numb in her high heels, and tried to calculate the time. She was, in fact, perfectly used to high heels and late nights; back in Berlin, midnight was nothing. Usually, two o’clock in the morning was her favourite time, when everything slowed down and the harsh edges of the city relaxed. Often she would still be out at dawn, when the housewives first appeared at their doors, clutching their dressing gowns to their necks, looking for the milk cart. But on this particular night, the waiting was a strain.  A numbing exhaustion was seeping through her body, up from her legs, coaxing her into a waking doze, forcing her to shake herself awake. She wished yet again that she could find a cigarette, but smoking might draw unwelcome attention. Coffee would help, and the bar across the square was still open, its light fizzing over a few plastic tables, yet she dared not desert her post. Instead, she took out a chunk of chocolate and let it dissolve slowly on her tongue, staring restlessly at the casino from her vantage place in the shadows. It helped that her performer’s training had instilled a certain vigilance in her, a hypersensitivity to her surroundings, and she told herself that standing here was no different from waiting in the wings, poised to enter the stage for her moment of action.

About Jane Thynne

Jane Thynne

Jane Thynne was born in Venezuela and educated in London. She graduated from Oxford University with a degree in English and joined the BBC as a journalist. She has also worked at The Sunday Times, The Daily Telegraph and The Independent, as well as for numerous British magazines.

She appears as a broadcaster on Radio 4. Jane is married to the writer Philip Kerr. They have three children and live in London.

You can find out more by visiting Jane’s website, finding her on Facebook or following her on Twitter @janethynne.

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Introducing Urban Fantasy: A Guest Post by Elliot Parker, Author of Demon, Interrupted

Demon cover

Once again I’m featuring an author and book I really wish I had had time to read as I know just how important reviews are for writers. This time I’m welcoming Elliot Parker, author of Demon, Interrupted to Linda’s Book Bag. Elliot has kindly agreed to explain a little bit more about urban fantasy as I feel a total ignoramus when it comes to the fantasy genre.

Demon, Interrupted is  published by Dragon Moon Press and is available for purchase here.

Demon, Interrupted

Demon cover

Hide or die.

Evangeline Lawson can find anything, except freedom. A descendant of St. Anthony of Padua, the Patron Saint of lost articles, she has the supernatural ability to locate any missing object, car keys, missing dogs, children, as well as nuclear missiles, secret underground bunkers, and divine objects of power. The only thing she can’t find is freedom from every power hungry treasure hunter.

Breadcrumbs left by her ancestors lead Evangeline to the doorstep of the world’s most morally ambiguous angel, Adrien. Sure he can protect her, but he can also use her to find his way back into heaven. The angel will use any means possible to force Evangeline to stop running and strengthen her abilities.

Abilities that Evangeline will need to fight the oldest and most powerful of demons. Lilith has been hunting the St. Anthony lineage for hundreds of years, and will stop at nothing to turn Evangeline into her own personal divining rod. She needs Evangeline’s super charged GPS to find artifacts that can unleash hell on earth.

Evangeline swings like a pendulum. Run and hide or fight? Where she stops could determine the fate of mankind.

Introducing Urban Fantasy

A Guest Post by Elliot Parker

Good day everyone!  My name is Elliot and I write Urban Fantasy. That sounds like I am recovering from addiction to it, which I might be.  What is Urban Fantasy you ask?  Urban fantasy is a subgenre of Fantasy.  It gets its name from the common use of urban or city settings.  So much so, that one could argue that the setting itself becomes a character in many novels.  Ilona Andrews, Kate Daniels series centers on Atlanta, Georgia.  Karen Monings’ Fever series centers on Dublin, Ireland.  My novel Demon, Interrupted focuses on Florence, Italy.

The characters often find themselves wrapped up in a blend of everyday and supernatural phenomena.  Many elements will be familiar to the reader, but presented with a “twist”. Vampires, werewolves, wizards and humans living knowingly or unknowingly side by side.  Ancient supernatural feuds raging beneath the noses of mere mortals.

While the majority of Urban Fantasy is narrated from the first-person point of view of a gritty female protagonist, there are very notable male exceptions including Jim Butcher’s Harry Dresden and Kevin Hearne’s Iron Druid Chronicles among others.  The benchmark is definitely a tough-as-nails female protagonist who plays be her own rules and is vulnerable to a very select few.  She is the lynchpin of her story, often containing abilities or powers that no other character in the supernatural world possesses.  These powers usually present as the largest hurdle for her to overcome, but are integral to her becoming the hero of the story.

The closest cousin to Urban Fantasy is not High Fantasy but Paranormal Romance, driven by the main character being female and typically some romantic lines being present. A constant conversation occurring among authors and readers is the difference between the two.  In any romance or subgenre of romance, the main story line must be the romance itself.  The relationship between the two protagonists.  We watch them meet, fall in love, almost mess it up (sometimes several times) to finally have a happily ever after. I stress the happily ever after because it is a requirement in romance.  While romance often occurs in Urban Fantasy, it is not a requirement and frequently evolves at a much slower pace than paranormal romance. The main story line of an Urban Fantasy novel is whatever the main character must find, accomplish or overcome.

