#BookReview: The Lido by Libby Page @LibbyPageWrites @RebeccaGray @orionbooks #TheLido #5Stars

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The Lido 

Book Blurb:

Meet Rosemary, 86, and Kate, 26: dreamers, campaigners, outdoor swimmers…

Rosemary has lived in Brixton all her life, but everything she knows is changing. Only the local lido, where she swims every day, remains a constant reminder of the past and her beloved husband George.

Kate has just moved and feels adrift in a city that is too big for her. She’s on the bottom rung of her career as a local journalist, and is determined to make something of it.

So when the lido is threatened with closure, Kate knows this story could be her chance to shine. But for Rosemary, it could be the end of everything. Together they are determined to make a stand, and to prove that the pool is more than just a place to swim – it is the heart of the community.

The Lido is an uplifting novel about the importance of friendship, the value of community, and how
ordinary people can protect the things they love.

The Lido will be available to buy in ebook and hardback on the 19th April 2018.  You can pre-order your copy here.

My Review:

I loved this book.  It’s been a while since I’ve read such an all round fantastic story that left such an impression on me.  I love reading a book that keeps you thinking about it for days to come.

The sense of community the author has created in the book is brilliantly done.  I loved learning about all the different people who use the lido and what effect it has on them.  The characters are so varied and each one has a different reason for using the Lido which was fascinating to read about.

The two main characters Rosemary and Kate are at opposite ends of their life and would probably not even be friends if it wasn’t for their shared interest in the Lido.  I loved how the lido made them both feel and how fighting to save it made them both do things that they hadn’t tried in a long time.  It was great to read about how the lido brought them and all the other characters together and helped Kate especially to fit in and make new friends.

Interspersed with the fight to save the lido is a beautiful love story of how Rosemary met, fell in love and lived with her husband George.  It is a wonderful story and brought joy to my heart and a tear to my eye in equal measure.  The lido, and the people who use it, seem to have played a part in each part of their journey which was so lovely to read about.

This is Libby Pages debut and I can’t wait to read her next one! If you like uplifting and inspiring reads with a bit of history and a love story you will love this book!

Huge thanks to Orion for my copy of this book via netgalley. A definite must read that I urge everyone to read!

About The Author:

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Libby Page wrote The Lido while working in marketing and moonlighting as a writer. The Lido has sold in over twenty territories around the world and film rights have been sold to Catalyst Global Media. After writing, Libby’s second passion is outdoor swimming. Libby lives in London where she enjoys finding new swimming spots and pockets of community within the city.

#BlogTour: The Silent Women by Terry Lynn Thomas @HQDigital @TLThomasBooks #TheSilentWomen #HistoricalThriller #5Stars #MustRead

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I’m very excited to be kicking off the blog tour for The Silent Women by Terry Lynn Thomas.  I thought this book was fabulous and I gave it five stars!

The Silent Women is available to buy on ebook now for the bargain price of £1.99! You can purchase your copy here.

Book Blurb:

Would you sell your secrets?

Catherine Carlisle is trapped in a loveless marriage and the threat of World War Two is looming. She sees no way out… that is until a trusted friend asks her to switch her husband’s papers in a desperate bid to confuse the Germans.

Soon Catherine finds herself caught up in a deadly mixture of espionage and murder. Someone is selling secrets to the other side, and the evidence seems to point right at her.

Can she clear her name before it’s too late?

My Review:

I really enjoyed this fascinating historical thriller. I Iove historical fiction especially when it is set around WW2 and features spies or the resistance.  It always helps add to the tension and atmosphere as you realise that some people might have actually done the things described in the book.  I always wonder if I would have had the courage to stand up to Hitler and try and make a difference.

This story drew me in from the very intriguing prologue regarding a tense situation.  I immediately wanted to read more to discover what happens to the characters involved and if they survived.

My favourite character was Catherine.  I really admired her strength, courage and determination.  It would have been very easy for her to toe the line and do as society and her family expected but the fact she doesn’t really shows her character.  It was quite startling reading about what rights a woman had at this time, which wasn’t actually that long ago, and how much control men had.  Cat really pushes against this and refuses to conform.  Her arguments with her sister in law were brilliant and helped add to some comic moments in the book.

The gradual unraveling of the mystery of what happened and who the spy was is brilliantly done and had me guessing until the end.  The pace of the book is perfect being neither too fast or slow and ensured that the book was quite hard to put down.

This is the first book by Terry Lynn Thomas that I have read and I look forward to reading more from her in the future.

Thank you to HQ Digital for my copy of this book and for inviting me onto the blog tour.

If you like thrilling historical fiction with some fabulous female characters you’ll love this book!

About The Author:

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Terry Lynn Thomas grew up the San Francisco Bay Area, which explains her love of foggy beaches, windy dunes, and gothic mysteries. When her husband promised to buy Terry a horse and the time to write if she moved to Mississippi with him, she jumped at the chance. Although she had written several novels and screenplays prior to 2006, after she relocated to the South she set out to write in earnest and has never looked back. Now Terry Lynn writes the Sarah Bennett Mysteries, set on the California coast during the 1940s, which feature a misunderstood medium in love with a spy. When she’s not writing, you can find Terry Lynn riding her horse, walking in the woods with her dogs, or visiting old cemeteries in search of story ideas.
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#BlogTour #CharacterSpotlight: Seas Of Snow by Kerensa Jennings #SeasOfSnow #BitsAboutBooks

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I’m on the blog tour today for Seas Of Snow by Kerensa Jennings.  This is a book I have heard a lot about and I can’t wait to read it.

Seas Of Snow was published in paperback on the 5th April 2018.  You can purchase a copy here.

I have a character spotlight on Uncle Joe to share with you, but first here is a little bit about the book.

