My Guest, Author Marie Macpherson

Marie Macphersonjpeg

I’d like to welcome Marie Macpherson to Layered Pages today. Marie lives in a small village not far from the Scottish capital, Edinburgh. She studied at Strathclyde University, gaining a PhD in Russian Language and Literature. She spent a year at Moscow State University in the former Soviet Union to research her thesis on the 19th century Russian writer, Lermontov, said to be descended from the Scottish poet and seer, Thomas the Rhymer.

After a career teaching languages and literature, she retired from academic life to pursue her interest in creative writing and has found her niche in historical fiction.

The rich history of lowland Scotland provides her inspiration. Reeling and jigging at Scottish Country Dancing and walking the Lammermuir Hills keep her fit.

Marie, please tell me about your writing…

Why do I write?

I often ask that question myself? For writing is such hard work! Why don’t I just remain a reader? I often ask myself when the words won’t flow, the characters don’t gel, the plot refuses to thicken and my wonderful ideas come out half-baked.

Like most writers, I developed a passion for literature and language at an early age: learning to read was an eye-opener for me. That marks on paper could be transformed into words seemed a kind of magical process, a kind of alchemy – not least because most of my earliest reading material was fairy stories and legends.

The film Dr Zhivago cast a spell over me aged sweet sixteen and drew me into the exotic culture of Russia. Learning to decipher the Cyrillic alphabet, I re-discovered the magic I’d experienced as a child learning to read. And being able to understand the great classical novels – those big baggy monsters – by Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Gogol, Turgenev – in the original language was thrilling.

Since winning a writing competition (aged 10) – a story about my pet dog, I’ve been a closet writer, secretly scribbling stories There are a couple of novels locked away – not in the proverbial drawer – but in an ancient, primeval version of Word that needs a magic spell to open it. One day I will.

After experimenting with contemporary, satirical fiction, I found my niche in historical fiction set in 16th century Scotland, not surprising perhaps. Growing up on the battlefield of Pinkie and within sight of a ruined castle, I was surrounded by history and haunted by stories from the past. Ghosts and ghoulies stalked the tumbledown halls and walls – all rich fodder for the imagination. The legends of the great Scots heroes and heroines have always enthralled me: Wallace the freedom fighter wielding his broad sword, Bruce being inspired by a spider, Mary Queen of Scots getting her head chopped-off. Perhaps, subliminally that was why I chose the work of Lermontov topic for my PhD thesis. The Russian writer claimed to be descended from the Scottish bard and seer, Thomas the Rhymer.

Winning the Martha Hamilton Prize for Creative Writing from Edinburgh University, followed by the Writer of the Year award by Tyne and Esk Writers, pulled me out of the closet and pushed me to submit my work for publication.

How writing impacted on my life

I’m a ‘late call’ to creative writing and being published has given me a second career. What better way to while away the time to the grave? Instead of contemplating my navel, I’ve taken off on a rollercoaster ride. When not writing or researching, I’m giving talks, presentations and interviews, appearing at literary festivals and events, writing articles for magazines and blogs. While it’s been a steep learning curve, there’s never a dull moment.

Be careful what you wish for, as it may come true. And, at times, that’s how I feel about being a published writer. Nevertheless, I wouldn’t have it any other way.

My advice about Writing

It’s hard to think of something new to say as so many other writers here have given very wise and practical advice. What to add?

  • Heed Toni Morrison’s maxim: If there’s a book that you want to read, but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it.
  • Write in a genre you feel comfortable in. Don’t try to follow the latest fashion if it doesn’t suit your style or doesn’t fit.
  • Take time to develop your voice. After a lifetime of writing academic articles this was the most difficult lesson I had to learn. To shift my mindset, I try to heed Anton Chekhov’s advice: Don’t tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass. My mantras are show don’t tell, be specific. Clichés perhaps but crucial.
  • Dramatise a scene as much as possible but don’t romanticise too much. And above all be authentic.
  • Since my memory is a sieve, I always carry a notebook to catch hold of those fleeting thoughts before they take off again.
  • Work off-line, but I’m the world’s worst at not following own advice. I’m at risk of being a Facebook fly, gadding about the internet, hopping from blog to blog – not so much to self-promote but to give and receive moral support readers and writers from all over the world. As E. M. Forster famously said, ‘Only connect.’ And that’s the benefit of social media.
  • Keep in mind Bruce’s spider – if at first you don’t succeed in being published, keep trying! Never say never!

 

The First Blast of the Trumpet, the first book in the Knox trilogy was published in 2012. It is available in hardback, paperback and Amazon

The next in the series, The Second Blast of the Trumpet, is due for release in September 2015 on Amazon

Find my Author page on Facebook

 

Sunday Book Highlight

The Secret Bride Book Cover

Mary Tudor, the headstrong younger sister of the ruthless King Henry VIII, has always been her brother’s favorite-but now she is also an important political bargaining chip. When she is promised to the elderly, ailing King Louis of France, a heartbroken Mary accepts her fate, but not before extracting a promise from her brother: When the old king dies, her next marriage shall be solely of her choosing. For Mary has a forbidden passion, and is determined, through her own cunning, courage, and boldness, to forge her own destiny. The Secret Bride is the triumphant tale of one extraordinary woman who meant to stay true to her heart and live her life just as her royal brother did- by her own rules…

Excerpt from The Secret Bride:

“Mary was upstairs, and what he did next would affect not only his own life, but perhaps history. She might be meant to marry another king… beget a great dynasty… he could be taking a destiny from her greater than giving her a common life with him.  Charles missed Anne so keenly just then, the trusted counsel of a sister, her honesty with him, and her humor. At this moment, he even missed Henry whose raw clarity in things never wavered. If he could see the king’s face, as he always had—read his expression—he would know far better what to do.