One of my favorite hallmarks of Urban Fantasy is the dreaded cliffhanger. I know, I know, as a reader I have a deep love/hate relationship with cliffhangers, but as an author they are awesome sauce! Many Urban Fantasy novels end on a cliffhanger because of the episodic nature of the genre. There are very few single, stand-alone stories.  Most authors have extensive collections of five to ten or more books where the main character finds him/herself mixed up in problems with ever-increasing stakes.  If the series does end, for me, it is sad but fulfilling.  Most monogamous romance storylines end with a happily ever after for the characters.

I hope you have enjoyed this nutshell explanation of Urban Fantasy. I have been drawn to this genre for over two decades. I love the tough, gritty, loner females who start their journey alone but slowly and surely form their own piecemeal family, more loyal than any blood relatives.  There are no doubt many more hallmarks and genre-norms but these are some of my favorites, and you can bet I included them all in my novel.

(Thanks so much Elliot – I’ve definitely learnt something today!)

About Elliot Parker

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Elliot Parker is a 38-year-old author transplanted from the North into the Deep Deep South. Originally from a scientific research background, she incorporates her love for research and science into every story. She is always looking for the perfect blend of creative and analytical. When not writing she consumes inhuman amounts of chai tea and searches for another animal to add to her menagerie. Demon, Interrupted her debut novel published by Dragon Moon Press, is out on December 12th.

You can find out more about Elliot and urban fantasy by following her on Twitter @AuthorEParker and finding Elliot on Facebook.

An Extract From Music Notes by Manning Wolfe

Music Notes

Having previously had the chance to interview Manning Wolfe, here on Linda’s book Bag, I’m delighted to be sharing an extract from her latest Merit Bridges series and the new release Music Notes: Texas Lady Lawyer vs L.A. Baron

Music Notes: Texas Lady Lawyer vs L.A. Baron was published by Starpath on 18th November 2017 and is available for purchase from your local Amazon site.

Music Notes: Texas Lady Lawyer vs L.A. Baron

Music Notes

Attorney Merit Bridges is looking over her shoulder! Who’s back there?

When client Liam Nolan is slain with his own guitar, Davey Ray Bell shows up claiming to be Liam’s illegitimate son. L.A. Baron, Nolan’s former manager, makes a back-door music deal and vies for the estate.

When the probate court pushes Baron out of the power position, he pursues Merit with a vengeance. Using the dark web, he ruins her reputation, destroys her career, and finally attempts to take her life.

Who will come out on top of the scales of music and the scales of justice?

An Extract from Music Notes

Liam got up, picked up his Strat, and walked along the lake on the hike and bike trail toward home. As he dropped down under the First Street Bridge, he looked up from his dreamy state to see a Pursuer coming toward him. The Pursuer was slight in stature, but backlit by the bridge and Liam could only see an outline.
“Hey, Liam,” the Pursuer said.
“Hey. Who’s there?” Liam asked.
“Don’t you know who I am?” the Pursuer asked.
The voice sounded familiar. The Pursuer continued toward Liam until they were close enough for Liam to recognize the face.
“What are you doing here at this hour?” Liam asked.
“Looking for you. I followed you from the Saxon Pub.”
“Well you found me. What do you want? I told you I have nothing for you,” Liam said.
“Don’t be that way. Let me buy you a cup of coffee. I want to talk to you,” the Pursuer said.
“I don’t want coffee and I don’t want to talk to you. Leave me alone,” Liam said and turned to go.
“Don’t turn your back on me again!”
The Pursuer looked around and picked up a large rock from beside the path. Liam felt movement behind him. As he turned back, he felt a strong blow between his neck and skull. He fell, dropped his guitar case, then struggled to get up.
“You, asshole,” Liam said.
As Liam pushed himself up from the ground, the Pursuer grabbed the guitar case and slammed it into Liam’s head. Liam fell to the ground again and the Pursuer hit him with the case over and over until the latches broke and the case flew open, sending the Strat spiraling into the water.
Liam looked up to see the Pursuer freeze, blink, and begin to shake. A hand reached down by the dying face and gathered up the case handle and rock, and put them inside the broken case. The Pursuer ran along the trees and out of the park with the case. Liam’s blood spread out over the trail, pooled at the grassy edge, and finally spilled over into the dark water.
No one came to help poor Liam or see the face of his killer. Dozens of purple guitar picks lay strewn along the water’s edge.

About the Author – Manning Wolfe

Manning Wolfe Headshot 2

Manning   an author and attorney residing in Austin, Texas, who writes cinematic-style, smart, fast-paced thrillers with a salting of Texas bullshit. The first in her series, featuring Austin Lawyer Merit Bridges, is Dollar Signs: Texas Lady Lawyer vs Boots King.

A graduate of Rice University and the University of Texas School of Law, Manning’s experience has given her a voyeur’s peek into some shady characters’ lives and a front row seat to watch the good people who stand against them.

You can find more about Manning Wolfe through these links: FacebookwebsiteTwitterGoodreadsInstagramGoogle+ and LinkedIn.

An Extract from That They Might Lovely Be by David Matthews

That they might lovely be cover

Sometimes I get frustrated as a blogger as a book turns up that I know I’d love but I simply don’t have time to read and review. This is exactly what has happened with David Matthews’ That They Might Lovely Be. However, I do have an extract to share today as part of the launch celebrations for the book.

Published by Top Hat Books on 8th December 2017, That They Might Lovely Be is available for purchase here.

That They Might Lovely Be

That they might lovely be cover

No-one thought Bertie Simmonds could speak. So, when he is heard singing an Easter hymn, this is not so much the miracle some think as a bolt drawn back, releasing long-repressed emotions with potentially devastating consequences…

A decade later, Bertie marries Anstace, a woman old enough to be his mother, and another layer of mystery starts to peel away.