Book Blurb:

In 1950s England, six-year-old Gracie Scott lives with her Mam and next door to her best friend Billy; she has never known her Da. When her Uncle Joe moves in, his physical abuse of Gracie’s mother starts almost immediately. But when his attentions wander to Gracie, an even more sinister pattern of behavior begins.

As Gracie grows older she finds solace and liberation in books, poetry, and her enduring friendship with Billy, with whom she escapes into the poetic fantasy worlds they create. But will fantasy be enough to save Gracie? Just how far will Uncle Joe’s psychopathic behavior go?

The story weaves between these events and the visits Billy pays many years later to an old friend, confused and dying in a hospice. It is here that he is forced to revisit the events of the past.

Character Spotlight:

Who is your character?

The character I am choosing to put in the spotlight today is Uncle Joe.

The inspiration for his/her character?

Although SEAS OF SNOW is set through the Second World War and in post-War fifties England, the story was inspired by a contemporary crime case.
I led the BBC News coverage of the investigation into a school caretaker who had murdered two little girls in Soham. I worked closely with Cambridgeshire Constabulary during the investigation as they gathered evidence – and I saw first-hand the brutality of the perpetrator’s crimes. I also got an extraordinary insight into the mind and motives of a psychopath.

The creation of your character?

Although my story is very different in many ways to the case I covered, the emotions it inspired in me is something I channelled closely in the creation of Uncle Joe. Dealing with the evidence associated with the case triggered in me everything from deep sadness to revulsion; from horror to disgust; from abject heartbreak to despair. I wrote the book partly as a means of catharsis. I wanted to explore whether evil is born or made.

Because SEAS OF SNOW uses perspective shift throughout the book, there are many passages written from Uncle Joe’s perspective. I found it an eviscerating and upsetting experience to write those passages. I had to use my imagination to synthesise what I had learned through my psychology studies, researching the behaviours and mindsets of psychopaths, and what I knew myself from the particular case that originally inspired SEAS OF SNOW. I would often break away afterwards, and find myself crying. But it was important I pushed myself to create something authentic and believable. I was making a monster, and I needed my readers to believe he was real.

Can you tell us a little about your character?

The story of SEAS OF SNOW is a sort of fairy tale with archetypes of good versus evil. The good tends to manifest as sweet, generous, kind. As for the evil…. let’s just say Uncle Joe is a very bad man. Through the book we learn about some of the aspects of his childhood and background that have shaped him. And we gradually discover more about the depravity of which he is capable, and the way he deludes himself. Some of his actions are unconscionable.

Does he/she have any similarities with anyone ‘real’?

What is fascinating when you study the psychology of psychopaths is you realise there are so many traits they have that you might recognise in people around you. The ability to lie, and manipulate. Hide in plain sight, like the school caretaker Ian Huntley did when he was interviewed by the media at the time of the disappearance of the two little girls in Soham.

Psychopaths are unable to experience empathy, but they can be very good at creating the illusion of empathy.

If so .. tell us more!

The truth is there are lots of people who are psychopaths – some of them are extremely high functioning, talented individuals. Some are even in high powered positions across society. What interests me is that not everyone who is a psychopath goes on to commit monstrous acts. I wrote SEAS OF SNOW partly to explore that dichotomy.

What do you like most about your character?

I deliberately made Uncle Joe a devastatingly attractive man with a beautiful body, handsome face and gorgeous voice. I wanted to create that sense of us not quite being able to believe our own eyes. It is very easy to apply fairy tale logic to real life… beauty equals goodness.

The brutal reality is that evil comes in all sorts of forms… it can shape-shift to suit its own intent. Uncle Joe has exquisite green eyes you could lose yourself in, and a physical attractiveness people find hard not to notice.
It was important to me to bring that dimension to life to help expose how our perceptions can be deceived; and to give the story a fairy tale quality where happy-ever-afters feel possible… but darkness often prevails.

What do you dislike about your protagonist’s character?

Gosh… where to start… the way his mind works… the pleasure he gains from causing pain… the way he strikes fear into people… the way he is able to convince himself and delude himself about certain things…

Would you and your character be friends ‘in real life’?

Never.

What’s Next?

In my next novel, there is another antagonist. The book is called EDGE IF RAIN and it is inspired by another case I worked on when I was a journalist and TV producer….. watch this space…

About The Author:

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Kerensa Jennings is a storyteller, strategist, writer, producer and professor.

Kerensa’s TV work took her all over the world, covering everything from geo-politics to palaeontology, and her time as Programme Editor of Breakfast with Frost coincided with the life-changing events of 9/11.

The knowledge and experience she gained in psychology by qualifying and practising as an Executive Coach has only deepened her fascination with exploring the interplay between nature and nurture and with investigating whether evil is born or made – the question at the heart of Seas of Snow. As a scholar at Oxford, her lifelong passion for poetry took flight.

Kerensa lives in West London and over the last few years has developed a career in digital enterprise.

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#BlogTour: The Madonna Of The Mountain by Elise Valmorbida @FaberBooks @joanna_brl #TheMadonnaoftheMountains #HistoricalFiction

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Book Blurb:

1923
Maria Vittoria is embroidering a sheet for her dowry trunk.

Her father has gone to find her a husband. He’s taken his mule, a photograph and a pack of food: home-made sopressa sausage, cold polenta, a little flask of wine – no need to take water – the world is full of water.

There are no eligible men in this valley or the next one, and her father will not let her marry just anyone, and now, despite Maria’s years, she is still healthy. Her betrothed will see all that. He’ll be looking for a woman who can do the work.

Maria can do the work. Everyone in the contrà says that.

And the Lord knows Maria will need to be able to work. Fascism blooms as crops ripen, the state craves babies just as the babies cry for food. Maria faces a stony path, but one she will surely climb to the summit.

In this sumptuous and elegant novel you will taste the bigoli co l’arna, touch the mulberry leaves cut finer than organdie, and feel the strain of one woman attempting to keep her family safe in the most dangerous of times.

