The Fed-Up Cow by Peta Lemon

Fed up cow

My enormous thanks to the author Peta Lemon for sending me a copy of the children’s book The Fed-Up Cow in return for an honest review

Published by Quirky Picture Press, The Fed-Up Cow is available for purchase here.

The Fed-Up Cow

Fed up cow

Hilda is FED-UP with being a cow. Spending all day doing not much but moo. There has to be something more she can do.

So she decides to be a sheep… … then a pig … and even a chicken.

Is the grass any greener on the other side?

Join Hilda, the fed-up cow, on her voyage of self-discovery in this daft but timeless story, written in rhyme.

My Review of The Fed-Up Cow

Hilda is bored with being a cow so looks for another animal identity to transform her life.

The Fed-Up Cow is a fabulous children’s book. I loved it and am certain young children will adore it too because it is witty, engaging, colourful and there’s a jolly good story between its pages too.

There is a surprising amount to the plot for a picture book in this age range as Hilda experiments with being various animals, so that I think The Fed-Up Cow could be read several times over with young children without them getting bored.

There’s a smashing rhyme scheme and a wonderful rhythm to the writing so that reading this aloud with children would be a real pleasure. The language is simple enough for young children to begin the reading process independently with words like ‘now’ and ‘cow, and yet there is sufficient challenge in other vocabulary, like ‘chortles’, to extend children’s language as they enjoy the narrative.

I loved the plot and the humour and I thought the themes of identity, and being content with who we are, were handled so well. The idea of pretending and being someone else will appeal to all children, but enjoying what we have and who we are too is a valuable lesson to learn.

Alongside the text are superb illustrations from Maria Dasic Todoric that enhance both the story as well as the engagement and enjoyment. The illustrations add an extra educational element too as children could count the flies buzzing around the cows, or the number of pigs rolling in the dirt, for example.

I think The Fed-Up Cow has all the elements that make for a wonderful children’s book and I recommend it most highly.

About Peta Lemon

peta

Peta Lemon is the author of beautifully illustrated children’s picture books, published under the imprint Quirky Picture Press.

Her books are always funny, written in rhyme and illustrated by Maria Dasic Todoric.

The Fed-up Cow is available now from all major retailers. Timmy on the Toilet and the Bins of Cotteridge Down are coming later in 2018.

The Apocalypse: A Guest Post by Devon C Ford, Author of The Fall

the fall

As a blogger I get the chance to encounter a wide range of books and although I don’t have time to read them all, it doesn’t stop me being completely fascinated by them. One such book is The Fall by Devon C Ford. I’m thrilled that I have a stunning guest post from Devon C Ford today looking at the concept of an apocalypse.

Published by the innovative Vulpine Press, The Fall is available for purchase here.

The Fall

the fall

Cal’s ‘honeymoon’ didn’t start off quite how he’d planned. For starters, he was heading somewhere he didn’t actually want to go. And secondly, he was going alone and unmarried. He had no idea that his first visit to New York City would also land him in the middle of a domestic terror attack, forcing him to flee Manhattan in a desperate bid to survive.

This was no ordinary terror attack.

The Movement, in a misguided attempt to seize political control of the USA, unwittingly invited the destruction of their homeland, and as the bombs start to fall, the shock and loss of life reverberates around the world. Cal, along with a small group he met in NYC, desperately flees inland away from the targeted coastal cities, but chaos follows them around every corner.

The Apocalypse

A Guest Post by Devon C Ford

For starters, there are lots of different kinds of post-apocalyptic world we could find ourselves in. Imagine yourself a year down the line having to deal with a world without power, without running water, without transportation as there is no fuel left. Imagine yourself having to cope with the big three: food, shelter, water.

And not in that order, either.

Do you know how long you can go without water? Do you know how to purify rain water? Could you handle the extremes of seasonal weather changes where you live? How long will your food last, and do you know how to become self-sufficient? How much farm land does it take to feed one person? Are you even aware of the psychological effects of surviving in the first place?

And that’s just the first year in an apocalypse, without even considering what other people would do.

So why do so many people want to read about the end of the world as we know it? What is the obsession?

I think it’s a slightly sad side-effect of the society we have built, and make no mistake we have built it in every democratic country because we as the people have elected our leaders. People will always seek a release, an escape, a brain-break from the daily grind  where responsibility and paying bills and getting up before you want to only to go and work to make someone else more money than you get, is just the endless hamster-wheel cycle of life.

People want to switch that off, and they will do it in different ways. Exercise, alcohol, TV, books… all of these things are a way to push normal life aside for a moment.

Sometimes that switch off, that distraction, becomes a mild obsession. Many of us wish it could be exercise (he types, as he looks over his expanding midsection) but it worms its way into your thoughts so insidiously that you haven’t even noticed it’s there until you are hooked.

The apocalypse does that. You can’t say when or often how, but somewhere along the way you became hooked. It’s a believable world to escape to, where a person can reinvent themselves and be what they think they could be instead of what they have ended up as.

For many it remains as a mild obsession or an enjoyable escape, and allows them to imagine a world without phones and power, to see justice dispensed without the lengthy trial and predictably light sentence, to read about how people survive adversity.