Beginning in a village in Kent and set between the two World Wars, That They Might Lovely Be stretches from the hell of Flanders, to the liberating beauty of the Breton coast, recounting a love affair which embraces the living and the dead.

An Extract from That They Might Lovely Be

Chapter One

Monday, 12 August 1940

All day there had been dogfights high overhead. It was mid- afternoon  when  the rector’s wife  stepped  through  the  French windows  into the garden.  Bullets  spattered  down through  the trees, ripping the turf around her feet yet leaving her unscathed. This, the second miracle of her life, turned her wits.

In the same hour, Delia Simmonds  was about to wring the neck of a young cockerel ready for the pot while her father, the retired schoolmaster, was sitting on the old oak bench, resolutely ignoring the combat above the clouds. The squawking of the doomed bird was drowned out as a stricken aeroplane came screaming down from the sky toward them. They watched as it roared above the roof of their cottage, skimming the tops of the trees before ploughing straight into the South Lodge on the other side of the wood.

They  heard  the  crash,  but  neither  felt  compelled  to  hurry along the lanes to see where it had hit the ground. News would reach  them  soon  enough.  They  had  inhabited  the  fringes  of village life for some years now. As an accumulation of barnacles and weed gradually renders a vessel unseaworthy, so the steady accretion of gossip and suspicion, which had attached itself to the schoolmaster  and  his  family  since  the  tragic  events  ten  years before, had made his position untenable. He had bought a small parcel of land in the woodlands and had a cottage built there for himself and his daughter.

As it happened, it could not have been ten minutes before a child came running up the path to the gate.

‘You’d  best  come,  miss,  sir.  Plane’s  crashed  into  the  South Lodge. They’re saying your Bertie and Mrs. Cordingley’s inside but it’s all ablaze.’

For  a  moment,  Delia  froze,  the  limp  bird  in  her  hand,  the basket for its feathers between her feet. Then she threw back her head and laughed and laughed.

The child fled.

About David Matthews

author

David Matthews was born in the middle of the last century to a Quaker father and a mother who left the Church of England to become a Jehovah’s Witness. After a number of years “in the wilderness”, he found himself back in the Anglican Church, active in the local community.

David had a fulfilling career as a teacher, including eleven years heading a comprehensive school in Croydon, where he still lives with his wife and sons. His play Under the Shadow of Your Wings was professionally directed and performed in the summer of 2015, as part of Croydon’s heritage festival. He now feels he may devote a significant amount of time to transforming ideas, hatched over countless summer vacations, into novels, poems and plays. He enjoys spending time in south-west France where he is renovating a stone cottage with an idyllic view, and making a garden for it.

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Introducing Queer Sci-Fi: A Guest Post by J. Scott Coatsworth, Author of The Stark Divide

The Stark Divide

When J. Scott Coatsworth got in touch about his ‘queer sci-fi novel’, The Stark Divide, I was intrigued. Given that the UK and the US are often ‘two countries divided by a common language’, I wasn’t sure if ‘queer’ referred to homosexual or unusual or both! As my TBR stands at over 900 books I couldn’t take on the review but I had to know more and luckily, Scott was willing to tell me!

The first book in the Liminal Sky series, The Stark Divide was published on 10th October 2017 and is available for purchase in e-book and paperback from your local Amazon site.

The Stark Divide

The Stark Divide

Some stories are epic.

The Earth is in a state of collapse, with wars breaking out over resources and an environment pushed to the edge by human greed.

Three living generation ships have been built with a combination of genetic mastery, artificial intelligence, technology, and raw materials harvested from the asteroid belt. This is the story of one of them—43 Ariadne, or Forever, as her inhabitants call her—a living world that carries the remaining hopes of humanity, and the three generations of scientists, engineers, and explorers working to colonize her.

From her humble beginnings as a seedling saved from disaster to the start of her journey across the void of space toward a new home for the human race, The Stark Divide tells the tales of the world, the people who made her, and the few who will become something altogether beyond human.

Humankind has just taken its first step toward the stars.

Introducing Queer Sci-Fi

A Guest Post by J. Scott Coatsworth

I’ve been writing sci fi and fantasy, on and off, for more than thirty years. But until I came back to writing seriously in 2014, I hadn’t embraced my queer roots in my writing. I’m a gay man, married to my husband since 2008 (and together since 1992). When I starting writing queer characters in my sci fi and fantasy, it really took off.

When I was growing up, I read both sci fi and fantasy voraciously. My mother was a member f the science fiction book club, and I read every book in her library, from Pern to the Foundation. I loved them, but outside of the green dragon riders in Pern, none of them reflected who I was.

I wanted to read about characters like me, guys who fell in love with other guys, and about characters like my friends across the LGBTIQA spectrum.

Sometimes queer speculative fiction is heavy on the romance. I write a bit of that. And sometimes it’s a lot more heavy on the sci fi or fantasy plot. Both have their place, but the important thing is that it is inclusive – and that people in both my community and the mainstream one can read it and see all kinds of different folks represented.

One of the first things I did when I started writing again was to create a new group and website – QueerSciFi.com. We serve as a safe space for all kinds of people to come together to talk about queer speculative fiction, and we’re dedicated to encouraging queer writers to try to push our way out of our safe spaces and into the mainstream, so that more of our voices are heard.

