The Lost Bookshop by Evie Woods

On a quiet street in Dublin, a lost bookshop is waiting to be found…

For too long, Opaline, Martha and Henry have been the side characters in their own lives.

But when a vanishing bookshop casts its spell, these three unsuspecting strangers will discover that their own stories are every bit as extraordinary as the ones found in the pages of their beloved books. And by unlocking the secrets of the shelves, they find themselves transported to a world of wonder… where nothing is as it seems.

My Review

I love this book so much. It’s gone straight to the top of my favourite books of the year – maybe even the decade. I kept thinking it reminded me of the books of another author, but it was only towards the end that I remembered who that was – Menna Van Praag.

Magical realism is one of my favourite genres, though occasionally it disappoints, because there are books which fall too much into the fantasy genre. The Lost Bookshop, however, is perfect.

The story is told in two timelines with three different narrators. It begins in 1921, after the 1st World War, and our narrator is Opaline Carlisle. Her much older brother Lyndon wants to marry her off, but she escapes to Paris and finds a job in a bookshop. I loved Opaline so much that on one occasion, when her story was particularly harrowing, I jumped two chapters to find out what happened to her. Then of course I went back to whoever should have come next.

In the present, we alternate between Irish girl Martha and English scholar Henry. Martha has just escaped an abusive marriage to Shane and found a job as housekeeper to the very elderly actress, Madame Bowden. Her job comes with a basement flat. Henry is writing a thesis on a lost bookshop, which he has stumbled upon, but then it appears to have vanished. He knows it was somewhere by the house where Martha now lives. Or is it the house?

As we jump back and forth from Opaline to Martha and Henry, and back again, we begin to see the connections. And we start to ask whether it’s all just coincidence or was it somehow meant to be. I just can’t enthuse enough about this book. I never want to erase its beauty from my memory. I cried (in a good way) so many times – it’s breathtaking, mystical, magical and bewitching – I’m running out of words to describe it. Oh yes – extraordinary.

About the Author

Evie Woods is the pseudonym of Evie Gaughan, bestselling author of The Story Collector, The Heirloom and The Mysterious Bakery On Rue De Paris. Living on the West Coast of Ireland, Evie escapes the inclement weather by writing her stories in a converted attic, where she dreams of underfloor heating. Her books tread the intriguing line between the everyday and the otherworldly, revealing the magic that exists in our ordinary lives.

All Grown Up By Catherine Evans Guest Post

Neveah (pronounced Ner-vay) is fifteen. A school- kid. With a secret life. She’s a digital freelancer, and is having an affair with her biggest client, Giles.

Giles is married. He thinks Neveah is twenty-two. She’ll do just about anything to stop him from finding out her true age. But secrets have a way of spilling out. With devastating consequences.

But this is not just Neveah’s story. It tells of those connected to her too, including Billy whose life spins into turmoil when he makes some bad decisions. Each brilliantly executed character has their own secret, and nobody is spared in Catherine Evans’ exploration of the murkiness of contemporary sex.

All Grown Up examines the early sexualisation of young girls and toxic masculinity amongst boys, confronting the reader with important questions about consent and underage sex. Why do some young girls become sexually active sooner than is good for them? If a man has sex with a girl who lies about her age, is he still culpable? If society is at fault for teaching both girls and boys a warped view of sex, who is really to blame when it goes wrong?

All Grown Up is a brave, unflinching and gripping work from an exciting new voice in fiction.

Guest PostIntroduction to All Grown Up
All Grown up is my second novel. It’s about a neglected fifteen-year-old schoolgirl who moonlights as a digital freelancer. She’s very bright and resourceful, and has big plans for herself. She wants to go to university, and she knows she won’t get any help from her parents, so she has come up with her own solution. She embarks on an affair with her client, Giles, who is married. He believes that she’s an independent woman of twenty-two.

“When a man has sex with an underage girl, even if she has lied about her age, is he still culpable?”

“The entire story was inspired by a strikingly poised schoolgirl I saw on a London bus. She was surrounded by her schoolmates, but her dignity and extreme self-possession marked her out, and I found myself thinking about her long after the bus journey was over. I realised that if she had been wearing an evening gown or a business suit, I would have taken her completely at face value.