As the French king advised, he had written to Wolsey and explained the situation, but of course the letter could not possibly arrive in London in time. The sound of Mary’s weeping still echoed through his mind, haunting him with thoughts of all he stood to lose. If I should wait… and lose her love because of it…if she should be married off to another because I paused for too long… He closed his eyes. Heavenly Father, I am at a crossroads, I know not want to do… She is my love, my heart… but he is my king… I cannot think how I am to honor one and betray the other.

When he went to her chamber a quarter of an hour later, he knew what scrutiny he would face from the French ladies there. There would be no turning back from the gossip it would cause. Whatever they decided to do, soon the world would know their secret and the cocoon of secrecy in which they had always lived would be gone forever. But he realized, only by seeing her one more time would be know the right path to take. He owed them both that. When he could put it off no longer, he rose, made the sign of the cross, and began the long walk to where Mary, and destiny waited.”

anne-girard

Diane Haeger, who also writes as Anne Girard, is the author of 15 historical novels, most of them based on true stories from history. Her stories are drawn from a range of countries and eras including the French Renaissance, Georgian England, the American Civil War, to a series called In The Court of Henry VIII. Her most recent novel, Madame Picasso, details an early love affair in Paris between the famous artist and his muse. Her next novel, to be published later this year, is Platinum Doll, about 1930’s movie star Jean Harlow. Haeger holds a bachelor’s degree in English literature and a master’s degree in clinical psychology. She lives in California with her husband and children.

Website

 

Saturday’s Book Goodness!

Su

Roma Nova – the last remnant of the Roman Empire that has survived into the 21st century – is at peace. Carina Mitela, the heir of a leading family, but choosing the life of an officer in the Praetorian Guard Special Forces, is not so sure. She senses danger crawling towards her when she encounters a strangely self-possessed member of the unit hosting their exchange exercise in Britain. When a blackmailing letter arrives from a woman claiming to be her husband Conrad’s lost daughter and Conrad tries to shut Carina out, she knows the threat is real. Trying to resolve a young man’s indiscretion twenty-five years before turns into a nightmare that not only threatens to destroy all the Mitelae but also attacks the core of the imperial family itself. With her enemy holding a gun to the head of the heir to the imperial throne, Carina has to make the hardest decision of her life… “If there is a world where fiction becomes more believable than reality, then Alison Morton’s ingenious thrillers must be the portal through which to travel. Following in Caesar’s footsteps, she came with INCEPTIO, saw with PERFIDITAS – and has well and truly conquered with SUCCESSIO!” – Helen Hollick, author and Managing Editor Historical Novel Society Indie Reviews “Alison Morton has done it again. SUCCESSIO is the latest in her series of powerful tales of family betrayals and shifting allegiances in Roma Nova. Once again, I was gripped from start to finish.” – Sue Cook, writer and broadcaster

About Author:

Alison pic2

Alison Morton writes Roman-themed alternate history thrillers with strong heroines. She gained a BA in French, German and Economics and thirty years later went back and bagged a masters’ in history (with distinction!).

A ‘Roman nut’ since age 11, she has visited sites throughout Europe including the alma mater, Rome. But it was the mosaics at Ampurias (Spain) that started her wondering what a modern Roman society would be like if run by women…

Six years in the UK reserve forces (where she rose from private soldier to captain) not only reinforced her sense of common purpose and self-discipline, but provided her with experiences and opportunities no civilian would ever touch. Oh, and travel and fabulous mess evenings.

Setting about her novelist education with the persistence of a Roman road builder, she joined the Romantic Novelists’ Association New Writers’ Scheme, studied with the Arvon Foundation, joined the Historical Novel Society and attended numerous specialist workshops and conferences. Thanks to her independently published book sales figures, she has recently qualified as a full member of the UK’s Society of Authors. She has recently been accepted as an author member of International Thriller Writers.

Alison talks and writes about alternative history at conferences and workshops including for the Romantic Novelists’ Association, the Historical Novel Society and in Writing Magazine. She also writes a monthly column in the local English language magazine and has published a collection of these as The 500 Word Writing Buddy: 25 Inner Secrets for the New Writer.

INCEPTIO, the first in the Roma Nova series, which was also shortlisted for the 2013 International Rubery Book Award, and PERFIDITAS, the second in series, have been honoured with the B.R.A.G. Medallion, an award for independent fiction that rejects 90% of its applicants.  Alison’s third book, SUCCESSIO, which came out in June 2014, was selected as the Historical Novel Society’s indie Editor’s Choice for Autumn 2014 and has also been awarded the B.R.A.G. Medallion.