My own Liminal Sky series offers a glimpse at a world that mirrors our own in its diversity, and a look at where we might be going as a society if things continue the way they are.

In the process, it holds up a mirror to our society, and isn’t that what good sci fi does?

That’s what Queer Sci Fi is all about.

About J. Scott Coatsworth

J Scott

Scott inhabits the space between the “here and now” and the “what could be”. He was shepherded into his love affair with fantasy and sci fi by his mother at the tender age of nine, and soon read her entire library. But as he grew up and read more, he wondered where all the gays were.

He came out as gay at 23, and decided to create the stories he couldn’t find at his local bookstore. He reimagined his favorite genres, subverting them and remaking them to his own ends. And every now and then he hopes someone finds and enjoys them.

His friends say Scott’s mind works a little differently – he sees connections between things that many people miss, and accomplishes more in a day than many people do in three.

Scott’s fiction subverts expectations and transforms traditional science fiction, fantasy, and contemporary life into something fresh and unexpected. He manages both Queer Sci Fi and QueeRomance Ink with his husband Mark to promote and celebrate fiction that reflects their worldview.

He infuses his work with love, beauty and power, making them soar, and maybe that changes the world, just a little.

Scott lives with his husband of 25 years in Sacramento, California, in a small yellow house with two pink flamingoes in front.

You can follow J. Scott Coatsworth on Twitter @jscoatsworth and find him on Facebook. You can also visit his website.

Building Up A Momentum: A Guest Post by Jim Ody, Author of The Place That Never Existed

The Place That Cover

With two books out recently, from Zombie Cupcake Press, Lost Connections and The Place That Never Existed, I was fascinated to find out from author Jim Ody just how he managed to have two publications on the go at once. Huh! It wasn’t just two, as he explains in a guest post that made me tired just thinking about it.

The Place That Never Existed is available for purchase here and Lost Connections is available for purchase here.

The Place That Never Existed

The Place That Cover

For Paul and Debbie it was meant to be the happiest time of their lives. A small village wedding in front of their family and friends, followed by a quiet honeymoon in Devon.

Not everyone had been happy to see them together. A woman from their past refused to accept it. Her actions over the previous year had ended in tragedy, and had almost broken the happy couple apart.

Now, away from it all in a picturesque log cabin, Paul and Debbie look forward to time spent alone together… But she has found out where they are, and she will stop at nothing to make sure that the marriage is over… forever.

But Huntswood Cove isn’t just a beautiful Devonshire fishing town, it has its own secret. Recently, people have begun to disappear, only to turn up dead in suspicious circumstances. The locals begin to question what is going on.

Soon everything strange points to the abandoned house in the woods. The house that nobody wants to talk about. To them, it is the place that never existed.

Lost Connections

Lost Connections

What would you do if the most important person to you had been kidnapped?

One minute your daughter is there, and the next she has been bundled into a van right under your nose. They want something of your father’s. You don’t know what that is, and your father mysteriously disappeared over 7 years ago. Going to the police is not an option. And the answers will slowly appear in the most unlikely of places.

As single-parent Eddie’s world falls apart, an unlikely alliance forms between friends and neighbours who put their differences aside to help get his daughter, Daisy, back.

As the mystery unfolds a huge secret is uncovered that not only will affect Eddie and his family, but the whole of mankind. Only the truth will set his daughter free…

Building Up A Momentum

A Guest Post by Jim Ody

I have always had a burning ambition to adorn a shelf or two of a bookcase with my own books. Having now re-released Lost Connections, and The Place That Never Existed, I know that it is important to keep the momentum going in order help build on a fan base and keep up the interest in my books. Only then can I not only fill up the aforementioned bookcase, but hopefully fill other people’s bookcases too!

A year ago I had just self-published both of these two books and whilst to the outside world it looks like I’ve not written anything new since, that couldn’t be further from the truth! This year I have written my next book A Cold Retreat, and this will be released for the first time in January 2018, and will be the third release by Zombie Cupcake Press. Aside from this I have also written six short stories and am putting the finishing touches to a novella. I am not one for writing short stories as I love the complexities that a novel allows me. However since submitting and having my short-story A Moth In The Jar published by Bloodhound Books in their Dark Minds anthology, I realised that this was something that I could write quickly and potentially reach a whole new audience.

My books are psychological/thrillers with twists that hopefully you won’t see coming, however my publisher is more romance/sci-fi/horror focused. This has suddenly opened my books to a whole new audience who have happily embraced my writing. This is why I jumped at the chance to write more short stories as you offer out bite-size chunks of literature to other people’s fans gaining more readership as you go. Next month my short story The Reveal will be release in an anthology called Madame Scarlet’s Carnival, a collection of six stories that include the same characters that all intertwine. And I have a sci-fi/comedy called Virgin Women in Outer Space which uses the same format of using one storyline to weave the individual stories around. The anthology is called Off Course and is released in February. The other four stories are all horror and will be released in two other anthologies sometime in 2018.

You have to understand that as an author I am surrounded by fantastic books and huge competition (although I feel us authors work together rather than against each other). Just like the music industry if you remain quiet and low key you can lose your followers in a flash. For me I find it best to put together a two year plan and work towards that. The goals are more of a guide, but they keep me focused on what I am trying to achieve. So my aim is to release one psychological/thriller a year that will now be slightly more serious, commercial and mainstream. To counter balance this I am about to start a series which will be more comedic. The first book is called Just South of Heaven and was written about eighteen years ago. I will be re-writing it for a number of reasons including the improvement of my writing, and updating things like technological advancements and my humor. I then hope to release novella each year too which will allow me to explore different genres and push me out of my comfort zone. My current novella is called Beneath The Whispers and is a cross-genre tale of love in the dark corners of the mind.