“Anyone can set themselves up with a website and get a few business cards printed. It astonishes me how tech savvy even very young children are. Could it be that … and then the story took over.

“The book is about the early sexualisation of young girls and society’s collusion in this process, including by the girls themselves. Young girls like to test the boundaries of their own power, and often put themselves into dangerous situations, believing themselves to be completely in control. They are not mature enough to consider the long term consequences of what they are doing.

“The book also examines toxic masculinity amongst boys. Boys are also vulnerable and need protection, and yet there is a lot of posturing and competition amongst them, and there are very few good role models to teach them how to navigate relationships in a healthy and sensitive manner. Early sexualisation and toxic masculinity have always been societal issues, but nowadays, teens are not able to make their mistakes in private. Now, social media is a constant pressure, and they can find themselves excoriated, canceled or marked out for censure or ridicule in a horribly public way. To add to all these pressures is the easy access to pornography, which has distorted young peoples’ expectations of a normal, healthy sexual relationship. The pressure on girls to look and behave in a certain way is immense. Nor are boys exempt from this pressure. As a society, we need to come up with more imaginative ways to keep our teens safe, and I hope the book proves to be both entertaining and thought-provoking in equal measure.”

Many thanks to READ Media for inviting me to share a guest post from #AllGrownUp.

About the Author

Catherine Evans was born in South Africa and grew up in Swaziland and Malawi. After a degree in English Literature and Psychology with UNISA (the University of South Africa), she worked in the City for twenty years. She is currently a Non-Executive Director for Phoenix Copper Limited, which focuses on the exploration of green metals in Idaho, USA. She lives in Oxfordshire with her husband and daughter. She also has three stepdaughters. She is the author of The Wrong’un. All
Grown Up
is her second book.

@Inkspotpub

Her No1 Fan by Abby Davies

Rachel Brown plays Doctor Elouise Sparks in the popular TV series ‘Emergency’. Though successful in her career, Rachel has just learned that her chance of conception is small, and she is devastated by the information.

That’s when Mikey Bell takes Rachel from her home to a remote mountain cottage. But Mikey’s motive isn’t ‘normal’. He has a strange request. The good news is that if Rachel can deliver by Christmas Day, he’ll let her go.

But someone else in the cottage is not on the same page as Mikey. This person has different designs for Rachel, and the bad news is that this No.1 Fan has no intention of ever letting her leave.

My Review

This was so fast-paced and relentless that after reading it in two sittings, my head was spinning. From one horrific event to another, the shocks just never stopped coming.

When TV actress Rachel Brown is kidnapped by a lunatic, you know it’s not going to end well. And if you thought her No 1 fan Mikey is nuts, just wait until you meet his nana. I was definitely reminded of Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho more so than Misery, except that the old lady in this case isn’t dead – yet.

Rachel is married to Jacob, who also plays her husband in the TV series Emergency. One night, Jacob is beaten up outside their home by a man in a blue anorak, the same man Rachel believes was stalking her earlier. He probably won’t come back again the police tell her. They rarely do. Wrong! And so the nightmare begins.

Did I already tell you what Mikey’s other obsession is apart from Rachel’s character in Emergency? No. Well it’s Christmas and all things related. He wears a Christmas jumper the year round, keeps a dust- covered plastic tree up in the corner of the room where he hides Rachel, and hangs tinsel around the place. And he sings corny Christmas songs to himself, like Rocking Around The Christmas Tree and Let It Snow.

This was so good! You can’t beat a fast-paced thriller that never lets up, a likeable main protagonist and a lunatic perp with an evil nana. Once you start reading, clear the decks, skip work, make a flask full of tea, get some snacks in and keep going till the end. You won’t be disappointed. It’s brilliant!

Incidentally, I love the cover. It’s really beautiful and the colours are stunning.

Many thanks to the author @Abby13Richards for a pre-publication copy.

About the Author

Abby Davies was born in Macclesfield in 1984. She grew up in Bedfordshire in a seventeenth century cottage near Flitton Moor and started writing ‘thrillers’ when she was seven years old. After reading English Literature at Sheffield University and training to be an English teacher, she wrote novels in her free time.

She was shortlisted for the Mslexia Novel Competition in 2018 and longlisted for the Blue Pencil Agency First Novel Award in 2019. Her debut Mother Loves Me was published by HarperCollins in 2020. The Cult came out in 2021. Arrietty was her third novel followed by Her No1 Fan.