The Madonna Of The Mountain was published by Faber & Faber on the 27th March in ebook and hardback.  You can purchase your copy here.

My Review:

The Madonna Of The Mountains is a saga like story following Maria and her family from 1923 through to after the second world war.  It is a beautifully told story about love in later life, for that time anyway.  I really felt for Maria who fears she will be ‘left on the shelf’ at 25! It was very poignant to read about her weighing up her good points, trying to convince herself that she has a lot to give her future husband.  Her helplessness in this situation is heartbreaking, particularly as she has no say in what happens.

Maria was my favourite character and I loved reading about the journey she goes through throughout the novel.  She has to grow up quickly in a short amount of time and her ability to adapt and make do was very admirable.  Her strength and determination to make her marriage work and keep her family safe was beautiful to read about and I admired her courage.

The book is set in an interesting period of Italian history which was fascinating to read about.  I love learning about new periods of history and as I didn’t know much about this period I found it very interesting.  The affect of the rise of fascism in everyday life and the war years were the most fascinating part of the book for me.  I’ve always been amazed by how quickly it took off in Italy and how easily people followed it.  The Mulberry farming and the keeping of silkworms was great to read about too as again I hadn’t read much about it before.

As you might expect in a book set in Italy, food is mentioned and I enjoyed reading the sometimes mouth watering descriptions.  The author has included a few recipes in the back of the book for some of the food mentioned and I will definitely be trying some of them in the near future.

The book has a bit of a slow start as there isn’t a lot of action and a lot about Maria’s thoughts or musings.  The author’s writing style is a little different to what I’m used to and took me a little bit to get used to but it soon gets interesting so I would urge everyone to continue as it does pick up.

If you like family sagas or Italian history you will enjoy this book.  Thank you to Joanna Lee and Faber and Faber publishers for my copy of this book and for inviting me onto the blog tour.

About The Author:

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Elise Valmorbida’s new novel The Madonna of the Mountains is to be published by Faber & Faber (UK) in March/April 2018, and by Spiegel & Grau (USA) in June 2018.

Her debut novel Matilde Waltzing – also historical fiction – was published in Australia to critical acclaim. The TV President was described by The Times Literary Supplement as “luridly entertaining fiction”, and The Winding Stick was reviewed as “a literary classic”. Her non-fiction work, The Book of Happy Endings, has been published on four continents in four languages.

Elise won the Trailblazer Award (Edinburgh International Film Festival) for her role as producer and script consultant of indie Britfilm SAXON. She wrote ‘The Making of a Guerrilla Film’ story which was published with SAXON the screenplay.

Elise teaches creative writing at Central Saint Martins and Arvon. Her literary agent is Clare Alexander of Aitken Alexander Associates.

http://www.elisevalmorbida.com
https://www.facebook.com/elise.valmorbida

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#BlogTour #Giveaway: Hall Of Mirrors by Christopher Fowler @annecater @Peculiar @sophiechristoph @DoubledayUK #HallOfMirrors #RandomThingsTours

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I’m so excited to be on the blog tour for Hall Of Mirrors, the 15th book in the Bryant & May series by Christopher Fowler and have a copy to giveaway!

Hall Of Mirrors is available to buy now in ebook and hardback.  You can buy a copy of this book here.

Details of how to enter the giveaway are available below but first here is a bit about the book.

Book Blurb:

The year is 1969 and ten guests are about to enjoy a country house weekend at Tavistock Hall. But one amongst them is harbouring thoughts of murder. . .
The guests also include the young detectives Arthur Bryant and John May – undercover, in disguise and tasked with protecting Monty Hatton-Jones, a whistle-blower turning Queen’s evidence in a massive bribery trial. Luckily, they’ve got a decent chap on the inside who can help them – the one-armed Brigadier, Nigel ‘Fruity’ Metcalf.
The scene is set for what could be the perfect country house murder mystery, except that this particular get-together is nothing like a Golden Age classic. For the good times are, it seems, coming to an end. The house’s owner – a penniless, dope-smoking aristocrat – is intent on selling the estate (complete with its own hippy encampment) to a secretive millionaire but the weekend has only just started when the millionaire goes missing and murder is on the cards. But army manoeuvres have closed the only access road and without a forensic examiner, Bryant and May can’t solve the case. It’s when a falling gargoyle fells another guest that the two incognito detectives decide to place their future reputations on the line. And in the process discover that in Swinging Britain nothing is quite what it seems…
So gentle reader, you are cordially invited to a weekend in the country. Expect murder, madness and mayhem in the mansion!

UK only Giveaway:

I’m thrilled to be hosting a giveaway for a paperback copy of Hall Of Mirrors by Christopher Fowler.

To be in with a chance of winning this fabulous sounding book all you have to do is retweet the pinned tweet on my Twitter page and tag some friends who you think would be interested in this giveaway!

If you are on Facebook then like and then share the post on my Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/Over-The-Rainbow-Book-Blog-1699785863378672/

This Giveaway will be open for a day, so make sure you get your entry in! Good luck everyone.

About The Author:

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Christopher Fowler was born in Greenwich, London. He is the multi award-winning author of 45 novels and short story collections, and the author of the Bryant & May mysteries. His novels include ‘Roofworld’, ‘Spanky’, ‘Psychoville’, ‘Calabash’ and two volumes of memoirs, the award-winning ‘Paperboy’ and ‘Film Freak’. In 2015 he won the CWA Dagger In The Library. His latest books are ‘Wild Chamber’ and ‘Hall Of Mirrors’. His most recent collection ‘Red Gloves’, 25 stories of unease, marked his first 25 years of writing. Other recent novels include the comedy-thriller ‘Plastic’, the haunted house chiller ‘Nyctophobia’ and the JG Ballard-esque ‘The Sand Men’.