Sitting in front of a laptop and spilling out words onto a screen is what most people consider to be the main, and often, the only work for an author. If only. Thankfully we have social media and I have embraced it as much as I can. As I have grown and gained a following I have felt the need to interact more with them. I have written two books for myself, and whilst A Cold Retreat was also written in the same vein, there were a few changes in what happened after the book was written. For a start I put together a launch team of about fifteen to twenty people who I could share the ideas of my book with. I had half a dozen BETA read for me, and the feedback received was invaluable. When I signed for my publisher the group grew and turned into my street team called Jim Ody’s Spooky Circus and currently there are about seventy selected members who get insights into my writing, giveaways, ARC’s and answer questions in polls to name my books, choose covers, pick story ideas etc.

Being an author can be a lonely occupation, but it doesn’t, and certainly shouldn’t need to be. Whilst I am by no means successful, I have learnt a lot throughout my journey and already I am trying to give that knowledge back through a Facebook group that I helped to put together. The point of it is to help out self-publishing authors by bringing together all of the services an author could need for free. The services and advice are offered free of charge by people either looking to gain experience, build a portfolio, or just give something back. These range from editors and proofreaders, to cover and web designers and bloggers.

I love writing and releasing books, so I want to continue improving my writing and eventually have a larger publisher release my work. And then, of course, there are the film rights for the adaptation…

(Crikey Jim! It sounds like you’re going to be busy!)

About Jim Ody

Author Photo

Jim was first published in an English School Textbook in 1987. He won a competition to draw a dog-walking machine. Having won an art competition the year before, he felt that at the age of eleven he had peaked and consequently retired from art.

For 10 years Jim wrote for a number of websites reviewing and interviewing bands in his own unique way, as well as contributing dark poems and comedic features.

Jim likes to write psychological/thrillers that have endings that you won’t see coming. He also favours stories packed with wit.

He has a very strange sense of humour and is often considered a little odd.  When not writing he will be found playing the drums, watching football and eating chocolate. He lives with his long-suffering wife and three beautiful children in Swindon, Wiltshire.

You can follow Jim on Twitter @Jim_Ody_Author and find him on Facebook.

Sparkling Fountain by Oranmore

Sparkling Fountain

Since I’ve been blogging I have rediscovered the enjoyment of reading poetry again – something that I haven’t really done since I gave up teaching. It has given me great pleasure to read and review Sparkling Fountain by Oranmore for this tour.

Published by Clink Street on 30th November 2017 Sparkling Fountain is available for purchase here.

Sparkling Fountain

Sparkling Fountain

Life and death, conflict and oppression, nature, love, philosophy and faith. The poems of Oranmore resonate with deep, universal themes and are based on real events and poignant personal experiences. From growing up in Ireland to the 100th Birthday of his father — 4th Lord Oranmore and Browne and the longest serving member of The House of Lords — and his travels across the globe, Sparkling Fountain combines both previously published and new poems to create a fine original collection which is a joy for all to read.

My Review of Sparkling Fountain

Sparkling Fountain is such an apt title for this extensive collection of poetry because the language cascades and glitters like water droplets in the sunlight. I really enjoyed these poems. They are by no means perfect and occasionally tense shifts or clashes mean that the reader has to work just that little bit harder to grasp meaning but I think that is what makes them all the more appealing.

I got a strong sense of our literary history reading Sparkling Fountain. Is seems to me as if Oranmore has distilled a wide range of genres and styles into a unique voice of his own. I thought I could hear the cadences of Gerard Manley Hopkins in Mother Earth and there’s everything from the nursery rhyme-like An Irish Fiddle through poems that reminded me of the Romantic poets (Sit and Slumber made me think of Coleridge’s Frost at Midnight for example) to others like Honesty that reminded me of a local poet to me, John Clare. There are so many universal themes explored, from the political negligence of those in power and their disregard for the ordinary person, through love, faith and fate to the more prosaic concepts of cramped air travel (I loved Traveller to Australia) and a windy day that I feel there is something in this anthology for every poetry lover to enjoy.

I don’t usually quote from what I’ve read in my reviews, but of all the poems in this anthology, one of the more simple lines stands out for me and it is the opening to Destiny: ‘Try your best and then accept what the cards have dealt.’ That seems to me to be considerable common sense.

Whilst I don’t share any of the religious belief that features in many of the poems such as Good Friday, I thoroughly enjoyed reading Sparkling Fountain. The poems made me think, provoked memories from my past and gave me an insight into a highly educated and interesting mind. Sparkling Fountain is well worth dipping into.

About Oranmore

Oranmore, also known as Dominick Mereworth, is a poet and playwright. He has had numerous anthologies previously published including The Glory of Glories: Inspirational Poetry (Arcturus Press 2005) and has had a number of plays produced on Fringe Theatre London including Seal of Rome in Belfast and I married Madeline as well as others produced in Belfast and Cork.