She lives in Wiltshire with her husband, daughter and two crazy cocker spaniels.

Fireweed by Richard Vaughan Davies Guest Post

It’s Hamburg in 1947 and young British lawyer Adam is posted to the destroyed city to assist in the prosecution of Nazi war criminals — an exhausting, soul-destroying and demoralising task.

He starts to visit the Lion House brothel, where he falls in love with Rose, an aristocratic German girl forced to work as a prostitute during a time of strict anti-fraternisation rules.

Rose is beautiful, educated, clever and witty, and Adam becomes increasingly obsessed with her. He starts to plan their future but, with the world against them, is a future possible? 

When a Nazi prisoner, responsible for the cold-blooded killing of hundreds of innocents, escapes Adam’s custody, there is only one place for the desperate man to hide: Hamburg’s forbidden Dead Zone. Adam’s career and reputation is on the line and he is desperate to find the dangerous fugitive, no matter the cost. 

Guest Post

“Today I’d love to introduce my novel Fireweed, written over a three year period from 2016 to 2019.

“After attending many Creative Writing groups, it seemed high time I tried to put what I’d learnt into practice… I only turned to writing in retirement. Prior to this, I was a businessman for many years. On business trips to Germany, I was always horrified by the terrible destruction Allied bombers had wrought on almost every German city and town. I wondered what it would have been like for a young English officer posted to a ruined city like Hamburg, immediately after the war ended? Strict anti-fraternisation regulations forbade any contact between the occupying forces and the German population, but these measures were soon relaxed?

“What if our young officer fell in love with a German girl while working as a lawyer in the post-war trials?

“It felt as if the book was starting to write itself and I just had to act as typist. I started setting aside an hour a day to hammer away at my desktop and I’d edit the previous day’s work each morning.

“I knew what I wanted from the book…

“I wanted to try to emulate, however inadequately, the type of author I had always enjoyed – Nevil Shute, Nigel Balchin, Winston Graham and others. I also wanted to incorporate what I’d learnt on visits to the Normandy beaches and the trenches of WW1. I’d always been fascinated by the war and post-war period and I wanted to write the book I’d like to read…

“I had studied German at school so was acquainted with the language and a visit to Hamburg in my youth had stuck with me. I could envisage the setting perfectly and so. The writing began and it didn’t stop until the story was told.

“I decided to call the novel Fireweed. This is the name for the seed that lies dormant in the ground and germinates in intense heat. It sprang up across the bomb sites of Europe, representing the power of life in destruction. Like Fireweed, I wanted my characters to find life amongst the debris of war.

“I also hope that the characters will come to life in the minds of my readers and stay with them after they close the book.”

Many thanks to READ Media for inviting me to share a guest post from Fireweed.

About the Author

Richard Vaughan Davies is an author living in the Cotswolds. Formerly an entrepreneur with a successful business in men’s retail in Chester and North Wales, he wrote a regular business column in the Liverpool Daily and published a how-to-book named Let’s Talk Shop. Richard is the author of In the Shadow of Shakespeare. Fireweed is his latest work.

@Inkspotpub

The Sleepless by Liam Bell Release Day Launch

What if I told you that sleep was just a habit? What if the third of your life you spend asleep, you could be awake instead?

Grafton is a single dad who works in local radio, but he’s always dreamt of being a ‘real’ journalist. When he gets a whiff of a story – a Scottish commune whose residents believe that sleep is a social construct – he decides to investigate… something tells him ‘the Sleepless’ might finally provide answers about his wife, Liz, who abandoned him and their son Isaac for a similar cult in India.

Born out of COVID-19’s age of ‘alternative truths’, this commune set in Ardnamurchan, Scotland, rejects societal routines of sleep with the aim of achieving a toxin cleanse, a nirvana of sorts…

However Grafton finds the truth of the commune is much more sinister and its governance thirsts for blood, using torturous methods to keep its followers weak…

As Grafton is drawn deeper into the extreme world of the Sleepless, Liz reappears, and Grafton has to race to save both himself and his son…

Meet the Author

Liam Bell is author of three previous novels, Man at Sea, So It Is and The Busker, as well as short stories and articles in publications including New Writing Scotland, Litro, and Northwords Now. He was born in Orkney and grew up in Glasgow. He has studied at Queen’s University Belfast, the University of Glasgow, and the University of Surrey and now teaches at the University of Stirling. More information at www.liammurraybell.com or on X @liammurraybell.