He has written comedy and drama for BBC radio, script, features and columns for national press, graphic novels, the play ‘Celebrity’ and the ‘War Of The Worlds’ videogame for Paramount, starring Sir Patrick Stewart. His short story ‘The Master Builder’ became a feature film entitled ‘Through The Eyes Of A Killer’, starring Tippi Hedren. Among his awards are the Edge Hill prize 2008 for ‘Old Devil Moon’, the Last Laugh prize 2009 for ‘The Victoria Vanishes’ and again in 2015 for ‘The Burning Man’.

Christopher has achieved several ridiculous schoolboy fantasies, releasing a terrible Christmas pop single, becoming a male model, writing a stage show, posing as the villain in a Batman graphic novel, running a night club, appearing in the Pan Books of Horror and standing in for James Bond. After living in the USA and France he is now married and lives in London’s King’s Cross and Barcelona.

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#Blogtour: What Lies Within by Annabelle Thorpe @annabellet @meadolivia @QuercusBooks #WhatLiesWithin

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I’m kicking off the blog tour for What Lies Within by Annabelle Thorpe today.

What Lies Within was published in ebook on the 5th of April 2018 and is currently the bargain price of 99p.  You can purchase your copy here.

Book Blurb:

An intense, claustrophobic psychological novel about the dark side of expat life, and what being out of your comfort zone can do to you, set in the vibrant souks and ancient riads of Marrakech

A unique friendship, built on a lie

Freya, Paul and Hamad. Three friends from two different worlds; a seemingly unshakeable bond, suddenly under threat.

A move that would change all their lives.

The trio have stayed close since university despite Freya and Paul’s marriage and Hamad’s wealthy lifestyle – so different from their own. Then an incredible job offer from Hamad sees Paul and Freya move to Morocco.

A city where nothing is as it seems

Marrakech soon proves a perplexing place to live. Instead of reinvigorating their marriage, Freya finds the move is driving them apart. Revelations about their shared past force her to acknowledge that neither Paul nor Hamad is quite the man she thought. When a shocking crime is committed, Freya finds herself cast adrift in the dark corners of a bewildering city, unsure who to trust or to believe.

My Review:

This was a very atmospheric, emotional and addictive book which I thoroughly enjoyed.  It’s a bit of a slow burner and it isn’t fast paced so don’t go into the book expecting a thriller as you will be disappointed.  Rather the author takes time to allow the reader to get to know her characters, setting and the relationship between the three which made me feel a lot closer to the characters and therefore more invested in what was going to happen.  It’s the gradual unveiling of the relationship and the secrets each of them have that helps to create the tension in the book, as we discover the holes in what is outwardly a very unique and happy friendship.

My favourite Character was Dame Edith.  I loved her formidable character and how she had the confidence to make what she wanted happen, not a women to be messed with.  She knows what she wants and goes for it which was very admirable, though frustrating for those who disagreed or though differently to her.  I enjoyed reading about her past and what she had got up to in her life.  I also had a soft spot for Freya who I felt a bit sorry for.  It was quite emotional watching her trying to save her marriage and recreate the happiness Paul and her had enjoyed at the beginning.

The author’s descriptions of Marrakesh were very vivid and made it very easy to picture the setting.  I felt that I could picture where the story was set as clear as if I was there experiencing it all alongside the characters.  I could imagine the noise of the market, picture all the beautiful colours and feel the heat and dust of the place.  I really want to go visit the country now so I can experience it all first hand, though maybe I’ll avoid becoming an expat considering what happens in this book!

This is the author’s second book but the first I have read and I look forward to reading more from her in the future.

Huge thanks to Olivia Mead and Quercus for inviting me onto the blog tour and for my copy of this book.

If you enjoy atmospheric, character driven novels then you will love this book!

About The Author:

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Annabelle Thorpe has been a travel and features journalist for fifteen years, writing for national print and online media. She currently works as a freelance, writing mostly for the Times, Telegraph and Guardian, alongside copywriting, non-fiction travel books and PR consultancy work for the National Trust. Alongside her journalism, Annabelle completed an MA in Contemporary History in September 2012 and is an alumna of Curtis Brown Creative. She lives in Ditchling, East Sussex. Follow Annabelle on Twitter @annabellet or visit her website  www.annabellethorpe.co.uk

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#Interview: Alexandra Clare @_alexandraclare @ImpressBooks1 @natalie_rose_c #He’sGone #She’sFallen

I’m very excited to be able to share my Q&A with Alexandra Clare, author of He’s Gone and She’s Fallen.

Both books are now available to buy in ebook and paperback here.

Before I share my Q&A with you, here is a little bit more about the books.

Book Descriptions:

He’s Gone:

How do you find a missing child when his mother doesn’t believe you have the right to even exist? When Detective Inspector Roger Bailley returns to work as Robyn, all she wants is to get on with the job she loves while finally being herself. When toddler Ben Chivers is snatched from a shopping centre on her first day back at work, Robyn has to find Ben and herself as she deals with the reactions of her police colleagues, the media and her own daughter.

She’s Fallen:

A SUSPICIOUS FALL

Nineteen-year-old Shazia Johar has everything to live for. But when she is found critically injured after plunging from a hotel balcony, DI Robyn Bailley must determine why she fell. Was Shazia pushed or did she jump?

A BROKEN WOMAN

When Robyn’s team investigate the events that led to Shazia’s fall, they discover evidence of violence in the hotel room. What happened and who is responsible?

A DEATH

As Shazia’s life hangs in the balance, Robyn’s team discover the body of another hotel guest. With uncertainty and falsehood disturbing both investigations, Robyn must navigate the web of lies under continued criticism of her new identity from her ex-wife and her daughter.

Q&A:

What do you do when you are not writing?