Yes, I said that, people read about the apocalypse because of the feel-good-factor when the characters overcome adversity and survive. Despite the death and destruction and loss, a good Post-Apoc tale leaves the reader with that warm, fuzzy feeling that no Rom-Com could ever hope to match.

“But it’s just fiction…” I hear them cry.

Is it? Do any of us honestly believe that we as a species are so civilised and evolved that we couldn’t find ourselves in the midst of a global war? Or surviving in the aftermath of a nuclear Armageddon? Or picking up the pieces after a series of natural disasters or the next pandemic?

Take a look at history. We have killed billions of our own kind in our relatively short time on this rock. We’ve seen and perpetrated genocides, ethnic cleansings, slavery, forced labour, we’ve killed people through political uprisings, suffered famines, droughts, earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, floods, weather disasters… and all of this is before smallpox, Spanish flu, the Black Death, malaria, cholera, typhus, AIDS…

Wake up, peeps, we are probably due for something bad to go down.

Which brings me on to the people who already know this. ‘Prepping’ is nothing new on the far side of the pond to me, but it is still a relatively new concept over here. People are going on survival training weekends not just for fun, but so that they can provide for and protect their families when the SHTF. People, normal people with good jobs and no overt signs of lunacy, keep season-relevant BOB’s ready to go at all times. (A BOB, for those of you not up with the lingo, is a Bug-Out-Bag containing everything you need to survive for a few days.)

Talk of the apocalypse, in whatever form, isn’t as much a case of IF but WHEN.

But is it all doom and gloom? Well, that depends on your personal outlook on life. If you eat food that someone else has cooked every day and live your entire life through the inadequate medium of social media, then the apocalypse probably isn’t going to be your thing.

If you secretly yearn for the banks to disappear and for the need to survive to overtake the need to meet that next performance review on a strong footing, then you might not see it as such a bad thing.

The sad truth is, we don’t know how close we are every day to another war breaking out because our access to that information is as sanitised as it could be. We are spoon-fed the information that others deem us capable of handling, and we happily go on with our lives as though nothing is amiss on our happy planet.

But if we were aware, would we be as happy? Would we still be able to function in our daily lives? Could you imagine the conversations we would have?

“Have you seen the new Marvel film yet?”

“Forget that, did you see the display of military might by North Korea? Do you know where there are any shelters around here? And there was a report that an Ebola outbreak is making people reanimate and attack. Dude, it’s happening, I’m going off-grid!”

Those of you old enough to recall might remember the feeling that war between east and west was imminent for years. That heightened state of fear, public fear, has to have an effect on not just people, but society as a whole.

I’ve been asked if I prep, and I suppose I do in a way. No, I don’t have a stockpile of food and tools, because if an apocalypse of any form did happen I live in an area that is too populated to stay in. I don’t have a rural stronghold I could dig into like the proverbial Alabama tick, I don’t have six months of canned goods in my basement for the main reason that I don’t have a basement, so no, I’m no prepper.

But that’s not to say I don’t have a plan…

(Oh my goodness Devon. What a guest post! I’m looking at the store cupboard right now and thinking…)

About Devon C Ford

devon

Devon C Ford is from the UK and lives in the Midlands. His career in public services started in his teens and has provided a wealth of experiences, both good and some very bad, which form the basis of the book ideas that cause regular insomnia. His debut series After it Happened became a bestseller.

His latest book The Fall is part of a multi-author series and is available to buy now on Amazon.

You can find more about Devon C Ford on Facebook, on his website and by following him on Twitter @DevonFordAuthor.

Giveaway: The Lost Girl by Carol Drinkwater

the lost girl

If you haven’t yet discovered Carol Drinkwater’s wonderful writing, boy do I have a treat for you today.

I have previously reviewed The Forgotten Summer by Carol Drinkwater here on the blog and The Lost Girl here. I was also thrilled to be able to interview Carol about The Lost Girl in a post you can read here.

Today I’m so excited that Carol has allowed me to give away a signed paperback copy of The Lost Girl and you can enter the giveaway at the bottom of this blog post.

The Lost Girl is published by Michael Joseph, an imprint of Penguin, and is available for purchase via the links here. You can also get a taste of what a wonderful book this is by reading an extract from the publishers here.

The Lost Girl

the lost girl

Her daughter disappeared four years ago. . .

Since her daughter went missing four years earlier, celebrated photographer Kurtiz Ross has been a woman alone. Her only companion her camera. Since Lizzie disappeared, she has blamed and isolated herself, given up hope. Until, out of the blue, an unexpected sighting of Lizzie is made in Paris.

Could this lead to the reconciliation she has dreamed of?

Within hours of Kurtiz arriving in Paris, the City of Light is plunged into a night of hell when a series of terrorist attacks bring the city to a standstill. Amid the fear and chaos, a hand reaches out. A sympathetic stranger in a café offers to help Kurtiz find her daughter.

A stranger’s guiding light

Neither knows what this harrowing night will deliver, but the other woman’s kindness – and her stories of her own love and loss in post-war Provence – shine light into the shadows, restoring hope, bringing the unexpected. Out of darkness and despair, new life rises. New beginnings unfold.