X (Twitter)
@liammurraybell
@fly_press
@KellyALacey 
@lovebookstours 

Instagram 
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Buy Links
www.flyonthewallpress.co.uk
www.amazon.co.uk

Christmas At The Saporis by KD Sherrinford

What will the Saporis find under the tree this year—Christmas presents, or family skeletons?

In the spirit of the holiday and a wish for familial harmony, Irene Adler persuades her detective husband to invite his brother Mycroft to Christmas luncheon. Holmes had cut ties with his brother when he discovered the machinations Mycroft employed that drove Sherlock and Adler apart for four years. He isn’t really sure this reunion is a great idea, but he can deny his wife nothing.

#ChristmasAtTheSaporis @KDSherrinford @Zooloo’s Book Tours @zooloo2008 #ZooloosBookTours #blogtour

Of course, they can’t tell the children what Mycroft is to them, as that would entail learning that their father is the celebrated detective when they know him simply as Lucca Sapori. And just when they think things may be going better than expected, ghosts of the past crop up in unexpected ways and threaten to ruin the holidays for everyone.

My Review

In Christmas At The Saporis, we go back in time to when Sherlock Holmes and Irene Adler have been reunited for a number of years and their two children Nicco and Charlotte are aged eight and four. They are living on a farm on the Sussex Downs (an area I know well), rearing horses and various other animals.

Sherlock is masquerading as Lucca Sapori, so as not to put himself or his family in danger. They have always been protected by Sherlock’s brother Mycroft, who works for the government (and arranged Sherlock’s secret identity), but they haven’t spoken since he persuaded Irene to leave Sherlock some years before. He told her that Sherlock would never settle down and she would be better off leaving him. She was expecting Nicco at the time and it was four years before they were reunited and Sherlock met his son.

But back to the story. Irene thinks the time has come to mend the rift and wants to invite Mycroft for Christmas, so harmony can be restored and the two brothers can be reconciled. However, the children do not yet know that their father is the famous detective Sherlock Holmes, so Mycroft cannot be introduced as their uncle.

They also invite Mrs Hudson, Holmes’s housekeeper from Baker Street (who both cooks the dinner and then joins them at the table much to Mycroft’s surprise), while other unexpected visitors arrive – both human and animal – and the festivities turn to chaos. It’s a very entertaining novella, though you really need to have read Song For Someone first for it to make sense. I read it in under an hour in the back of the car on the way to London.

Many thanks to @zooloo2008 for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

About the Author

KD Sherrinford was born and raised in Preston, Lancashire, and now resides on The Fylde Coast with her husband John. She was employed by Countywide for over 20 years and became a Fellow of The National Association of Estate Agents. Retirement finally gave KD the opportunity to follow her dreams and start work on her first novel. Song for Someone. KD recently completed her second book in the Sherlock Holmes and Irene Adler mystery series Christmas at The Saporis. The third Meet Me In Milan will be published this summer.

Ashley Barnard Photography

KD’s Links
Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/kdsherrinford/
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/KDSherrinfordAuthor.co.uk
Twitter : https://twitter.com/KDSherrinford
Website : https://www.kdsherrinford.co.uk

Christmas at the Saporis
Book Links

Goodreads – https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/75538189-christmas-at-the-
saporis
Buy Linkshttps://mybook.to/christmassaporis-zbt

You’d Look Better As A Ghost by Joanna Wallace

I have a gift. I see people as ghosts before they die. Of course, it helps that I’m the one killing them.

The night after her father’s funeral, Claire meets Lucas in a bar. Lucas doesn’t know it, but it’s not a chance meeting. One thoughtless mistyped email has put him in the crosshairs of an extremely put out serial killer. But before they make eye contact, before Claire lets him buy her a drink, even before she takes him home and carves him up into little pieces, something about that night is very wrong. Because someone is watching Claire. Someone who is about to discover her murderous little hobby.