Over the years Dominick has also had short stories published to wide acclaim in national magazines. In addition, he continues to work extensively in the voluntary and charity sector including: Kent Refugee Action Network and Rapid Ireland, he is the president of Celtic Vision and Vice-President for both Veterans in Europe and Montecassino Federation for Remembrance and Reconciliation. His father, 4th Lord Oranmore and Browne, was to date the longest serving member of The House of Lords and Dominick succeeded him in 2002 to become the 5th Baron. Today he lives in London with his family.

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The Book Lovers’ Miscellany by Claire Cock-Starkey

the book lovers' miscellany

My grateful thanks to the author Claire Cock-Starkey for a copy of The Book Lovers’ Miscellany in return for an honest review.

Published by the Bodleian Library on 13th October 2017, The Book Lovers’ Miscellany is available for purchase here.

The Book Lovers’ Miscellany

the book lovers' miscellany

Ever wondered how ink is made? Or what is the bestselling book of all time? Or which are the oldest known books in the world? Highbrow to lowbrow, all aspects of the book are celebrated and explored in The Book Lovers’ Miscellany.

From a list of unfinished novels, a short history of the comic, the story behind Mills and Boon and an entry on books printed with mistakes, to a guide to the colours of Penguin paperback jackets and a list of the most influential academic books of all time.

Between these pages you will discover the history of paper, binding, printing and dust jackets; which books have faced bans; which are the longest established literary families; and which bestsellers were initially rejected. You can explore the output of the most prolific writers and marvel at the youth of the youngest published authors; learn which natural pigments were used to decorate a medieval bible; and what animal is needed for the making of vellum.

The ideal gift for every bibliophile, The Book Lovers’ Miscellany is full of fun facts, potted histories and curious lists, perfect for dipping into and sharing.

My Review of The Book Lovers’ Miscellany

The Book Lovers’ Miscellany is a cornucopia of bookish facts and information.

This is a little gem of a book. Although I read it in the order presented, it would pay huge dividends if treated like a bookish box of chocolates, dipping in at random and seeing what tasty morsel came out. Alternatively, as many pages are cross referenced, readers could enjoy a kind of literary mystery tour, jumping from one author led note to another. The footnotes too add an extra dimension of interest.

An aspect I really enjoyed was the way different elements prompted memories for me. The references to papyrus took me back to a trip to Egypt where I saw it made, for example. I adored the oath for the Detection Club that I hadn’t come across before because it made me giggle.

Whilst many of the materials such as the glossary of book and manuscript terms were familiar, and avid bibliophiles may feel they know much of the information already,  reading The Book Lovers’ Miscellany also provided new information and I especially liked learning the ages of older first time authors – there’s hope for me yet!

Claire Cock-Starkey writes with a meticulously researched, fluent and authoritative style that is a pleasure to read. I think The Book Lovers’ Miscellany would be a perfect gift for any book lover, be they a reader or a writer.

About Claire Cock-Starkey

Claire Cock Starkey

Claire Cock-Starkey started out in media, working at BBC Radio Four and Five Live before going on to work at LBC. Having had a family, Claire is now a writer and freelance copy editor always keen to work on new projects.

You can find out more by visiting Claire’s website and following her on Twitter @NonFictioness.

An Interview with Mary Wood, Author of Brighter Days Ahead

Brighter days cover

Given the way life has been of late there couldn’t be a more fittingly aspirational title for a book than Brighter Days Ahead and I’m thrilled to be interviewing Mary Wood all about her latest novel as part of its launch celebrations.

Published by Pan Macmillan on 30th November 2017, Brighter Days Ahead is available for purchase through the publisher links here.

Brighter Days Ahead

Brighter days cover

War pulled them apart, but can it bring them back together?

Molly lives with her repugnant father, who has betrayed her many times. From a young age, living on the streets of London’s East End, she has seen the harsh realities of life . . . When she’s kidnapped by a gang and forced into their underworld, her future seems bleak.

Flo spent her early years in an orphanage, and is about to turn her hand to teacher training. When a kindly teacher at her school approaches her about a job at Bletchley Park, it could be everything she never knew she wanted.

Will the girls’ friendship be enough to weather the hard times ahead?

An Interview with Mary Wood

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Mary. Thank you so much for agreeing to answer some questions on my blog about your writing and Brighter Days Ahead in particular. Firstly, please could you tell me a little about yourself?

Hello Linda,

Thank you for having me as your guest today.

To begin at the beginning, I was born the thirteenth child of fifteen. We had a wonderful mother, who encouraged us all to follow our dreams.

We were very poor at times as my father’s work – farm labourer, wasn’t paid well. But always we were happy and loved.

My circumstances led me to have an empathy and interest in social history, which was later to influence my writing.

I met and married my husband, Roy when very young, and began a family of my own when just eighteen.

This led to me having a chequered career, from cleaning, to party plan, and working at home – stitching knickers! Anything and everything that brought in extra and fitted in with being a mum to our four wonderful children. Till eventually, I joined the Probation Service and became a Probation Service Officer, which was also to influence my writing – giving it the gritty element.

An avid reader, I always dreamt of becoming an author.

I began to write in 1989, but always my work was rejected. I never gave up, but it wasn’t until 2011, having survived breast cancer twice, and a year in a wheel chair struck down by M.E. that I took my fate into my own hands and self-published on kindle.

Each of my self-pub books went to number one in genre and then, the most wonderful thing happened. I was spotted by an editor for Pan Macmillan and at the age of 68 offered a seven-book deal!