Dare she believe in a miracle?

Set during a time of bloodshed and chaos in one of the most beautiful cities on earth and along the warm fragrant shores of the Mediterranean, Kurtiz discovers that miracles really can happen . . .

About Carol Drinkwater

Carol Drinkwater c Michel Noll

Carol Drinkwater is a multi-award-winning actress who is best known for her portrayal of Helen Herriot in the BBC television series All Creatures Great and Small. She is also the author of over twenty books, both fiction and non-fiction. Her quartet of memoirs set on her olive farm in the south of France have sold over a million copies worldwide and her solo journey round the Mediterranean in search of the Olive tree’s mythical secrets inspired a five-part documentary film series, The Olive Route.

You can follow Carol on Twitter and visit her website.

The Lost Girl Giveaway

the lost girl

For your change to win a signed paperback copy of The Lost Girl by Carol Drinkwater click here. Open internationally. The giveaway ends at UK midnight on Sunday 25th March 2018.

Staying in with Aiki Flinthart

shadows Wake

I’ve been meeting all kinds of new authors as I stay in with them to discuss books and they bring a wide range of experience and objects with them. Having stayed in with Aiki Flinthart I’m beginning to wonder if I ought to check their bags before I let them in for the evening!

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 Aiki Flinthart

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Aiki. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me.

Hey, Linda, no worries. (Aussie for ‘thanks.’) Glad to be here. Have my cup of tea ready. Let’s go.

(An author who likes tea is my kind of guest!)

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

shadows Wake

That’s a tough one, strangely enough. I’ve got two separate trilogies coming out this year and I love both of them. But for today we’ll go with Shadows Wake. Because who doesn’t love a girl who can throw knives and pick locks? It’s the first in a trilogy about Rowan Gilmore and the beginning of a series called the Ruadhan Sidhe novels, all set in the same universe.

(Ooo. You’ll have to return another time to tell us about your other trilogy too.)

What can we expect from an evening in with Shadows Wake?

An evening in with Shadows Wake ought to have your heart beating a little faster and you reaching for the phone to order takeaway, rather than waste time cooking. Well, that’s the plan, anyway. If I’ve done my job right. It’s an action/urban fantasy story for Young Adult and New Adult readers. Set in tropical Cairns, Queensland, Australia – for those who’d like to travel but haven’t the time. Reading’s the next best thing.

(I’ve been to Cairns so I’d love to return there through reading – not least as it rained quite a lot of the time I was there!)

Shadows Wake follows Rowan Gilmore, an eighteen year old who – with her mother – has been running from an unknown enemy since she was four. Running and hiding her extraordinary strength, speed, and precognitive abilities. But all without knowing why she’s hiding or who from.

Now, she’s had enough and she’s about to take a stand. But she has a darkness within that, if released, will kill everyone she cares about – and more.

And, in case you’re wondering, it’s not vampire, shape-shifter, or zombie story.

(Well I did wonder. I think Shadows Wake sounds intriguing and exciting.)

What else have you brought along and why?

knives

I’ve brought along a photo of my own (very scarred and well-used) throwing knives. I’m a bit of an action junkie so I tend to try whatever my characters can do. Consequently, although I had already trained for many years as a martial artist and swordswoman, I now also do archery and knife-throwing.

(Good grief! I’m glad I didn’t know all that before I let you in…)

Aiki

The second photo is me using my horsebow – while dressed as a pirate. It was Talk Like a Pirate Day. Sept 17th. What can I say? I’m a sucker for pirates?

Anyway, knife-throwing and archery are both lovely, Zen things to do after work. You have to clear your mind and repeat the exact motions each time or the knife hits the board wrong and it’s very loud. I’m sure the neighbours hate it when I miss. And no, you can’t pick up a random kitchen knife and throw it a random distance and expect to hit the target with anything pointy. Rowan’s been training since she was six, so she’s a lot better than me.

But, although Rowan gets to do lots of kicking-butt in this story, I actually wanted to write an Urban fantasy that wasn’t as dark and gritty as the current trend for them seems to be. So while there’s darkness in Rowan, she’s a decent person just trying to do her best to defeat her monsters – external and internal. Isn’t that what most of us are doing?

Will she succeed in mastering those monsters, though? Well, that would be spoilers, so you’ll have to find that out yourself.

(I will indeed Aiki. I can’t wait to read Shadows Wake now and it has nothing to do with the fact you’re really quite scary!)

Thanks so much for staying in with me to introduce Shadows Wake, Aiki. I’ve really enjoyed finding out about it. 

Have a good night in!

I will if you make sure you take those knives when you go!

Shadows Wake

shadows Wake

Rowan Gilmore and her mother, Anna, have spent most of Rowan’s life running, hiding Rowan’s speed, strength and precognitive powers—but without knowing why she’s different, why they have to hide, or who from.

And Rowan’s sick of running scared. But she has to continue, because she also harbours a dark power that emerges only when she’s afraid or in danger.

A power that kills indiscriminately.

When she moves to Australia, a street fight reveals Rowan’s abilities to a stranger, Fynn, and she must decide whether to run again or stay and risk discovery by her pursuers.  Her mother has found happiness with a new partner and Rowan is reluctant to wreck it.  So, after foiling another kidnap attempt, Rowan makes her decision. The time has come to stand her ground.