#YoudLookBetterAsAGhost
@JoWallaceAuthor @ViperBooks #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours #blogtour 

The thing is, it’s not sensible to tangle with a part-time serial killer, even one who is distracted by attending a weekly bereavement support group and trying to get her art career off the ground. Let the games begin…

My Review

As soon as I read the synopsis, I thought of one of my literary heroes – Will Carver. Dark and funny, You’d Look Better As A Ghost reminded me a bit of Psychopaths Anonymous. And this certainly was dark, and very funny if you love that kind of humour.

Claire is a serial killer. There’s no other way of putting it. Sometimes she just can’t help murdering those who annoy her. She clearly sees them as ghosts and that’s when she knows exactly what she must do. And it’s often going to be gory and gruesome. No subtle poison and body dumped in a lake somewhere. She quite likes to carve them up and bury the body parts.

Of course they have to REALLY upset her, though that’s not difficult. Like Lucas when he emails her to say she’s been shortlisted in an art competition and then informs her that he made a mistake, and it’s another Claire. Not even an apology, after lifting up her spirits and then shattering her dreams.

Not helped by the fact that her beloved father has just died, having spent the last years of his life in a dementia ward. Claire is distraught. So she attends a bereavement support group, where she meets some VERY annoying people, so no prizes where I’m going with this.

At intervals, we see Claire as a child, on her fifth, sixth and seventh birthdays. Her mother is one of the nastiest, most selfish and horrible people you will ever meet in a book. In fact the passages about Claire’s childhood are amongst my favourite, dark but not remotely funny. What a brilliant and unusual book – you might even find yourself rooting for Claire.

Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours

About the Author

Joanna Wallace worked as a solicitor until an autoimmune condition took away some of her sight. She now volunteers at a charity helpline and runs a family business with her husband. She was partly inspired to write You’d Look Better As A Ghost following her father’s diagnosis of early onset dementia. Joanna lives near London with her husband, four children and two dogs.

Still Unwritten by Caroline Khoury Cover Reveal

Forty-eight hours to find her passion. Seven days to find his way back on stage. One chance to take a risk on love.

If Fran doesn’t nail this audition for a major TV role, she’s officially done as an actress. She just needs to tap into her inner seductress… who doesn’t seem to exist.

Enter stage right: Jae-seung.

To Fran, he’s just her landlord’s ridiculously hot nephew, helping her rehearse. To the rest of the world, Jae-seung is lead singer of global sensation, JYNKS – and he’s missing in action.

Together, they embark on an international journey of discovery: Fran, to track down her estranged mother and unlock her tightly guarded heart; Jae-seung, to continue (reluctantly) with his tour rehearsals. The chemistry between them is off the charts. But Jae-seung’s life is in South Korea, under strict contracts and constant scrutiny. Would a fling unleash Fran’s passion, or break the heart she’s learning to open?

A fast-paced, forbidden romance for fans of Helen Hoang, Lindsey Kelk and Ali Hazelwood.

And here is the cover of this great new book published 15th February 2024:

Genre: K-Pop Romance 
Publisher: Canelo

Check out the video clip below:

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Song for Someone by KD Sherrinford

Charlotte Sapori has led a wonderful life safely tucked in the bosom of her family.

Her mother, Irene Adler, is a renowned opera singer, while her father, Lucca Sapori, does important government work that frequently takes him away from them. Charlotte is close to her older brother, Nicco, and they are both doted on by their parents. All is well until her mother receives an unexpected diagnosis which shakes the family’s core.

#SongForSomeone @KDSherrinford @Zooloo’s Book Tours @zooloo2008 #ZooloosBookTours #blogtour

Knowing herself to be dying, Adler confesses to Charlotte things that have long been kept from her, telling her to find and read her diary. A distressed Lucca Sapori tells his daughter to read his as well. And by the way, Lucca Sapori is not his real name; in fact, she may have heard of him; he is actually the world-famous detective Sherlock Holmes.

Charlotte finds both diaries and plunges into the hidden world of Irene Adler and Sherlock Holmes as she discovers what brought them together and how they managed to stay together for thirty years, having to battle the odds.

My Review

When Charlotte Sapori’s mother, the renowned opera singer Irene Adler, is diagnosed with a serious illness, she decides the time is right to give both her diary and that of her husband Lucca Sapori, to their daughter Charlotte. Knowing that she hasn’t got long to live, Irene tells Charlotte to read them both after she passes away.