Alison is represented by Annette Crossland of A for Authors Literary Agency for subsidiary and foreign rights.

Links

Connect with Alison on her blog

Facebook Author Page

Twitter @alison-morton

Goodreads

Buying links (multiple retailers/formats):

INCEPTIO

PERFIDITAS

SUCCESSIO

 

Review: A Matter of Grave Concern by Brenda Novak

A Matter of Grave Concern

Bestselling author Brenda Novak unearths love in the darkest of places.

When Maximillian Wilder hides his noble identity and joins the notorious body snatchers known as the London Supply Company, the last thing on his mind is love. He’s worried about Madeline, his vanished half-sister, who was last seen in the company of Jack Hurtsill, the gang’s conscienceless leader. Raiding graveyards, stealing corpses, and selling them to medical colleges as dissection material is dirty work, but Max knows he must gain Jack’s trust. He’s determined to find out what happened to Madeline—and to bring Jack to justice if she was murdered for the coin her body could earn.

Beautiful, spirited Abigail Hale, daughter of the surgeon at Aldersgate School of Medicine, detests the challenging, hard-bargaining Max almost as much as Jack. But she must procure the necessary specimens if she is to save the college and her father’s career. She believes she is going to be successful—until Jack double-crosses her. Then she’s swept into a plot of danger and intrigue, one where Max must intervene to protect her, no matter the risk to his plan…or his heart.

**********

I had so much fun reading this story! I absolutely enjoyed the interaction between Max and Abigail. They have a meaningful connection in a particular way. They are both educated, intelligent, opinionated and strong. They complement each other very much which makes the story all the better. However, they come from two different words. I have to say that even the unsavory characters were entertaining to read and added much to the story. Jack in particular. One loves to really dislike him.

I have to say I haven’t quite read a premise like this one before and I found it to be creative and as I mentioned, fun reading. Raiding graveyards to sell corpse to medical colleges is something I did not know was done and I’m curious to find out if this really went on. It certainly does seem like it would. The title is perfect for this story, the story flows beautifully and the characters are lively. I will be on the lookout for more books by this author and highly recommend this story.

Stephanie M. Hopkins

Spotlight: Nixon and Dovey by Jay W Curry

???????????????????

Publication Date: November 14, 2014 Smashwords eBook: 369p ISBN: 978-1-3117280-3-6

Genre: Historical Fiction

Before he met Dovey, it was just a heated feud. Now, in the backdrop of southern antebellum slavery, it’s a deadly game of passion, murder, and revenge.

Facts: In 1818 Nixon Curry became entangled in one of the most sensationalized murder/love stories in early American history. As a result, Nixon Curry became arguably the most notorious and widely publicized criminal in America’s first half century. His fame derived not from the brutality or number of his crimes but from the determination of the Charlotte aristocracy to hang him. His remarkable talents, undying love for Dovey Caldwell, and the outright audacity of his exploits made him an early American legend.

Story: Set in the antebellum south of North Carolina, Nixon Curry, a talented son of poor Scot-Irish immigrants, accepts a job at a racing stable. Soon, his riding skills rival those of his mentor, Ben Wilson. The fierce rivalry becomes confrontational when Ben frames Nixon’s childhood, slave friend, Cyrus, for the Caldwell plantation fire. When both Nixon and Ben win invitations to the 1816 Race of Champions, the stage is set for an explosive faceoff. During prerace festivities, the dashing, young Nixon meets the beautiful Dovey Caldwell, daughter of the state’s wealthiest and most influential senator. Finding Nixon unworthy of Dovey’s affection, Senator Caldwell betroths his daughter to Nixon’s nemesis, Ben. The announcement sets in motion a clash of cultures, talents, and passions leading to murder, mayhem, and revenge.

How far will Nixon go to have his love? What price is he willing to pay and what will be the consequences?

Buy the Book

Apple

iBooks

Amazon (Kindle)

Barnes & Noble (Nook)

Kobo

About the Author

Jay Curry Author Photo

Jay W Curry is a former Big-4 consulting partner, business coach, and award-winning author. When he is not coaching, fly-fishing or writing he facilitates a Vistage CEO roundtable in Houston. Jay has co-authored three internationally successful books and has won honors for both his short fiction and non-fiction work. When the heat of Texas summer arrives, Jay and his wife, Nancy, head to their Colorado home (http:/CurryBarn.com) or visit their three children and seven grandchildren. Nixon and Dovey is the first of a three-book passion to bring the 200-year-old story of Jay’s relative, Nixon Curry, back to light.

For more information, please visit Jay W. Curry’s website. You can also find him on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.