And Fynn and his family become allies, with promises to help fight her unknown enemy – and to reveal the truth behind her extraordinary abilities.

But what’s his agenda? Can he be trusted? And who are the Mors Ferrum operatives Fynn says are chasing Rowan? What do they want? What is the ocair thing they keep asking about?

Most of all, what happens if the darkness lurking in her mind wakes and comes out to play?

In order to stand against the Mors Ferrum in the final battle, Rowan must learn to trust someone for the first time in her life. And let him help her control the darkness within.

Released on 25th March 2018, Shadow’s Wake is available for preorder here.

About Aiki Flinthart

Aiki 1

Aiki Flinthart has always written, but has only recently taken it further than just a hobby. Her 80AD YA portal fantasy series (2012) was so successful she has spent the last few years learning how to write better so as to do justice to the myriad of stories in her head. She’s recently had a story shortlisted in the USA Writers of the Future competition (2017), and in the Australian Aurealis Speculative Fiction Awards (Science fiction) 2018. Her Shadows Trilogy is coming out in 2018, along with the Kalima Chronicles science fiction trilogy in 2018/2019. She has also edited a short story anthology, Return, of speculative fiction works.

What her heroines do, she does – knife throwing, archery, swordfighting, martial arts. Write what you know, and all that.

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

The Dog Ate My Homework: and other poems for children by Aaron James

The Dog Ate My Homework

I’ve been lucky to feature several children’s books recently and am delighted to be reviewing The Dog Ate My Homework: and other poems for children by Aaron James today. Getting children engaged in reading is so important in my view.

The Dog Ate My Homework: and other poems for children is available for purchase here.

The Dog Ate My Homework: and other poems for children

The Dog Ate My Homework

The Dog Ate My Homework by Aaron James is a collection of short poems that will capture your imagination. Filled with fun stories that make you think, laugh and tell your friends. Do you remember your first day at school? Or when you tried to convince your teacher you actually done your homework? Or the excitement you felt when you bought your new pair of trainers? In The Dog Ate My Homework you will get a chance to read all these stories and many more!

My Review of The Dog Ate My Homework:

and other poems for children

The Dog Ate My Homework contains five school themed poems for children.

I enjoyed this collection of school based poems because I think it covers themes that many children might feel anxious about in a reassuring and entertaining manner. The poems are about the first day at school (and I’d have liked that one first in the anthology as it marks the beginning of school life), having new trainers, school dinners, sports day and homework so that familiar aspects of school life can be discussed with children in a safe and positive way. Similarly, a range of emotions is presented from excitement to fear, affording a discussion with children without threat.

I also really liked the fact that the persona behind the poems is a boy as it can be difficult to engage boys in reading and with poetry in particular.

The language and rhyme schemes are simple enough for children to read the poems independently and because the poems are so well illustrated I think this would be a smashing collection to promote the enjoyment of reading. There’s enough substance for each poem to act as a story without a reluctant reader becoming bogged down.

The Dog Ate My Homework is a collection I really recommend.

About Aaron James

Born and raised in Tottenham, North London and today living in Bromley, South London with his wife, Aaron James works as a poet and spoken word artist. The Dog Ate My Homework is his first children’s poetry book.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

tour poster

On Writing – And Music: A Guest post by Rachel Amphlett, Author of Call to Arms

Call to Arms Cover LARGE EBOOK

Lovely Rachel Amphlett, author of Call to Arms, has been on Linda’s Book Bag a couple of times, revealing 5 things about herself here when Assassins Hunted was released and writing about living locations here to celebrate Scared to Death, so this time I thought I’d set her a challenge and ask how her music has influenced her writing. Luckily she accepted the challenge!

Call to Arms is part of Rachel Amphlett’s Kay Hunter series and is available for purchase here.

Call to Arms

Call to Arms Cover LARGE EBOOK

Loyalty has a price.

Kay Hunter has survived a vicious attack at the hands of one of the country’s most evil serial killers.

Returning to work after an enforced absence to recover, she discovers she wasn’t the only victim of that investigation. DI Devon Sharp remains suspended from duties, and the team is in turmoil.

Determined to prove herself once more and clear his name, Kay undertakes to solve a cold case that links Sharp to his accuser.

But as she gets closer to the truth, she realises her enquiries could do more harm than good.

Torn between protecting her mentor and finding out the truth, the consequences of Kay’s enquiries will reach far beyond her new role…

On Writing – And Music

A Guest Post by Rachel Amphlett

One of the hardest things I’ve had to accept as a writer is that I can no longer listen to my favourite music while I’m working.

My love for music developed hand in hand with my love for writing – after nagging my parents for a good 18 months about wanting to learn how to play the guitar, my grandfather gave in and bought me a little acoustic guitar for my eighth birthday and I was packed off to lessons. Unfortunately, my parents had me learning classical guitar, when all I wanted to do was be like Chrissie Hynde!

At the same time, I was inhaling books at the rate of knots and starting to write my own stories – not that any of them from that time will ever see the light of day.