It’s then that we are plunged into the mysterious worlds of both Irene and Sherlock Holmes (who is of course Lucca Sapori) and the book is divided into chapters from both points of view. But first we must go back even further to when the couple first ‘met’ briefly. The prologue – A Very Bohemian Scandal – is the first introduction to both of them, but Holmes was in disguise. Years later Irene confesses that she knew who he was at the time, something which fascinates him – she must be a remarkable woman to have rumbled one of his famous disguises.

Seven years later Irene is being pursued by the man who murdered her husband in London. She saw him clearly, so she has escaped to Milan, where she had previously performed at La Scala for many years. But she is not safe. It is here that she meets Holmes again, who swears to protect her, so they pretend to be husband and wife and hide out with Sherlock’s friends on their farm. They initially detest each other and argue constantly, but in the words of Queen Gertrude from Shakespeare’s Hamlet ‘the lady doth protest too much, methinks’, and their hatred soon turns into admiration and finally, love.

I have to say at this point that I still can’t quite visualise Holmes (in any guise from Basil Rathbone and Peter Cushing to Jeremy Brett and Benedict Cumberbatch) as a lover, a husband and a father. He is often portrayed as being direct to the point of rudeness, unable to sustain relationships with women, and uncomfortable in social situations, to the point of exhibiting many of the signs of Asperger’s. This includes his high IQ but EQ (Emotional Quotient) of almost zero.

The author, incidentally, is a talented pianist, having learnt the piano from age six, playing the music of some of her favourite composers, Beethoven, Schubert, Stephen Foster, and Richard Wagner, who all strongly feature in her novels. I have a feeling that Sherrinford is a ‘nom de plume’, supposedly being the name Sir Arthur Conan Doyle had originally considered for his great detective before finally settling on Sherlock. It is also suggested that Sherrinford Holmes would be a third brother, but I digress.

Song For Someone is an entertaining romp through the imagined world of our favourite detective, seen through the eyes of Irene Adler, as well as through Sherlock himself. I can see that the author has done a huge amount of research to stay faithful to the spirit of the characters, while allowing Sherlock to fall in love and become more human and empathic (well up to a point anyway). I hope we see this on TV very soon – it would make a great series.

Many thanks to @zooloo2008 for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

About the Author

KD Sherrinford was born and raised in Preston, Lancashire, and now resides on The Fylde Coast with her husband John. She was employed by Countywide for over 20 years and became a Fellow of The National Association of Estate Agents. Retirement finally gave KD the opportunity to follow her dreams and start work on her first novel. Song for Someone. KD recently completed her second book in the Sherlock Holmes and Irene Adler mystery series Christmas at The Saporis. The third Meet Me In Milan will be published this summer.

Ashley Barnard Photography

KD’s Links
Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/kdsherrinford/
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/KDSherrinfordAuthor.co.uk
Twitter : https://twitter.com/KDSherrinford
Website : https://www.kdsherrinford.co.uk

Song for Someone
Book Links
Goodreads – https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/63901509-song-for-someone
Buy Linkshttps://mybook.to/songforsomeone-zbt

Playa Crush by Ian Ostroff Release Day

After struggling to find a job since his university graduation, a young bisexual man, Max Velasco, reconnects with his former gay lover, Milo Dumont, a famous DJ and social media content creator.

Instagram @ianostroffauthor @lovebookstours 

Impressed by his writing ability, Milo hires him to be a copywriter at his organization, Joie Media, a company that functions as a platform highlighting Milo’s brand for his online audience.

Max’s work soon takes him all over Mexico, where Milo pushes aside the harsh realities of the global pandemic and hopes to reignite the spark that he and Max had in high school.

But when Max falls in love with Diana Romero, a social media manager for Joie Media, Milo’s true nature is revealed. Max begins resenting his lack of a work-life balance and the pressures Milo places on him. It makes him desperate to move on from Joie Media before he’s stuck there for good.

The Author – Ian Ostroff

Geraniums by Marlene Hauser

The second book by professional writer and producer, Marlene Hauser, is inspired by many women and men who have overcome challenging childhoods to become contributing and outstanding adults.