Nixon and Dovey Blog Tour Schedule

Monday, December 1 Spotlight at Flashlight Commentary

Friday, December 5 Spotlight & Giveaway at Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More

Monday, December 8 Guest Post at What Is That Book About

Tuesday, December 9 Review at Deal Sharing Aunt

Monday, December 15 Guest Post at Mina’s Bookshelf Spotlight at Caroline Wilson Writes

Tuesday, December 16 Review at Flashlight Commentary Review at With Her Nose Stuck in a Book

Wednesday, December 17 Interview at Flashlight Commentary

Thursday, December 18 Spotlight at Boom Baby Reviews

Tuesday, December 23 Spotlight at CelticLady’s Reviews

Friday, December 26 Spotlight at Historical Fiction Connection

Saturday, December 27 Spotlight at Layered Pages

Monday, December 29 Review at Forever Ashley

Tuesday, December 30 Review at Book Nerd

Wednesday, December 31 Review at Svetlana’s Reads and Views

Nixon and Dovey Tour Banner

 

Spotlight: The Unquiet Bones by Mel Starr

The Unquiet Bones book cover

Publication Date: November 27, 2014 Lion Fiction Paperback; 256p ISBN: 978-1-78264-030-1

Series: The Chronicles of Hugh de Singleton Genre: Historical Mystery

Hugh of Singleton, fourth son of a minor knight, has been educated as a clerk, usually a prelude to taking holy orders. However, he feels no real calling-despite his lively faith-and he turns to the profession of surgeon, training in Paris and then hanging his sign in Oxford. Soon after, a local lord asks Hugh de Singleton to track the killer of a young woman whose bones have been found in the castle cesspool. Through his medical knowledge, Singleton identifies her as the impetuous missing daughter of a local blacksmith. The young man she loved-whom she had provoked very publicly-is quickly arrested and sentenced at Oxford. But this is just the beginning of the tale. The story of Singleton’s adventure unfolds with realistic medical procedures, droll medieval wit, romantic distractions, and a consistent underlying sense of Christian compassion.

Praise for The Unquiet Bones

“This skillfully woven story is a delight to read. The setting is exceptionally well crafted. Highly recommended.” —Davis Bunn, best-selling author

Buy the Book

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

Kreger Publications

About the Author

03_Mel-Starr-Author-150x150

Mel Starr was born and grew up in Kalamazoo, Michigan. After graduating with a MA in history from Western Michigan University in 1970, he taught history in Michigan public schools for thirty-nine years, thirty-five of those in Portage, where he retired in 2003 as chairman of the social studies department of Portage Northern High School. Mel and his wife, Susan, have two daughters and seven grandchildren.

For more information please visit Mel Starr’s website.

The Unquiet Bones Blog Tour Schedule

Monday, December 1 Review at Carpe Librum

Wednesday, December 10 Spotlight & Giveaway at Broken Teepee

Thursday, December 18 Review & Giveaway at Historical Fiction Obsession

Friday, December 19 Spotlight & Giveaway at Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More

Saturday, December 20 Review at Book Nerd

Monday, December 22 Review at Flashlight Commentary

Friday, December 26 Spotlight at Layered Pages

Monday, December 29 Review at A Book Geek Spotlight at CelticLady’s Reviews

Tuesday, December 30 Review at My Tangled Skeins Book Reviews Review & Giveaway at Words and Peace

Wednesday, December 31 Review at Beth’s Book Nook Blog

Friday, January 2 Review & Giveaway at Luxury Reading Spotlight at A Literary Vacation

The Unquiet Bones Banner

 

My Guest Author Prue Batten

I would like to welcome Author Prue Batten to Layered Pages today to take part in my writer’s series. Today I have asked her three important questions about her writing. I would also like to mention that that Prue is a B.R.A.G. Medallion Honoree

Why do you write?

I write because I have to. Don’t get me wrong. No one forces me to. But like an artist must paint, a sculptor must sculpt or a gardener must garden, then so must I write. It’s a kind of compulsion that has been with me since I was in primary school.

I had a wonderful teacher in Grade 3 who would place pictures on the board and ask us to write a ‘composition’. The images were often illustrations from children’s’ books but I didn’t know that at the time. I only knew that as I wrote my little composition I wandered into a world and characters of my own creation and I felt immensely happy.

In high school, I loved creative writing and in fact wrote a short story about an English woman who fell in love with a German officer during WWII. It wasn’t a love story but an examination of a difficult relationship in worse times. I often wonder where that story is now…

In matriculation, creative writing got me into trouble during term English exams when I would get lost in the story-writing part of an examination paper. Time would drift by and I would look up at the clock to find I had an hour to answer the rest of the paper in a three-hour exam! But during that time, my writing won an award, a State story-writing prize. I do still have that story and hope that it will be the foundation for a new historical fiction in one or two books’ time.

I only dabbled in writing from university days till my children left home – time was chock-full of family activities. But once the children had left the nest, I really hit the keyboard. I wrote day and night like the Devil Possessed and loved every minute of it. Still do … it’s like a chocolate high and I would be lost without it.

How has writing impacted your life?

Hugely.

I took an enormous leap of faith when I wrote the first book in The Chronicles of Eirie (The Stumpwork Robe) and had it published in the UK.

Book 1

Book 1

Like most independent writers I had been submitting to the mainstream system for some time. The final straw was a close call with an agent in the UK, an agent who loved my work and wanted to take me on … but after a week of ‘umm-ing’ and ‘ahh-ing’, decided my home of Tasmania was just too far away from the nuts and bolts of the publishing trade (wonder what she thinks of Richard Flanagan, a Tasmanian, winning this year’s Man-Booker Prize?). The fact she admitted to me that she would regret her decision was like an electric goad. In that same week, I received an email from a UK peer review site to which I belonged. They were funded by the UK Arts Council and were entering the POD publishing field and was I interested in publishing with them?