Photography is my other passion – just like writing, I love finding little details and capturing them, whether it’s a detail on a building or something natural. It was a bit of a cheat to make my character’s hobby photography but at least it meant she would know what she was talking about.

Do you have a day job as well?

I do and I enjoy it because it puts you into the middle of human interactions. Someone wants something, the other person may or may not want to give it to them, you can observe, watch the interactions and have a wonderful source of material.

How did you choose the genre you write in?

In a way, my genre, crime, chose me. I came up with the idea of a character who would suffer discrimination but not be stopped by it. For her to work, she needed to have authority and be in a position where someone who wouldn’t normally talk to a transgender person would have no choice but to deal with her. A detective inspector was a perfect choice.

Where do you get your ideas?

I am very nosy and everywhere I go, I ask myself, what is going on? There may be someone sitting opposite me on the train who is constantly checking the time – what are they late for? A man struggles with a bag that looks too heavy for its size – what’s inside? The real explanations may be very prosaic but there you have the seeds of stories.

Do you ever experience writer’s block?

Sometimes, I will get stuck on a scene and can’t work out how to proceed. My approach is to mark it and move on until I can see what happens next. The answer to the plot hole normally pops into my mind at some strange time, often when I’m walking in the fresh air.

Do you work with an outline or just write?

I need an outline. The route to the end may change as I go along but I have to know where I’m going.

Is there any particular author or book that influenced you either growing up or as an adult?

I love books which create a place for you to get lost in. One of my early favourites was the Chronicles of Narnia because here was this whole world, with its own rules, geography and characters. On a slightly less ambitious scale, I’ve created my own town to set my novels, with its own history and tourist attractions, which was a lot of fun.

What was the hardest scene to write?

My character’s scenes with her daughter because this relationship is so important to Robyn and, when things go wrong, I really feel like I’m hurting her.

How did you come up with the title?

The first in the series, He’s Gone, has a double meaning, referring to both the case to be solved of a missing toddler and the start of Robyn’s journey. She’s Fallen does the same.

About The Author:

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After nearly twenty years of being a committed corporate person, Alex Clare was made redundant. She had always enjoyed writing, studying fiction part-time through the Open University and managing to complete a novel in her commuting time, though no one had ever read it. Now, with lots more time on her hands, there was the opportunity to take writing more seriously. She began to enter competitions and joined a writing group, which encouraged her to try out new genres and styles. After a period focusing on short stories, she wanted to try another novel. Inspiration came from watching Parliament debate the Equal Marriage Act in 2013. Astounded by the intensity of feeling generated, she created a fictional world to explore some of the issues and attitudes. Now working again she is working on her second novel, in her usual place, on a London commuter train.

#BlogTour #Extract: Black Water by Cormac O’Keeffe @CormacJOKeeffe @bwpublishing @LinaLanglee

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I’m excited to be kick of the blog tour for Black Water by Cormac O’Keeffe today.

Black Water will be published on the 19th of April 2018 in ebook and paperback but you can pre-order your copy here.

I have an exclusive extract to share with you but first here is a little bit about the book.

Book Blurb:

I killed the boy . . .

Jig loves football and his dog, hates school, misses his dead granda and knows to lie low when his ma’s blitzed on the vodka.

He’s just an ordinary boy on the brutal streets alongside Dublin’s Grand Canal. Streets that are ruled by Ghost and his crew. And now Ghost inked, vicious, unprincipled has a job for Jig.

A job that no one can afford to go wrong not the gangs, the police, the locals, and least of all not Jig.

Extract:

PROLOGUE

I’ve killed the boy.

Shay ground his teeth at the realisation.
The side of his head throbbed from the impact of the explosion and, with his nose split and swollen, he struggled to breathe as he ran.

Orange flames danced against a canvas of black. On the other side of the perimeter wall, he heard the canal waters hiss as crack- ling debris hailed down.

If the gang was inside the building they were blown to pieces, Jig with them.
A sheet of corrugated roofing slammed down in front of him, searing his shin. He winced, but forced himself on.
So, this is how it fucking ends: risking my life searching through rubble for bits of the boy. After everything I’ve sacrificed.

Somewhere behind, the detective shouted at him to come back. But, ahead, Shay thought he could make out screams. Distant sirens echoed along the warren of Dublin’s streets.
The remainder of the warehouse heaved and groaned. He was out of time.

Fuck it, I’ve nothing to lose.

He stumbled forward, his face bubbling with the heat. His ankle twisted over something loose on the ground, tipping him off balance. Spitting blood from his lips, he looked down and followed the forks of yellow light.
Something small was smouldering. It looked like a runner.

A child’s runner.

1:

Jig liked the word SNAP. The sound the wipers made when he
ripped them off the car. And when he wrote the letters on the page, his tongue curled against his lips.

He took the path in jumps, inches from the canal’s black waters. But when he saw the swans, he stopped. They were clustered here and there, asleep, their long necks curled into their backs, their heads buried under layers of thick white feathers. Like little soft icebergs, lit up by streaks of yellow from overhead lights and the silver haze of the moon.

He had slipped out of his gaff no bother. When the bottle fell from his ma’s bed onto the floor, and the snorting started, that was the green light. He had kept on his tracksuit and runners so he was ready to go. He remembered to put on his gloves before taking the wipers and the note out from under his Man U pillow.

The canal was still. A gust of wind wrapped around Jig’s face, carrying a waft of roasted sweetness from the brewery. He checked the time on his phone: 2 a.m.
He ran, the wipers in his gloved hands and the note in his pocket.
He had a job to do for Ghost.