Lily Preston, clever beyond her years, is only four when she realises her family is headed for disaster. While she, older sister Mags and younger brother Artie are dragged around America and the world during the 1960s and early ’70s by their military father Jack, he propels their mother, gentle, green-fingered Lauren Rose, to the edge of insanity through mental and physical abuse. A cat-and-mouse game of escape and entrapment ensues, testing Lily’s resilience, resourcefulness and family loyalty to the limit.

#Geraniums @mhauser_author @BookGuild #RandomThingsTours  @annecater @RandomTTours #BlogTour

Jack, an emotionally scarred war veteran, enlists the help of his equally formidable mother Emma to turn his children against the fragile Lauren Rose and drive her away. Their next mission is to make Lily and her siblings conform to a strict, unforgiving code of behaviour and crush their spirited natures. Rebellion is met with increasingly harsh penalties.

Jack brings new women into his children’s lives, but Lily vows that, no matter what, she will one day trace her real mother, compelled to by the enduring bond between them. Love arrives in the form of high-school sweetheart Diego, who helps her in her quest to break free from Jack and Emma’s control.

When their persecution of her reaches bizarre new heights, Lily is forced to stand up to them in public and assert her right to independence, a college education, the chance to fulfil her dream of becoming a writer… once she has achieved the longed-for reunion with her mother.

My Review

The treatment of Lily, her older sister Mags and younger brother Artie, meted out by their emotionally scarred father Jack Preston and his horrendous mother Emma is insane. I know Jack suffers from PTSD, but the way he treats them is unforgivable.

Emma, crippled in her back by childhood polio, is a monster. My grandmother also had what we called a ‘Dowagers Hump’ and was only 4’9″. I never really knew what caused her spinal deformity, but she was the sweetest, kindest lady I ever knew. Emma’s disability is no excuse for her unbelievable behaviour, particularly towards Lily.

Jack meets Lauren Rose, beautiful, gentle and kind. She loves flowers, particularly geraniums, which Emma thinks are common (how dare she), and grows them in terracotta pots. Jack can be very jealous and controlling. Emma thinks Lauren Rose isn’t good enough for her son.

They have three children, but their marriage is falling apart. Jack is driving his wife to the brink and Emma is actively encouraging him to divorce her and even have her committed. It’s heartbreaking.

For the children, there is a pattern emerging that will almost destroy them. A series of ghastly women, Jack is vulnerable as well as controlling. He controls his wife and the children, while his mother and his women control him. As far as Lauren Rose is concerned, he tells the kids that she is dead to them.

Lily is determined to be reunited with her mother, who she is sure is alive somewhere. Mags believes that Lauren Rose could have done more to help them. Artie is threatening to go off the rails. It’s a difficult dilemma, because I can see where Mags is coming from. Even if her mother was mentally incapable of doing anything (I know this from personal experience), their other Nana and Granddad could have done far more to rescue them from the dysfunctional situation they were in.

I don’t know how anyone could be so cruel to their children and their grandchildren. It’s a staggeringly good story, emotional and gut wrenching – at times I just couldn’t believe what was happening. I became so invested in the children, I didn’t want it to end.

Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours

About the Author

Marlene Hauser is the American author of Off-Island and originated the award-winning TV film Under the Influence. Marlene holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Columbia University in the City of New York. She lives in Oxford. Marlene says, “I wrote this book because I thought it was a story that needed to be told, especially from that post war or baby boomer era. I took inspiration from the many women and men who have overcome challenging childhoods to become contributing and outstanding adults. I also took inspiration from my paternal grandmother, who bought herself a typewriter back in the day and never wrote, and for my father, who was a great storyteller.”

The Murmurs (Annie Jackson Mysteries #1) by Michael J Malone

On the first morning of her new job at Heartfield House, a care home for the elderly, Annie Jackson wakens from a terrifying dream.

And when she arrives at the home, she knows that the first old man she meets is going to die. How she knows this is a terrifying mystery, but it is the start of horrifying premonitions … a rekindling of the curse that has trickled through generations of women in her family – a wicked gift known only as ‘the murmurs’…

#TheMurmurs @michaelJmalone1 @OrendaBooks #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours #blogtour #Gothic #Scotland #supernatural

With its reappearance comes an old, forgotten fear that is about to grip Annie Jackson. And this time, it will never let go…

My Review

I adored this book. I couldn’t wait to read it. Really spooky and scary, but the most terrifying part is when we go back in time to the ‘witches’ who were accused of witchcraft, forced to confess and then strangled before their bodies were thrown on the bonfire.