I thought about it for only one hour.

The leap of faith was done and I was on my way.

Since then, I have written a further six books and am writing my latest – that makes a total of eight novels to date. I have a bespoke publisher, Darlington Press. And I’ve met the most wonderful people you can imagine … readers! People who have taken the time to review me, to email me privately, even to send me things they think I would like. Generous to a fault.

Gisborne 1

The journey has led me to combine with others, in my endeavours. A book doesn’t reach the public without a team and mine is a strong one – an award winning Australian graphic designer for my covers and print formatting (Salt Studio), a published writer in Scotland who is my e-formatter (Danny Gillan), and two beta readers who give me the benefit of their objective wisdom. Most importantly, the most intuitive editor (and published writer – John Hudspith) that one could wish for. He is a man who knows exactly what i’s to dot and t’s to cross in order to maximize dramatic tension but he never interferes with the authorial voice. In addition, he has a wit that drags me right to the end of a book successfully. These five people, along with my publisher and business manager, have helped the books achieve recognition, winning me awards and notoriety. For example, every one of those books – all seven – have ranked in Amazon.co.uk’s e-book Top 100’s in various categories for over 15 months continuously!

And of course, I must mention the unique partnership with a miniature book press, Bopressminiaturebooks.com in the USA. I think we might have the most original pairing in the world. The press commissions me to write short stories and then illustrates, binds and publishes the result in miniature limited editions which are snapped up by voracious collectors. An international star of stage and screen even has one of our books!

Gisborne 2

So you see, a huge effect. In addition, I have become worldly – learning the trade, so to speak. I have had to refine my computer literacy and become unafraid of the online world. This has led to a plethora of friends that I will have forever. The most wonderful time of my life!

What advice would you give to beginner writers?

There is the old cliché – read, read, read and read some more. Soak it up like a sponge. See how writers achieve, see how what they write affects you, find out why you might like a book. Or not like it.

And then write. Write a lot. Hone it, de-bone it, re-build it. It really comes down to those very basic points. And NEVER publish the first story you write. There always has to be a first one that begins the journey and it must stay in your writing files on your computer forever. I have a trilogy that sits in a box and gathers dust, and there it will stay. Forever.

G3 Prue Batton

If you want your characters to be believable, experience what you want them to experience. Eat stale bread, ride a horse, draw a bow and loose an arrow, wear long gowns and cloaks in a fierce wind, use a sword, climb a mountain, dive into freezing water fully-clothed. Whatever it takes. And feel. Feel it through to your very marrow.

And then soon, if you write enough, you will have the story that deserves to be read widely. When you get to that point, send it to beta-readers, have it edited professionally, re-write it, have it read and edited again. And research the industry, both indie and mainstream because knowledge is power.

Eventually you will be ready and like me, you can take that leap of faith. One other thing I would say is never have expectations of the novel and the industry. Go into it with eyes wide open and be joyful about what might come your way.

Have fun and goodluck!

About Author

PrueBatten_ProfilePic

A former journalist from Australia who graduated with majors in history and politics, I’m now a cross genre writer who is also a farmer, dog owner, gardener and embroiderer.

I didn’t plan to be a writer in those early days, I was far more a reader. But like most writers, I’ve always written – seeing the world through the medium of the word. It was inevitable that I become an independent writer simply because I love being at the cutting edge of something and together with many other ‘indies’, being at the forefront of the New Age of Writing and Publishing is like being a sea captain in the Age of Exploration. And I’ve been fortunate – winning silver medals and honourable mentions for my work and to have them ranking unbroken in the UK for the last year.

I try to make time for other things in life. I love wine, chocolate and cooking delectable cakes and biscuits. I mess about in my gardens, dirt under the fingernails and a plant catalogue alongside a cup of tea. I stitch (I love needle and silks) – to wind down. I walk (a lot) with the Jack Russells, but more than anything I like being on beaches, boats or the water – being by the sea is implicit for my writing to sing.

Website

Facebook

Pinterest

Friday Night Book Review: Finding Rebecca by Eoin Dempsey

finding Rebecca

Nothing could keep Christopher and Rebecca apart: not her abusive parents, or even the fiancé she brought home after running away to England. But when World War II finally strikes the island of Jersey, the Nazi invaders ship Rebecca to Europe as part of Hitler’s Final Solution against the Jewish population.

After Christopher and his family are deported back to their native Germany, he volunteers for the Nazi SS, desperate to save the woman he loves. He is posted to Auschwitz and finds himself put in control of the money stolen from the victims of the gas chambers. As Christopher searches for Rebecca, he struggles to not only maintain his cover, but also the grip on his soul. Managing the river of tainted money flowing through the horrific world of Auschwitz may give him unexpected opportunities. But will it give him the strength to accept a brave new fate that could change his life—and others’ lives—forever?