I am now a grandmother and great grandmother many times over, and about to sign my fourth contract with Pan Macmillan and love working with the wonderful team that look after me and my books.

(My goodness! What a roller coaster of a life. And what an uplifting biography for the rest of us too.)

Why do you write?

Writing is a compulsion. It is a completion of me, and yet an escapism too. A short answer this time, but that’s it in a nutshell. It is something I did as a child, and what I will do until I die.

When did you realise you were going to be a writer?

The spark was lit by a teacher. There were two who taught me English. One used to set us a title for a composition, and then say – ‘And, Mary Olley, (my nee name) I want one side, and one page only – not a novel!’

His successor, an altogether, different person, said, – ‘Well done. You know, one day you will be an author, you have a special talent.’

This, and my mother’s tales about her grandmother, who was an author, my great grandmother, Dora Langlois, gave me a burning desire to follow in her footsteps.

(As an ex-English teacher I love hearing how teachers have inspired authors.)

Which aspects of your writing do you find easiest and most difficult?

Easiest – writing the first draft.

Most difficult – tackling the edit. I have a wonderful team of editors at Pan Macmillan, but when I am faced with page after page that has turned red, well, I fall out with them in my head, then love them again as I see what their suggestions have done to my novel – they contribute so much, with just a tweak of a sentence. An amazing skill to possess. I always say that an author is nothing without her/his editor.

What are your writing routines and where do you do most of your writing?

I rise early – sometimes as early as 4.30 am. When in Britain, I go to my little-bedroom office, to begin work. During my time in Spain, I still rise early, but I become a duvet writer and take my laptop to my bed – that is, until the sun comes up, and then I am on my rooftop solarium, or even on the beach!

I like to write between 3 and 5000 words a day, but my record is 8000! I have written three books this year, and am hoping to make that four. Usually, I will finish work at around two and then, Roy and I spend quality time together. Roy has all the chores done by then as he has taken over the running of the home. He is a gem, and I couldn’t do what I do without him. We are the A-team.

(Oh! I have one like that too and he’s worth his weight in gold!)

Without spoiling the plot, please could you tell us a bit about Brighter Days Ahead?

Set in wartime, the story’s main characters are Molly and Flo. Their stories are very different. Molly is an East Ender, and her story unfolds to a background of the blitz. She is wronged by her father who has become mixed up with a black-market gang. His greed leads to Molly’s downfall and she finds herself torn away from David, the love of her life, and forced to work in a brothel. David is called up and becomes a pilot. Neither know where the other is.

Flo has been brought up by foster parents in the North of England. A kindly employer sees her potential and pays for extra schooling for her. Through her tutor she becomes a candidate for the code breaking operations in Bletchley. Fitting into this world of upper-class girls isn’t easy for working-class Flo.

Molly and Flo are worlds apart and yet, through a chance meeting become friends.

Theirs is a story that touches many threads of life – The heartbreak for Flo of falling in love with a man who is homosexual, and the fear she has for him and his partner as they face the threat of a prison sentence, if they are discovered. The terrible consequences of the blitz and the poverty it inflicts. The love between Simon’s sister who is a journalist, and a German student she met at university before the war, and how that goes horribly wrong. And a deep friendship between Flo and Molly that is all that Molly has to cling to as she lives her daily life in fear, and not knowing if she will ever see David again.

Throughout, Flo remains strong and is the rock that the others depend on. For her, true love comes along in a surprising way, and helps her to see where her heart really lies.

And so, we have a mix of characters playing out an emotional, and thrilling drama – Prostitutes. A girl from the wrong background, but with a brilliant mind. Two gay men, who live in fear of discovery, and a young woman who has fallen for a fellow student, whom war turns into the enemy.

How did you go about researching detail and ensuring Brighter Days Ahead was realistic?

When I had the initial idea, the main place for the setting was going to be Bletchley. And so, I went on a daytrip there to find out all that I could. I found it a wonderful place, atmospheric, informative, and an ignite of my imagination.

I was then privileged to speak with a lady who worked there during the war and still does. And she shattered this notion that I had, that Bletchley was an exciting place to work. She told me that mostly, it was boring. Long hours sitting at a desk processing words that meant nothing to her. It wasn’t until afterwards that it all seemed worthwhile when she discovered what a vital part she had played in winning the war.

And so, the setting changed, to include many scenes at Bletchley, but spread out to London and the blitz, and of course, a northern city, which in this book, is Blackburn.

I know Blackburn well, as I worked there for two years, and London, the war and the blitz, is something I have researched many times now, but always there is a gap in my knowledge. This is when I turn to books and the internet.

Brighter Days Ahead has a cover that suggests true friendship to me. How did that image come about and what were you hoping to convey (without spoiling the plot please!)?

My editor at Pan Macmillan works with a cover designer, and they engage models to depict their ideas. I am asked for my final approval. I love what they come up with, and, because my editor thoroughly knows my book from the work she has done on it, I trust her. She hasn’t let me down. To me, the girls on the cover are my Molly and my Flo, and I love how their friendship comes across.

If you could choose to be a character from Brighter Days Ahead, who would you be and why?

Flo. For one, I would not like to go through what Molly does, bless her, and two: Flo is how I would like others to see me. She is kind, and does what she can for others. She is dependable. She has empathy, and is capable of deep love and loyalty. She hasn’t a criteria for giving of herself, all are encompassed, from prostitutes, to a high-born girl, to a destitute East Ender, and, in a time when it was criminal – those with the same sex persuasion, all are people to her, who need love, understanding, and occasionally help.