Mary heard a noise at the front door, then footsteps running off,
light, like that of a child. She swung her arm to turn on the bedside
lamp and knocked something over. Easing herself out, she placed
the double picture frame back up, her eyes drawn towards the old photograph on the right. A fine big man, chest puffed out, a mop of black hair brushed to the side, eyes looking into the distance. It was her favourite of James.
She couldn’t help but glance at the photo next to it, taken years ago. Leo leaning forward, grabbing a friend’s head at his nine- teenth birthday party, beaming a wide and wet smile.
Frozen images melted in her mind. James, sitting at the front window, watching and waiting for Leo to come home. James, on his deathbed in hospital, refusing to let the cancer hollow him out without seeing his son one last time. And Leo, when he did visit that time and looked for ten thousand euro.
‘Da, I need it, Da. They have a bullet for me . . .’
But James was lost in a nightmare world of pain and sweeping tides of morphine. Mary had roared at Leo to get out. It was the last time she heard from him. But not the last time she heard from the lowlifes who wanted their ten thousand euro.

She put on her slippers and reached for the dressing gown. At the tiny landing, she turned on the light for the bottom of the stairs and peered down. There were long black rods or something inside the door.

Instinctively she went to grab the railing, but stopped, remembering the top fitting had come out completely from the crumbling wall. She pressed her two hands against the walls either side and stepped down.
The black things were wipers. Her heart jumped.

Oh God, they must be from the car.
As she neared, she could see a piece of paper on the ground. A voice inside told her not to, but she picked it up, her hands shaking. She dragged a short breath.

SNAP. TALK TO COPS AGAIN UR NEK WIL B NXT. Blood drained from her body. Her legs buckled.
As she fell, her head smacked against the edge of the hall table. The force of the blow twisted her head and shoulders around and
she went crashing onto her back.

The note sailed into the air.
Her eyes fixed wide open, blinked once, then twice.

Jig ran his hand through the reeds. They were swaying and rustling now. He tingled at the sensation. The wind had grown teeth.

Lampposts rattled as he sprinted. The water was flowing stronger, spilling over the locks onto the chambers below.
He wondered what Ghost would say about the job. He imag- ined bony fingers tossing his hair and Ghost saying, ‘Good job, little man.’
I’ll be in big time with Ghost now, I will.
A swan stirred. It unfurled its neck and shook its tail.

Jig knew from the brown feathers it was a young swan. That was what his granda had said. A cygnet, he’d told him, was what they were called. He thought he could see a sprout of white feathers. Jig stopped and stared for a moment.

Then he karate-kicked the air and ran.

2

The blows rained down. White fists and red-raw knuckles crunching on bone. Shay shuddered at the pummelling to his arms and hands, tossed at his moans for mercy.

Noise was dragging him away from his dream.

Bang. Bang . . . Yang. Yang.
Shay peeled back the sheets and flexed his wrists. They often throbbed with the memories.

The intrusion was the scream of an alarm from outside.

He eased himself out of bed and shook his head, the racket aggravating his tinnitus. He stood up, his feet arcing at the touch of the cold floorboards. He loosened his tight boxers and stepped silently to the window. Opening a blind, he tried to pierce the darkness, but he couldn’t determine the source of the siren.

He curled back into bed behind Lisa, warmed his feet and fixed on her hair. For a moment he expected to see the ripples of long blonde curls. He moved to push them out of his face, away from his nose, like he used to, a few years ago. When his vision focused, it revealed short straight brown hair and a pale thin neck. He remembered the day she arrived home from the salon. He knew why she did it, but never brought it up. Nor did she.
The scumbag grabbed her hair and licked her neck, the fucking animal.
That, and what Shay did afterwards, had landed them here. To this life.
The sense of being fucked over, of being trapped, of trying and failing to get his life – their life – back, scratched at his skull and
clawed at his stomach.
The walls and windows began to shudder. The Garda helicopter must be overhead, he thought.
Red lights flashed behind the blinds. He got up and looked out again; a fire tender was coming to a stop. Away to his right was the source of the noise: a car, now ablaze. Thick yellow flames curled into the night.
Ghost and his crew at work again, he thought.
He would see Ghost at the next match, as usual. The boys nearly shat their arses if he even looked at them, they held him in such awe.

I know what Ghost’s game is. Digging his nails into some of the boys. Like Jig.
He strained his neck to try and see the helicopter, it seemed that close. But then the vibrations subsided as it pulled away, towards the canal.

The noise from the car became more tortured, screeching one second, then receding. Two firemen pulled hoses, like long, bulbous snakes, and extinguished the flames with bursts of foam. Massive plumes of smoke puffed up.

Upright on the edge of the bed, he pulled at the skin under his eyes, then glanced down at the thin frame curled tight under the sheets.

He fretted over her reaction, once the sleeping tablet wore off.

‘You see that?’
The morning light pained Shay’s eyes as he blinked them open. Lisa had her back to him, hands pressed hard against her hips.

‘Yeah, a car went up on fire,’ he said, keeping his tone measured and slipping out of bed. ‘You were out for the count.’
He started at the sight of the smouldering shell, bare and black in the bright morning sunshine.
‘What a lovely thing to have on your doorstep,’ Lisa said, casting a look in his direction. ‘I bet you it will be there into next
week before those useless lumps in the council remove it.’
She scrunched up her nose at the smell of molten metal which
had infected the room. Shay knew she was being pulled down. His stomach tensed.
‘Brilliant,’ she said.
Shay watched three kids running from different directions to the car, whooping with delight. They circled the wreckage, kicking at it. Another boy, around six or so, emerged screaming, dragging a golf club behind him, the head of it scraping and slapping off the road. As he neared the car, he arced it up over his head and slammed it down on the bonnet, greeted by hoots.
Lisa recoiled at the noise, her face tightening.
‘Why car all burnt, Daddy?’ came a little voice from below. Charlie had crept past them. Molly followed. They put their
hands on the window sill and stood up on their tiptoes.

‘They’re bold boys,’ Molly scolded, pointing her finger at them,
‘they shouldn’t be doing that.’
Lisa turned her back on the window, and the kids. Shay saw the moistness in her eyes as she shuffled towards the door.