I left school at 16, determined to give it a shot at playing guitar in bands after teachers and careers advisors alike scoffed at my ideas of wanting to work in a recording studio, and so that’s what my focus became for the next 10 years.

I worked hard, grabbing any job I could to save up the money for a guitar, amplifier and then proper lessons, often working double shifts in hotel kitchens washing up or getting up at five o’clock in the morning to walk to an industrial estate a couple of miles from where I lived to make sandwiches for construction workers all morning – I’d do anything I could to make my creative dreams come true.

It paid off – by the time I was 23, I beat 450 other female lead guitarists to an audition at Air Studios in London for a new all-girl rock/pop band that was being put together by a record label.

I’m a shade under six feet tall though, and when I turned up at the audition they took one look at me and told me I wouldn’t suit the photo line-up they had in mind.

Me and the music industry had a falling out shortly afterwards 😉

Fast-forward a decade or so, and I’m living in Australia and desperate for something creative to do. I tried putting together a couple of covers bands here, but honestly – it’s like herding cats, and I got frustrated very quickly.

In the meantime, I was starting to jot down story ideas again and once I started, I couldn’t stop. A short creative writing course soon followed, and then I began to write my debut novel, White Gold.

And that’s how my writing career began.

white-gold

The thing is, if I’m exercising or driving I LOVE to have music to listen to – I have very eclectic tastes, although I do tend to hark back to rock, metal and blues given half a chance, but I just can’t write with that sort of music playing. I find it too distracting. Having that background in music, I’d spend all my time trying to work out riffs and chords instead of putting pen to paper (or fingers to keyboard!) or playing air guitar J

However, sometimes music CAN work well.

Sometimes a particular piece of music will inspire a scene – I’ll have to stop, switch off the music and start writing the scene before I lose the ‘feeling’ that the music inspires.

I also find that certain playlists on Spotify can help me get into a “writing zone” these days – tracks that are relaxing, with no words or definitive beat are the best ones for me, because again I’m not distracted by what the musician is doing.

Of course, once the word count is achieved for the day and my mind turns to the business and marketing side of things, the volume gets cranked up and I can rock along to all my favourite tracks once more!

And the guitar playing? Yes, I still miss it and would love to be part of a rock covers band again one day.

Watch this space 😉

Oh we will, Rachel, we will! And I think we ALL wanted to be like Chrissie Hynde!

About Rachel Amphlett

rachel 2016-2141.jpg

Rachel Amphlett is the bestselling author of the Dan Taylor espionage novels and the new Detective Kay Hunter crime thriller series, as well as a number of standalone crime thrillers.

Originally from the UK and currently based in Brisbane, Australia, Rachel’s novels appeal to a worldwide audience, and have been compared to Robert Ludlum, Lee Child and Michael Crichton.

She is a member of International Thriller Writers and the Crime Writers Association, with the Italian foreign rights for her debut novel, White Gold, being sold to Fanucci Editore’s TIMECrime imprint in 2014.

An advocate for knowledge within the publishing industry, Rachel is always happy to share her experiences to a wider audience through her blogging and speaking engagements.

You can visit Rachel’s website, find her on Facebook and follow her on Twitter @RachelAmphlett.

Staying in with T. Stedman

Migraine

I’ve been lucky to host an eclectic array of authors in this Linda’s Book Bag ‘Staying in with…’ feature and I never know what they are going to bring along, especially if they write in more than one genre. Today I’m excited to know which of her books T Stedman has brought to share with me.

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 T Stedman

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag. 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?

I have brought along My Migraine Story because it is my first Non-Fiction project which grew out of my blog www.migrainewise.com I’m a chronic migraineur myself and It’s the place where I record my own clinical trials; what worked and what didn’t.

cover

(My goodness. I think there will be many blog readers who could do with My Migraine Story, me included!)

What can we expect from an evening in with My Migraine Story?

An evening with My Migraine Story will tell you everything you need to know to battle your migraines and the anxiety and depression that accompanies it. It will help you understand more about your incredible excitable brain, and how to work with it to free the hidden creative you.

(Sounds perfect!)

Writing it has enabled me to make some wonderful friends with fellow sufferers, some have given me some wonderful feedback  –

One said: “This book also gives recipe tips and tells of how even supplements, household cleaning products and toiletries can be triggers, and gives examples of safe alternatives… Most of all, she gives even the most extreme sufferer hope that there is light at the end of tunnel – & NOT the flashing zigzag kind!”

Another: “There is definitely an important lesson to be learned here about taking matters into one’s own hands in order to enjoy better health and a more fulfilling life. Highly recommended to any migraineur who wants to take back control of their life.”

And lastly: “I highly recommend this book to the chronic migraine and episodic migraine patient. It has given me hope and it reiterates a lot of the ways I am already approaching my healing. Tracy has such a loving and caring and down-to-earth tone that it really feels like I am listening to an old trusted friend. I commend her for taking her health into her own hands because that isn’t always the easiest thing to do. She is the definition of advocating for yourself when it comes to migraine, mental health, and overall well-being.”

I usually write in the Dark Romance genre: www.tstedman.com but writing this book and giving something back has been extremely rewarding.