If Brighter Days Ahead became a film, who would you like to play Molly and Flo and why would you choose them?  

Oh, I wish! For Flo, I would choose, Clair Foy. She would be perfect and has the look of my Flo. She has a way with her, that gives the viewer the sense of her being able to cope in all situations and yet with compassion, as my Flo does. I can’t wait to see her in Breathe.

And for Molly, Jessica Raine, from The Last Post and Call the Midwife. Jessica, can convey emotion without all the tears and tantrums. She can get into people’s heart. Molly would need these qualities to put over how she is wronged – not the wrongdoer.

Many of your books are set in the fairly recent past. What draws you to the eras you write about?

I have books that are set in the mid nineteenth century, which is where The Breckton Series begins, and in May 2018, I have a book out that begins in the early nineteenth century, but yes, quite a few are set during the twentieth century and the two world conflicts of that era.

I have a fascination for the struggles and challenges that war presented to the women of the day. They were called upon to step up and keep the home fires burning, which entailed taking on traditionally male roles, and yet, still had few rights that were afforded to men.

I’m fascinated too, by the active roles that women took on during both wars, which took them to the heart of the fighting. My book, Proud of You is about a girl in the second world war, who became a special agent behind enemy lines. A theme that runs through my novels, Time Passes Time and In Their Mother’s Footsteps. Whilst, All I Have to Give is about a female surgeon in the First World war, and is a prequel to In Their Mother’s Footsteps.

I love how this era takes you to many countries too, so my settings are varied throughout. You may find yourself in Poland, France, Ypres, or dodging bombs in London.

In all my books you will find that I take you right into the action in a gritty way that tells it as it is. I don’t relate events – the reader lives them. Quite hard to take at times, but then it was harder for my heroines, who did what they did so that following generations could live in peace.

It took a while for you to become conventionally published. What message would you give to other authors struggling to be recognised?

Love your art. Dedicate yourself to it. Work at becoming the best that you can be. Make your stories live on the page. There are rules to our craft – learn them and live by them, then, never give up. If you do this, then it will happen for you. But you must work towards making it happen.

Your writing has evolved over time. Could you tell us a bit about that please?

I think this is a natural process in any craft – you move with the times and the demand – readers want more war settings, and so I responded to that. This moved me away from my natural northern setting, but not entirely, as I always sneak a northern lass in there somewhere, and often as one of the heroines, as Flo, in Brighter Days Ahead.

You enjoy interaction with your readers. What advice would you give to new authors on developing a readership?

First and foremost – remember that nothing can bring you more readers, or more success, or that contract you so desire, than knowing your craft and putting your utmost into your books.

But, of course, in these days of social media, you can help yourself become known in other ways.

Create a page on Facebook. Make this space an interesting and welcoming place for your followers to be and make it visible, by including a link to it wherever you can – as a signature to your emails, in your books and especially on your webpage.

Don’t use your followers just to promote your work, or hard sell to them. Grow your community by being a true friend. I genuinely love every one of my followers of my Facebook page and I am always there for them, as they are for me. I love to share everyday life with them. I love too, to be able to make a difference if they are hurting, or to have their comfort if I am.

I think that a webpage, is essential, as this is how readers can find you. I love interacting through the email accessed through my webpage. I receive some lovely messages this way. And I send a monthly newsletter to subscribers.

Then there is: Twitter, and Goodreads, Google and any number of social media help, but be careful with your time management, as all social media can take up so much of your time that you can find that you have little to give to your writing.

When you’re not writing, what do you like to read?

I don’t read much at all these days – an awful admission for a writer, when the advice to us is to read all we can, but I don’t have the time. Also, I find it difficult. I find myself critiquing, instead of enjoying. My relaxation is in games, such as scrabble and word find, and I love crosswords and clue word, as well as solo card games. Oh, and I watch the tele. I like dramas. And I am thinking of joining audible, as I know I would enjoy listening to books, much more than reading them as I love listening to a narration on the radio.

If you had 15 words to persuade a reader that Brighter Days Ahead should be their next read, what would you say?

A gritty, emotional story set in WW2 driven by the power of love and friendship.

Thank you so much for your time in answering my questions, Mary.

Thank you, for having me. I have so enjoyed this interview. Much love to you and to all who follow your blog. Mary x

About Mary Wood

Mary wood

Born in Maidstone, Kent, in 1945, the thirteenth child of fifteen children, Mary’s family settled in Leicestershire after the war ended.

Mary married young and now, after 54 years of happy marriage, four children, 12 grandchildren and many great-grandchildren, Mary and her husband live in Blackpool during the summer and Spain during the winter – a place that Mary calls, ‘her writing retreat’.

After many jobs from cleaning to catering, all chosen to fit in with bringing up her family, and boost the family money-pot, Mary ended her 9 – 5 working days as a Probation Service Officer, a job that showed her another side to life, and which influences her writing, bringing a realism and grittiness to her novels

Mary first put pen to paper, in 1989, but it wasn’t until 2010 that she finally found some success by self-publishing on kindle.

Being spotted by an editor at Pan Macmillan in 2013, finally saw Mary reach her publishing dream.

When not writing, Mary enjoys family time, reading, eating out, and gardening. One of her favourite pastimes is interacting with her readers on her Facebook page.

You can also visit Mary’s website and find her on Twitter @Authormary.

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