Annie Jackson comes from a line of women who have a ‘gift’ or is it a curse? She knows when someone is going to die and how. But when she tries to warn them, she is treated like a mad woman, even when she is only twelve years old. She can see the person dying, their faces turn into skulls, and she hears sounds and voices which are referred to as ‘the murmurs’.

On the first day of her new job in a nursing home (not the best place to avoid death premonitions), she sees an old man having a stroke on the bathroom floor and dying. Before she goes home, she tries to warn him, but he tells her to go away and leave him alone. It’s just the beginning of her terrifying dreams and visions. She can’t look at anyone, in case she sees their demise.

She tries to find out as much as she can about the family curse, but everyone seems to be keeping schtum. When she was still a child, her mother died in an accident, but Annie somehow survived. She remembers nothing about it and very little of her life beforehand. Then her father dies too and she and her twin brother go to live with a foster family.

As she starts to remember tiny snippets from her childhood, she discovers that her mother had two sisters – Sheila and Bridget – one of whom she met just once. She knew that Sheila was ill.

Her mother is very religious and they attend a church which is almost a cult. (Oh how I love this kind of thing as anyone who has read my reviews will know.) The local ‘pastor’ puts his hands on Annie’s head and tries to get rid of the devil inside her. It’s very creepy. Outside the church, an old woman whispers that Annie should be burnt at the stake. It’s all scary stuff with a gothic feel and a mixture of superstition and a hint of the supernatural.

We are interrupted during the story today, by flashbacks to the witches, episodes in Annie’s mother’s life and incidents of ‘the murmurs’ in Annie’s childhood. For instance she knew that a local girl would be involved in something terrible, but no-one will listen to her.

I’m going to say it again. I absolutely adored this book. It’s just up my street and I look forward to reading more about Annie in the future. I know this because it’s the first of the Annie Jackson Mysteries #1.

If I could offer Annie one word of advice it would be to accept what you see. You probably can’t prevent it anyway, without changing the future as well. While this would be devastating, it would surely be better than telling someone they are going to die and failing to prevent it. Or maybe not. Thank goodness I don’t have Annie’s gift.

Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours

About the Author

Michael Malone is a prize-winning poet and author who was born and brought up in the heart of Burns’ country. He has published over 200 poems in literary magazines throughout the UK, including New Writing Scotland, Poetry Scotland and Markings. Blood Tears, his bestselling debut novel won the Pitlochry Prize from the Scottish Association of Writers. His dark psychological thriller, A Suitable Lie, was a number-one bestseller, and is currently in production for the screen, and five powerful standalone thrillers followed suit. A former Regional Sales Manager (Faber & Faber) he has also worked as an IFA and a bookseller. Michael lives in Ayr, where he also works as a hypnotherapist.

Orenda Books is a small independent publishing company specialising in literary fiction with a heavy emphasis on crime/thrillers, and approximately half the list in translation. They’ve been twice shortlisted for the Nick Robinson Best Newcomer Award at the IPG awards, and publisher and owner Karen Sullivan was a Bookseller Rising Star in 2016. In 2018, they were awarded a prestigious Creative Europe grant for their translated books programme. Three authors, including Agnes Ravatn, Matt Wesolowski and Amanda Jennings have been WHSmith Fresh Talent picks, and Ravatn’s The Bird Tribunal was shortlisted for the Dublin Literary Award, won an English PEN Translation Award, and adapted for BBC Radio Four ’s Book at Bedtime. Six titles have been short- or long-listed for the CWA Daggers. Launched in 2014 with a mission to bring more international literature to the UK market, Orenda Books publishes a host of debuts, many of which have gone on to sell millions worldwide, and looks for fresh, exciting new voices that push the genre in new directions. Bestselling authors include Ragnar Jonasson, Antti Tuomainen, Gunnar Staalesen, Michael J. Malone, Kjell Ola Dahl, Louise Beech, Johana Gustawsson, Lilja Sigurðardóttir and Sarah Stovell.