********

I have to say that I was moved to tears and anguish at the atrocities of the Nazi Camps that are described in this story. The authors does not hold back on the brutality and utter evil of the Nazi SS. This is probably the most profound, emotional historical fiction book on World War II that I have read in a long time. At first I had to take the story in small dosages. Not because it wasn’t written well. Quite the contrary. The story was told so well that as I said above, I was moved to tears…

Each character in the book played an important role in the story and Christopher’s courage and honor to find Rebecca is extraordinary. What he witnessed and had to endure in Auschwitz will be forever stamped on my soul.

One can tell when reading this story that the authors detail to the Nazi Camps are extremely well researched and I admire the authors attention to the history of how the Nazi’s fooled for a time or deceived-if you will- all for their evil gain. Even many of the Nazi were brainwashed and really thought what they were doing was right. There was much I have to admit I didn’t know about and it was brought to light in this book.

I will remember this story for a long time to come and I highly recommend it.

Stephanie M. Hopkins

Interview with Author Deborah Lincoln

Agnes Cannons War

Publication Date: October 1, 2014 Blank Slate Press

Formats: eBook, Trade Paperback

Pages: 300

Genre: Historical Fiction

“I saw a woman hanged on my way to the Pittsburgh docks…”

Agnes Canon is tired of being a spectator in life, an invisible daughter among seven sisters, meat for the marriage market. The rivers of her Pennsylvania countryside flow west, and she yearns to flow with them, explore new lands, know the independence that is the usual sphere of men.

This is a story of a woman’s search for freedom, both social and intellectual, and her quest to understand what freedom means. She learns that freedom can be the scent and sound of unsettled prairies, the glimpse of a cougar, the call of a hawk. The struggle for freedom can test the chains of power, poverty, gender, or the legalized horror of slavery. And to her surprise, she discovers it can be found within a marriage, a relationship between a man and a woman who are equals in everything that matters.

It’s also the story of Jabez Robinson, a man who has traveled across the continent and seen the beauty of the country and the ghastliness of war, as he watches his nation barrel toward disaster. Faced with deep-seated social institutions and hard-headed intransigence, he finds himself helpless to intervene. Jabez’s story is an indictment of war in any century or country, and an admission that common sense and reasoned negotiation continue to fail us.

As Agnes and Jabez struggle to keep their community and their lives from crumbling about them, they must face the stark reality that whether it’s the freedom of an African from servitude, of the South from the North, or of a woman from the demands of social convention, the cost is measured in chaos and blood.

This eloquent work of historical fiction chronicles the building of a marriage against the background of a civilization growing – and dying – in the prelude to civil war.

Hello, Deborah! It is a pleasure chatting with you today and I would like to say that you have done an absolutely splendid job writing your story, Agnes Canon’s War. I finished reading it last week and I greatly admire your attention to the culture of the American nineteenth century. What first drew you to this period?

Thank you! I’m happy to be here and so glad you enjoyed ACW. I’ve had a fascination for the Civil War era ever since my visited Gettysburg when I was probably ten years old. So when a cousin compiled the basic facts about my great-great-grandparents, Agnes and Jabez Robinson, I was intrigued by their experiences during that war and wanted to know more about what they must have gone through.

I have to admit I haven’t read much about the Civil War era in the border state of Missouri. Why did you chose this setting for your story?

The main reason is that northwest Missouri is where my ancestors settled, and where their actual story played out. Agnes Canon’s War is based on fact, and I tried to keep the novel as true to the actual history as possible. The town of Lick Creek in the novel is actually the town of Oregon, Missouri, a delightful and very rural village north of St. Joseph, not far from the Missouri River. The bonus for me was that many people don’t know much about the Civil War west of the Mississippi, or how affected the people of Missouri were by fighting that disrupted their homes. It helps ACW stand out, I think, from most other novels about the Civil War.

What is one of the challenges Agnes faces while searching for the freedoms she longs for?

Margaret Fuller, America’s first feminist (she lived from 1810 to 1850) railed against all the challenges women in the nineteenth century faced. “Education,” she complains, “was not to prepare women for professions and public life but . . . that they may become better companions and mothers for men.” That kind of attitude was a huge stumbling block for any woman who hopes to determine her own future.

That’s a challenge we’re all familiar with. But I think one challenge that Agnes felt most keenly was the inability to travel alone. It simply wasn’t done for women to head off for the west the way Jabez did, to see and experience new places, unless she was accompanied by male relatives. That, to me, is a restriction that had to be suffocating for her.

Please tell your audience a little about Agnes and Jabez Robinson’s relationship in the beginning…

They were attracted, immediately, both of them. The encounter in Cincinnati was one of those jolts when you know there’s something there, something to fantasize about. Jabez, though he loved his first wife, had by then lost his passion for her, and Agnes’s strength and intelligence captivated him. I think in the early years, after his first wife’s death, they became friends. The idea that she would never marry had become a comfortable habit with Agnes; Jabez wasn’t sure he could convince her that independence and equality between a man and a woman can exist within a marriage. The depth of their friendship and love eventually overcame those impediments.

Besides the civil war what are some of the challenges happening during the nineteenth century? Like for example, education, how civilization is growing and so forth.

Ethnic upheavals may have been the most difficult challenge of those times. What to do with freed slaves, of course, was a gigantic challenge – many people, including Abraham Lincoln, hoped to relocate them to Africa or to Caribbean islands. But relations with Native Americans were also a challenge throughout the war. In 1862, thirty-eight Sioux warriors were hanged (on Lincoln’s orders), the largest mass execution in American history.