‘Listen, Lisa . . .’
Shay wanted to say something more, but couldn’t find the words. Lisa turned, her features tight against her pale skin.
‘What?’ she said.
Shay sensed the kids stiffen, looking up at them.
‘Well?’ she said. ‘What were you going to say? That we’ll be out of here soon?’
‘We will, Lisa. It can’t be much longer, won’t.’
‘Can’t or won’t? Which?’
Shay moved forward to hold her shoulder, to reassure her, but she shrugged him away. The kids jumped now at the banging outside. The hammering was getting more frantic.
‘You’ve been saying the same thing since we were dumped here,’ Lisa said. ‘A lot of our stuff is still in boxes. We’ve nothing up on the walls,’ she said, swinging her thin arms around. ‘We barely have any shelves. We’re half-living here.’
She paused. But he knew what was coming.
‘You said it’d be a year.’
‘I know,’ Shay replied, his stomach clamping. ‘But what can I
do? It’s not my fault.’
Her face strained again at the clang of metal on metal.
‘Isn’t it?’

About The Author:

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Cormac O’Keeffe is the award-winning Security Correspondent for the Irish Examiner, where he has worked for nearly 20 years. His work has given him unique access to contacts both in the police and the community. Cormac has lived in gangland communities near the Grand Canal in Dublin for many years and his professional and personal lives have informed and fuelled his novel, giving it an intensity, authenticity and originality which can only come from personal experience. Cormac O’Keeffe runs a regular blog about his writing, is a respected book reviewer and appears frequently on national radio and television.

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#BlogTour: Too Close To Breathe by Olivia Kiernan @LivKiernan @annecater @riverrunbooks #TooCloseToBreathe #RandomThingsTours #FiveStars

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Book Description:

FIND THE KILLER WHO LIKES TO PLAY DEAD
A bold, brilliant new crime thriller – perfect for fans of Tana French, Jane Casey and Gillian Flynn

TOO SOON TO SEE

Polished. Professional. Perfect. Dead. Respected scientist Dr Eleanor Costello is found hanged in her immaculate home: the scene the very picture of a suicide.

TOO LATE TO HIDE

DCS Frankie Sheehan is handed the case, and almost immediately spots foul play. Sheehan, a trained profiler, is seeking a murderer with a talent for death.

TOO CLOSE TO BREATHE

As Frankie strives to paint a picture of the killer, and their victim, she starts to sense they are part of a larger, darker canvas, on which the lines between the two blur.

Too Close To Breathe was published on the 5th April 2018 by River Run Books.  You can buy a copy here.

My Review:

I really enjoyed this fascinating, thrilling and unusual thriller.  I was drawn straight into the story from the intriguing prologue and continued to be gripped throughout.  The plot is finely paced with clues and revelations revealed at a perfect pace to keep a reader interested but not too fast that you feel you are in danger of missing anything.  The murders are unusual ones which I won’t say more about for fear of ruining the story, but I was surprised and I haven’t read a book where people had been murdered the same way before.

I had a bit of a love/ hate relationship with the main character, Frankie.  On one hand I felt a bit sorry for her and what she had gone through.  She was quite a strong women and obviously highly respected by her colleagues.  On the other she seemed unduly mean to her colleagues and seemed to let her prejudices cloud her judgement.  I felt quite frustrated with her at times and how she conducted the investigation.  Baz and Clancy were my favourite characters as they seemed very kind towards Frankie, even when I felt she didn’t deserve it, which was very touching.  The banter between Frankie and them was very amusing and led to some light relief from the murder case. I liked that all the police officers,  weren’t the stereotypical grizzly or seasoned police officers but instead seemed to care for each other and worked well as a team.

I always enjoy learning new things from books and I’d never heard of The Dark Web and the type of sites that are featured on it.  I was fascinated to learn more about this and lost quite a few hours researching it on line.  The author has definitely done her research as everything mentioned in the book seems to be true.

I must confess I was a little confused at the beginning as there is a few references to a case Frankie had worked on previously and I thought I might have missed a book in the series when I thought Too Close To Breathe was a debut.  I soon worked out that this wasn’t the case and that the previous case is mentioned as it is relevant to the story.  I only mention it here in case others are similarly confused, it is meant to be this way!

As mentioned above this is Olivia Kiernan’s debut novel and I am so excited to read more by her.  If you like thrilling and unusual crime thrillers that you can’t out down you’ll love this book.

Huge thanks to Anne Cater and River Run Books for my copy of this book and for inviting me onto the blog tour.

About The Author:

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Olivia Kiernan is an Irish writer living in the UK and author of crime thriller, TOO CLOSE TO BREATHE. She was born and raised in County Meath, near the famed heritage town of Kells and holds an MA in Creative Writing awarded by the University of Sussex.
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#BlogTour #GuestPost: Pendle Fire by Paul Southern @sarahhardy681 @Bloodhoundbook @psouthernauthor

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Book Description:

Social worker Johnny Malkin is battling a crippling workload and a hostile local community. That’s on a good day: things are about to get a whole lot worse.
 
Two fourteen-year-old girls are foundwandering Aitken Wood on the slopes of Pendle Hill, claiming to have been raped by a gang of men. With no female social workers available, Johnny is assigned to their case. But what, at first, looks like yet another incident of child exploitation takes a sinister turn when the girls start speaking of a forthcoming apocalypse.
 
When Johnny interviews one of the girls, Jenna Dunham, her story starts to unravel. His investigation draws him into a tight-knit village community in the shadow of Pendle Hill, where whispers of witchcraft and child abuse go back to the Middle Ages.
 
One name recurs: The Hobbledy Man. Is he responsible for the outbreaks of violence sweeping across the country?
 
Is he more than just myth?

Pendle Fire was published on the 22nd March by Bloodhound books in ebook and paperback.  The ebook is currently only 99p and you can purchase a copy here.