(I imagine it has. I have never forgotten the first migraine I ever had when I really thought I was going blind because all I could see was a waterfall of zig-zag black and white lines. I’m sure sufferers will be clamouring to read My Migraine Story.)

What else have you brought along and why?

For our evening in I’ve brought along a reminder “Each migraineur is an individual and should be treated as a whole person—that is for pain, as well as the healing of the mind and the body.”

We have to start living and for that we have to come out of the dark and into the light …

What a smashing sentiment. Thanks so much for staying in with me and bringing along a book that I’m sure will be useful to so many.

My Migraine Story

Migraine

More than a list of common triggers and remedies, My Migraine Story, is an emotionally candid personal account, learned through trial and error and bitter experience.

***
Tracy is a life-long migraine sufferer. By the time she was forty-five years old she was out of action for half of every month. She’d been made redundant, her marriage had broken down and she’d become suicidal.

Something needed to be done.

With only her love of the outdoors, health and wellbeing, she set out on a journey to chase her dream of being a writer.

But first she must fight her curse.

She started by examining herself closely – what she did, what she ate and how she felt, and recorded it all.

Looking closely at diet, supplements, hormones, cosmetics and mental wellbeing, no stone is left unturned. Tracy developed a positive mental attitude to migraine and really started to live.

This is a concise and detailed log of how she did it.

“The great thing is, I’m no longer in a prison. I’m only limited by my imagination …”

My Migraine Story is available for purchase here.

About T Stedman

T Stedman

T Stedman was born and brought up in Kent with her two younger brothers. She loved to dance, ride ponies and have her head stuck in a good book.

From a wild youth, she had many different jobs, from bar work to working for the NHS. And during that time spent long spells in Malta (the birth place of her paternal Grandmother) in a whirlwind of parties, clubs and music.

Writing from an early age was always a private thing; mainly poetry and short stories. Until the idea for the Atlantean race came to her and wouldn’t go away.

A strong thread throughout her writing is music, art and youth culture. Her stories are dark with flawed characters and are always sizzling hot.

T Stedman is author of the 21st Century Sirens Series, Diablo, and her blog – migrainewise. She still lives in Kent with her two grown kids, dogs and horse.

You can follow T Stedman on Twitter @AuthorTStedman and visit her website. You’ll also find her on Facebook.

An Extract from The Zero and the One by Ryan Ruby

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It gives me very great pleasure to be part of the launch celebrations for The Zero and the One by Ryan Ruby. I have a brilliant extract to share with you that has made me even more excited to read the book.

Published by Legend Press, The Zero and the One is available for purchase here.

The Zero and the One

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A bookish scholarship student, Owen Whiting has high hopes of Oxford, only to find himself immediately out of place. Then he meets Zachary Foedern from New York. Rich and charismatic, Zach takes Owen under his wing, introducing him to a world Owen has only ever read about.

From Oxford to the seedy underbelly of Berlin, they dare each other to transgress the boundaries of convention and morality, until Zach proposes the greatest transgression of all: a suicide pact. But when Zach’s plans go horribly awry, Owen is left to pick up the pieces and navigate the boundaries between illusion and reality to preserve a hold on his once bright future.

An Extract from The Zero and the One

REPETITION.— If something happens once, it may as well have never happened at all. Unfortunately, nothing ever happens only once. Everything is repeated, even nothing.

A British Airways jet, high above the coast of New England. The captain has turned off the fasten seatbelt sign, but mine remains strapped tightly across my waist. My fingers clutch the armrests, knuckles white. The air hostess evens her trolley with our row and bestows a sympathetic elevation of her eyebrows on me as she clears minibottles, plastic cups, crumpled napkins off my tray table. The other passengers regard me with caution. When I stumbled back from the toilet, I found that the young mother in my row had exchanged places with her tow-headed, round-faced toddler, who now stares obliviously at the white fields outside the window, in order to provide him with a buffer zone in case I were to do something erratic. Perhaps I’d been mumbling to myself again: a dangerous perhaps.

I tried to apologise to her, to explain that I rarely drink so much, it’s only on planes that… but no luck. She doesn’t speak English.

It’s true, flying terrifies me. I can count the number of times I’ve done it on one hand. Twice with my parents. Once with school. Most recently, to Berlin with Zach during the Easter holiday. None of which has remotely prepared me to endure this seven-hour trans-Atlantic torture. Nothing — not a book or an inflight movie or even three minibottles of whisky — helps me to relax. The least bit of turbulence, every unexpected dip in altitude, signals The Beginning of a Crash.

On the flight to Berlin, Zach noticed my anxiety and argued that this was precisely what was so interesting about air travel. It was to be regarded, he said, as an exercise in amor fati. As soon as you stepped through the doors, you were forced to resign yourself to the possibility that your conveyance will turn into your coffin. Your fate was no longer in your hands, no longer under your control. In fact life was always like this, but only in special circumstances were we made aware of it. If to philosophize was to prepare for death he could think of no better place to practice philosophy than on an airplane.

His words were no comfort to me then. They’re even less of one now. The last thing I want to think about are preparations for death. And coffins. How does one transport a body across the ocean? On a ship? Down in the hold with the rest of the luggage? Maybe on every flight there’s a coffin going somewhere. At this very moment my t shirts and toiletries could be nestling up with the dead.