There were challenges in assimilating other groups, as well. The Irish were discriminated against, Catholics weren’t welcome in many neighborhoods or professions. California legally prohibited Chinese immigration while the railroads were recruiting Chinese workers. Rapid industrialization after the war only exacerbated the differences between the haves and the have-nots.

Please tell me a little about Agnes’s Father and his relationship with her.

Daniel Canon simply did not understand his daughter. For one thing, she wasn’t a boy. And he was devastated by the fact that there would be no sons for him, no one to carry his name and his bloodline. The most he could hope for was a grandson, and to his way of thinking, that’s the only thing daughters were good for. It became apparent that Agnes was his only hope, and she disappointed him. Submissiveness, piety, passivity – that’s what he wanted from her. And there was no way she was going to give him that.

What motivates Jabez to travel across the continent during the ghastliness of war and what are some of the social conditions he encounters?

Jabez was a wanderer, an adventurer – as Eliza (his first wife) said, a rogue. He was restless, wanted to see the world, experience the wild, test himself against hardship and test his medical skills against the vast variety of diseases and accidents. He would have encountered primitive living conditions, greed and discrimination and avarice among the gold seekers, but also the excitement of a growing and expanding country in its “teen” years – the sense that anything was possible. When he was drawn into the war against Mexico in the southwest he would have encountered cultures that would seem almost exotic to him – a variety of different native cultures and the centuries-old Spanish and Catholic mission cultures of southern California.

Was there a particular scene in your story difficult to write?

Several. One that I had trouble with, though, was the scene where the men from Lick Creek visited Missouri’s Senator David Rice Atchison. Atchison wanted them to join him in claiming Kansas for the southern interests. The scene was difficult because I wanted it to be realistic, so I used actual phrases that Atchison used in speeches, but I needed the dialog and interactions to be natural, not stiff. It was hard avoid turning some of the historical characters into caricatures.

Which character are you partial to and why?

I love Agnes. She’s smart and funny and sassy, and didn’t let tragedy destroy her. But I have a special afinity for a couple of the minor characters, particularly Dick and Rose McDonald, the African American couple who are quietly capable and determined. And I adore little James with his black arrowhead.

Will you be writing other stories that take place during this era?

I’m working on one that takes place in the 1864 to 1868 time period, mostly in Montana during its wild territory days. And I’m noodling around with the idea of a sequel to Agnes Canon’s War: Agnes’s life in the gilded years of the 1870s and 1880s.

Thank you, Deborah!

Thank you, so much, for hosting me.

03_Deborah-Lincoln-Author-300x220

Deborah Lincoln grew up in the small town of Celina, among the cornfields of western Ohio. She earned a bachelor’s degree in English from Michigan State University and a master’s degree in Library Science from the University of Michigan. She and her husband have three grown sons and live on the Oregon coast.

Of her passion for historical fiction, she says: “I’m fascinated by the way events—wars and cataclysms and upheavals, of course, but the everyday changes that wash over everyday lives—bring a poignancy to a person’s efforts to survive and prosper. I hate the idea that brave and intelligent people have been forgotten, that the hardships they underwent have dropped below the surface like a stone in a lake, with not a ripple left behind to mark the spot.”

Agnes Canon’s War is the story of her great great-grandparents, two remarkable people whose lives illustrate the joys and trials that marked America’s tumultuous nineteenth century.

For more information on Deborah Lincoln please visit her website. You can also find her on Facebook, Twitter, and Goodreads.

Praise for Agnes Canon’s War

“Impressively researched, it captures the brutality of the war in the West and the complicated, divided loyalties of the people who are caught up in it. Agnes Canon’s War will have readers anticipating the romance and dreading the battles in equal amounts.” -Steve Wiegenstein, author of Slant of Light and This Old World

“The characters are likeable, intelligent, humorous, spunky and passionate people whose zest for adventure is met and then some! Superb historical fiction this reviewer highly recommends.” – Historical Novel Society

“Agnes Canon’s War is brilliantly researched and written. Deborah Lincoln has successfully described the occurrences of the Civil War era in the border state of Missouri and the resultant emotions upon the inhabitants of the area. Many neighbors were bitterly opposed to one another, and severe heartache touched everyone. Lincoln’s writing places the reader in the midst of that turmoil. Her research is accurate and lends to a skillfully-designed background for Agnes Canon’s story. An example is her reference to Westport Landing. It is a little-known fact (even to most Missourians) that this original port on the Missouri River, located in the vicinity of today’s Grand and Main Streets, resulted in present-day Kansas City. This heartfelt book will likely impress even the most seasoned historians.” -William R. Reynolds, Jr. author of Andrew Pickens: South Carolina Patriot in the Revolutionary War and The Cherokee Struggle to Maintain Identity in the 17th and 18th Centuries

“Years ago in fiction workshop, this manuscript leaped out at me with the most memorable opening line I’d seen in forever: “I saw a woman hanged on my way to the Pittsburgh docks.”