Guest Post by Paul Southern:

Beginning writing a new book is like seeing the summit of Everest on a clear day and thinking you’ll be able to walk up there in a t-shirt. It’s a moment to be savoured. The rest of the climb may be full of dead-ends and false dawns, despairing plunges into abysses of uncertainty and crevices of doubt but, if you’re lucky, you’ll reach the summit some years later with your manuscript in hand. What is sure, however, is that the original idea you had on that clear day will have changed dramatically. When you look back down the mountainside at the route you’ve taken, you will realise how difficult and arduous was the journey, and how much you had to adapt it to keep it going. Writing a book is a slog, not a sprint.

The original idea for Pendle Fire came in 2008, when I was thinking of plots for a prospective TV series called Nightfall. Several episodes had been sketched out by a close friend of mine, the title of one being The Hobbledy Man. The plot of this episode wasn’t really fleshed out, but a line from the description always stayed with me: ‘The children on a local estate have a superstition about the Hobbledy Man who comes out of the shadows in the underpass: they believe the sighting of him is a precursor of the ending of the world.’ From that simple sentence, the seed of Pendle Fire was planted and over the years took root. The Hobbledy Man preyed on my mind and would not leave me.

The series was to be set in Lancashire (one episode was called ‘Lucifer Over Lancashire’ after The Fall’s song) and end up on Pendle Hill, where some great conflagration would take place. Pendle Hill is, of course, the home of the Pendle Witches. The witch trials of 1612 saw many innocent people lose their lives and set the established Church against the theology of witchcraft. King James I himself was sceptical of the evidence against them but it was his book on the subject, Daemonologie, which advocated their prosecution. I have always been interested in the twilight realm that exists between the possible and the impossible (see Killing Sound, 2014), and this historical basis added an extra layer of interest in the area and turned me towards the hill.
I like to know a place intimately before I write about it, so I took the first train up to Colne and went walking. I visited the Black Moss reservoirs and trudged through Aitken Wood and, all that day, a mist lay over the Pendle valley. The book started to take shape. Eerie locations appeared to my left and right – abandoned farmsteads, hillsides full of bracken and gorse, dark paths that led into stricken woods. This could easily be the birthplace of the Hobbledy Man. Belief in witchcraft may largely be dead, but it was easy to imagine what it must have been like at the time of the trials when old Demdike sold her soul to Tib. There is something wild and abandoned about the region still, something uncontained and dangerous. I now had a character and a location, I had historical links. I had atmosphere. What I needed now was a plot.

On the way back, I passed through the towns of Nelson and Burnley. They are typical of many in Lancashire, faded relics of a bygone age, old mill towns with nothing now to spin, with divided communities living cheek by jowl. In their own way, they seemed as abandoned and desolate as the hill.
When I returned to Manchester, the first thing I did was read about them. The local Burnley and Nelson newspapers were a mine of information. I wanted to get a feel for these places, hear what the local people said. What do the young people do? What happens at night? The answer appeared to be very little. Or, at least, very little which was spoken about.
In recent years, many northern towns have been plagued by grooming gangs. The national publicity given to cases in Rotherham and Rochdale has highlighted the issue. Sadly, these investigations are very much the tip of the iceberg. The polarisation of communities in northern towns has not helped community relations; nor has it allowed the authorities to effectively deal with the problems till it’s too late.
My first two books (The Craze and Brown Boys in Chocolate) were multi-racial crime thrillers that dealt with many issues in both the Muslim and white communities in Manchester. A novelist should never shy away from controversial subjects. If you find that you’re censoring yourself when you’re writing, then you’re doing what too many people have done in abuse cases. You’ve looked away and said nothing. I did the opposite. I started to talk to people on the ground and in authority.
Almost overnight, Pendle Fire had a contemporary political thread. Whereas, in the 17th century, the Devil’s work was seen in the practice of witchcraft and the exploitation of women, today it could be found in the practice of child abuse. The Devil was the master illusionist, blamed for tempting people to commit crimes. He knew the constitution of men and could take advantage of them. Conjury, lechery and magic were his calling cards. There was a casual offloading of guilt and responsibility which opened the door to the moral puritanism of the witchfinders. Today, that offloading has led to the suffering of too many vulnerable children, too much wringing of hands, and no solutions.

I had seen my Everest, or more aptly, Pendle Hill, now. It was not a clear day and it would have been impossible to get up there in a t-shirt, but the analogy still held true. It was the moment when I could see the way to the top and write the book. It was not till years later that I got it finished, of course, but in the end it didn’t let me down and I hope I didn’t let it down. I believe a good book should make you think at the same time it entertains. I hope you will be as changed when you read Pendle Fire as I was when I wrote it.

Thank you very much Paul for writing such a fascinating guest post.  

About The Author:

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Paul Southern was born in the 1960s to itinerant parents who moved from city to city. He lived in Liverpool, Belfast, London and Leeds, then escaped to university, where he nearly died of a brain haemorrhage. After an unexpected recovery, he co-formed an underground indie group (Sexus). Made immediate plans to become rich and famous, but ended up in Manchester. Shared a house with mice, cockroaches, and slugs; shared the street with criminals. Five years later, hit the big time with a Warners record deal. Concerts at Shepherd’s Bush Empire, Melody Maker front cover, Smash Hits Single of the Week, Radio 1 and EastEnders. Mixed with the really rich and famous. Then mixed with lawyers. Ended up back in Manchester, broke. He got a PhD in English (he is the world’s leading authority onTennyson’s stage plays!), then wrote his first novel, The Craze, based on his experiences of the Muslim community. He has three other published books and has written for ITV. He was shortlisted for a CWA Dagger award in 2002 and received positive reviews from national and international press, including The Guardian, Arena, Radio 4, Ladsmag, and Kirkus, amongst many others.
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