When it is time, the air hostess helps me firmly lock my tray table and return my seat to its upright position.

We’re beginning our final descent into New York, she explains.

No Miss, I am tempted to reply. Not our final descent.

The customs officer is a candle stub of a man with a damp, fleshy face that seems to have melted from the dark hairline of his crew cut into the wide, unbuttoned collar of his uniform. He flips through every page of my mostly blank passport, looks from me to my photo and back again. The photo, I remember, was taken at a booth in the Galleries, three or four years ago, in the thick of my rather dubious battle with puberty, right after one of those visits to the hairdresser, which, because I no longer live with my parents, I am no longer obliged to make. I neutralise my expression and re- move my glasses, as I had been instructed to do then, but it is only when my left eye, which has astigmatism, wanders toward my nose that the resemblance finally becomes clear to him. He asks me to confirm the information I had written on my declaration form.

Student. One week. 232 West 113th Street. Business or pleasure?

Funeral.

The stamp falls with a dull, bureaucratic thump: Welcome to the United States.

I know what New York looks like from the establishing shots of countless films and television shows. But there the city is only as large as the screen you watch it on. A safe size. Contained. Manageable. Odourless. Two-dimensional. With clearly marked exit signs, if you’re watching at the cinema. With a volume dial and an off button, if you’re watching from the comfort of your living room.

These taxi windows offer no such protection. On the motorway, my driver slices through traffic, steering with one hand on the indicator and the other on the horn. When a removal van tries to pass us, he closes the distance at the last moment. The driver leans out the window of the van, his face red, spit flying from his mouth as he tries to shout over the siren of the ambulance behind us. Not one to allow an insult to go unanswered, my driver rolls down the passenger-side window, letting in the foul breath of late afternoon. I probably shouldn’t have pushed my luck by getting off the plane.

About Ryan Ruby

Ryan Ruby

Ryan Ruby was born in Los Angeles in 1983. He has written for The Baffler, Conjunctions, Lapham’s Quarterly, n+1, and the Paris Review Daily among other publications, and has translated two novellas from the French for Readux Books. He lives in Berlin.

You can visit Ryan’s website for more information.

There’s also more with these other bloggers:

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Discussing The Teacher’s Secret with Suzanne Leal

The Teacher's Secret

It gives me great pleasure to belong to Legend 100 team of bloggers for Legend Press. Today I’m delighted to be part of their celebrations of The Teacher’s Secret by Suzanne Leal. Suzanne has kindly agrees to stay in with me and tell me about The Teacher’s Secret.

The Teacher’s Secret is available for purchase here.

The Teacher’s Secret

The Teacher's Secret

A small town can be a refuge, but while its secrets are held, it’s hard to know who to trust and what to believe.

The Teacher’s Secret is a tender and compelling story of scandal, rumour and dislocation, and the search for grace and dignity in the midst of dishonour and humiliation.

Only one person knows the truth…

Staying in with Suzanne Leal

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag Suzanne. Which of your books have you brought along to share with me and why have you chosen it?

I’ve brought along my novel, The Teacher’s Secretwhich explores the web of relationships in and around a small school, its dramas, crises and victories.  Readers will, I hope, find themselves immersed in the world of the small coastal community of Brindle and the people who live there.

Having been a teacher in a previous life, The Teacher’s Secret sounds just my kind of read. Tell me, what can we expect from an evening in with The Teacher’s Secret?

A tale of scandal, rumour and dislocation, The Teacher’s Secret is a gripping read about schoolyard machinations in a small town by the sea.

Terry Pritchard is a much-loved teacher at Brindle Public School – but when the new principal starts to question his motives, it becomes clear that Terry is also a man with something to hide.

The Teacher’s Secret is Terry’s story.  It is also the story of Nina, newly single and struggling to teach a hostile class; of Rebecca, who won’t return home but can’t say why; and of Sid, the school caretaker, who, in his gentle way, takes care after everyone.

Above all, it is a story of community and how, in the midst of dishonour and humiliation, grace and dignity might still be found.

(I love the sound of those characters.) 

What else have you brought along and why? 

I have brought my copy of A Boy in Winter by the UK writer, Rachel Seiffert, who is also my friend.  The story Rachel tells in A Boy in Winter is one of bravery in a time of fear and her writing, as always, is precise, spare and beautiful.  Rachel introduced me to her literary agent, Toby Eady, who represented me for my first novel, Border Streetand who died at the end of last year.  I will always be grateful to Toby for finding me a place in the world of writing and publishing and to his wife, Xinran, for her kindness and generosity.

 What a wonderful tribute to Toby. Thanks so much Suzanne.

About Suzanne Leal

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Suzanne Leal is a lawyer experienced in child protection, criminal law and refugee law. A former legal commentator on ABC Radio, Suzanne is a regular interviewer at Sydney Writers’ Festival and other literary functions. She is the senior judge for the 2017 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards. The Teacher’s Secret is her first novel published in the UK. Suzanne lives in Sydney with her husband, David, and her four children, Alex, Dominic, Xavier and Miranda.