On revisiting this story several years after my first beta-read of the whole novel, I was struck by how many details and scenes I remember. Historical fiction is not for the lazy writer. The tremendous amount of research that skilled writers weave into the narrative are simply amazing.

I’m afraid I’ll be guilty of plot spoilers if I mention some of my favorite scenes or the tragic events that really happened. I will say Jabez has a first wife, and Agnes befriends her to her dying day. That first wife has a fascination for what today would sound like New Age mysticism. Any reader who hates reading about war should keep going, because all sorts of intriguing historical issues and beliefs come to light in Agnes Canon’s world.

The prose is polished, the story spellbinding, the authenticity both inspiring and heartbreaking. Five stars!” -Carol Kean Blog, Book Reviews, Cosmic Rants

Buy the Book

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

Powell’s

Agnes Canon’s War Blog Tour Schedule

Monday, December 8 Review at Forever Ashley Review at Back Porchervations

Tuesday, December 9 Interview at Caroline Wilson Writes

Wednesday, December 10 Review at Too Fond

Friday, December 12 Review at Just One More Chapter Guest Post at Mina’s Bookshelf

Monday, December 15 Review at Luxury Reading

Wednesday, December 17 Review at Book Babe Guest Post at Let Them Read Books

Thursday, December 18 Review at Griperang’s Bookmarks

Friday, December 19 Review at Boom Baby Reviews Interview at Layered Pages

Agnes Canon's War book tour banner

 

 

 

Book Blast: The Iris Fan by Laura Joh Rowland

02_The Iris Fan Cover

Publication Date: December 9, 2014 Minotaur Books Formats: eBook, Hardcover

Series: Sano Ichiro Mystery Series (Book 18) Genre: Historical Mystery

Japan, 1709. The shogun is old and ailing. Amid the ever-treacherous intrigue in the court, Sano Ichirō has been demoted from chamberlain to a lowly patrol guard. His relationship with his wife Reiko is in tatters, and a bizarre new alliance between his two enemies Yanagisawa and Lord Ienobu has left him puzzled and wary. Sano’s onetime friend Hirata is a reluctant conspirator in a plot against the ruling regime. Yet, Sano’s dedication to the Way of the Warrior—the samurai code of honor—is undiminished.

Then a harrowing, almost inconceivable crime takes place. In his own palace, the shogun is stabbed with a fan made of painted silk with sharp-pointed iron ribs. Sano is restored to the rank of chief investigator to find the culprit. This is the most significant, and most dangerous, investigation of his career. If the shogun’s heir is displeased, he will have Sano and his family put to death without waiting for the shogun’s permission, then worry about the consequences later. And Sano has enemies of his own, as well as unexpected allies. As the previously unimaginable death of the shogun seems ever more possible, Sano finds himself at the center of warring forces that threaten not only his own family but Japan itself.

Riveting and richly imagined, with a magnificent sense of time and place, The Iris Fan is the triumphant conclusion to Laura Joh Rowland’s brilliant series of thrillers set in feudal Japan.

The Sano Ichiro Mystery Series Titles

Shinjū Bundori The Way of the Traitor The Concubine’s Tattoo The Samurai’s Wife Black Lotus The Pillow Book of Lady Wisteria The Dragon King’s Palace The Perfumed Sleeve The Assassin’s Touch The Red Chrysanthemum The Snow Empress The Fire Kimono The Cloud Pavilion The Ronin’s Mistress The Incense Game The Shogun’s Daughter The Iris Fan

Buy the Book

Amazon US

Amazon UK

Barnes & Noble

Book Depository

IndieBound

About the Author

03_Laura Joh Rowland

Granddaughter of Chinese and Korean immigrants, Laura Joh Rowland grew up in Michigan and where she graduated with a B.S. in microbiology and a Master of Public Health at the University of Michigan. She is the author of sixteen previous Sano Ichiro thrillers set in feudal Japan. The Fire Kimono was named one of the Wall Street Journal’s “Five Best Historical Mystery Novels”; and The Snow Empress and The Cloud Pavilion were among Publishers Weekly’s Best Mysteries of the Year. She currently lives in New Orleans with her husband. She has worked as a chemist, microbiologist, sanitary inspector and quality engineer.

For more information please visit Laura’s website. You can also follow her on Facebook.

The Iris Fan Blog Tour & Book Blast Schedule

Tuesday, December 9 Book Blast, Excerpt, & Giveaway at Passages to the Past

Wednesday, December 10 Review at Oh, For the Hook of a Book Book Blast at Literary Chanteuse

Thursday, December 11 Review at Buried Under Books

Friday, December 12 Book Blast at Queen of All She Reads

Monday, December 15 Book Blast at Layered Pages

Tuesday, December 16 Review at Book Dilletante Interview at Dianne Ascroft’s Blog

Wednesday, December 17 Book Blast at CelticLady’s Reviews

Friday, December 19 Review at Unshelfish Book Blast at I’d So Rather Be Reading

Monday, December 22 Review at Broken Teepee

Tuesday, December 23 Review at Book Nerd

Monday, January 5 Review & Interview at Jorie Loves a Story

Wednesday, January 7 Review at Book Babe Review at Svetlana’s Reads and Views

04_The Iris Fan_Blog Tour & Book Blast Banner_FINAL