You can visit Suzanne’s website, follow her on Twitter @suzanne_leal or find her on Facebook.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

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Staying in with K.T. Lee

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It’s always wonderful to discover a new author and a new series to enjoy so I am delighted to welcome K.T.Lee to Linda’s Book Bag today to stay in with me.

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 K.T.Lee

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, K.T. 

Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me.

Thanks so much for having me – it’s great to be here.

My pleasure. So, tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

I’ve brought along Calculated Deception. I chose Calculated Deception because it is the first full-length novel in The Calculated Series, my new series featuring women in STEM teaming up with government agents to fight crime.

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Calculated Deception features Dr. Ree Ryland, an engineering professor who loves her job and plays by the rules. However, when Agent Parker Landon and his FBI team discover that someone at the university has been procuring military-grade hardware by disguising it as test equipment, all evidence points to Ree. After the FBI intercepts a shipment that puts Ree in the clear, Parker is forced to tell her that she’s being used as a pawn by an unseen enemy. And now she’s in that enemy’s crosshairs. Ree turns down the protective detail offered by the FBI and insists on using her inside knowledge to help with the investigation. Parker is leery of bringing a civilian on to the team, but he’s surprised at how much fun he has working with Ree, even as he tries to keep her out of harm’s way. Parker, Ree and the FBI team find increasingly worrying evidence that someone is quietly acquiring everything they need to cause destruction on a massive scale. They must uncover the motive and identity of the killer hiding among Ree’s friends and colleagues before it’s too late.

(This sounds really exciting.)

What can we expect from an evening in with Calculated Deception?

Calculated Deception is a fun, page-turning suspense. You’ll see elements from spy thrillers with the focus on characters and small community feel of a cozy mystery. There is a little sweet romance as well.

My goal as a writer is to create a unputdownable book with a bit of fun and banter between the characters along the way. If I’ve made you laugh or kept you up too late reading, I’ve done my job!

(That sounds like the perfect combination!)

I thought I’d share a few quotes from book reviews on Goodreads and Amazon:

  • “The book is well written, keeping the reader interested till the end. A thriller, with a smart scientist protagonist, and a romance makes this an excellent read.” – Goodreads reviewer
  • “I loved this book from the beginning just for the title and cover alone. There is something empowering about a female main character that is intelligent, a College Professor, and an Engineer…This story was captivating and kept you interested throughout the book. It was a good mix of thriller, suspense, possible international terrorism, and a little romance. I loved it and will be reading the next one in the series soon!” – Shannon Waugh, Book Reviewer

(You must be thrilled with those responses K.T.)

What else have you brought along and why? 

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I’ve brought along coffee and a few pieces of dark chocolate. Ree’s love of chocolate and coffee was particularly easy for me to imagine and put on the page. I share Ree’s habit of keeping “break in case of emergency” chocolate in my kitchen!

(That made me laugh so much as my husband and I always keep a bar of emergency chilli chocolate in the kitchen cupboard too!)

Like many writers (and engineers), I also love coffee. I have a collection of my favorite mugs displayed on a rack on the wall, from those with family photos to souvenir mugs from some of my favorite places. I’m currently drinking coffee out of my Rosie the Riveter mug – this one is also my go-to when I am editing my books. There is something about the iconic image with “We Can Do It!” written across the top that always gives me that extra boost.

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(Great tip there for other writers K.T – have an inspirational mug to help those words flow!)

Thanks so much for staying in with me to tell me all about Calculated Deception K.T. I think it must be time to reach for a mug, settle down with the book and crack open the emergency chocolate!

Calculated Deception

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Dr. Ree Ryland is an engineering professor who loves her job and plays by the rules. Her life is reassuringly predictable – until an enemy hiding in plain sight decides her squeaky-clean reputation is the perfect cover to commit a crime.

When Agent Parker Landon and his FBI team discover that someone at the university has been procuring military-grade hardware by disguising it as test equipment, all evidence points to Ree. After the FBI intercepts a shipment that puts Ree in the clear, Parker is forced to tell her that she’s being used as a pawn by an unseen enemy. And now she’s in that enemy’s crosshairs. Ree turns down the protective detail offered by the FBI and insists on using her inside knowledge to help with the investigation. Parker is leery of bringing a civilian on to the team, but he’s surprised at how much fun he has working with Ree, even as he tries to keep her out of harm’s way.

Parker, Ree and the FBI team find increasingly worrying evidence that someone is quietly acquiring everything they need to cause destruction on a massive scale. Now, they must uncover the motive and identity of the killer hiding among Ree’s friends and colleagues before it’s too late.

Calculated Deception is Book 1 in The Calculated Series. All books in The Calculated Series may be enjoyed as standalone novels or as a series.

Published by Vertical Line, Calculated Deception is available for purchase here.

About K.T.Lee

KT

K.T. Lee is a writer, mom and engineer who grew up on a steady diet of books from a wide variety of genres. When K.T. began to write the kind of books she wanted to read, she mixed clever women and the sciences with elements from thrillers (and a dash of romance) to create The Calculated Series.

You can find out more about K.T.’s books at her website or find her talking about writing, science, and cute animals on Instagram and Facebook. You can follow K.T.Lee on Twitter @KTLeeWrites.