#BlogBlitz #GuestPost: Without Rules by Andrew Field @AFwithoutrules) @damppebbles #WithoutRules #damppebblesblogtours

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Good morning everyone I’m on the blog tour for Without Rules today and I have a great extract from the book to share with you.

Without Rules is available in ebook on the 15th October, pre-order your copy here.

Before I share my extract with you here is a little bit about the book.

Book Synopsis:

When a professional hitman turns up at Candy’s World to hide, China Mackie discovers her plan to flee from her abusive father has tragically backfired. A gruesome bloodbath has left four people dead on the streets of a northern city centre on a cold wet Sunday morning. China knows she’s next to die. Unless she is more ruthless than everyone else. She must improvise fast. Seduce her father’s assassin. Plead her case so he helps her escape in a fight to the death where rules don’t matter but the consequences do.

Guest Post: The ups and downs of book optioning for the movies

Books have always been a fertile breeding ground for film producers looking for original source material for their movies. It is a no brainer for film studios to option novels with an existing watertight workable plot and fully formed characters rather than start from scratch. It is the equivalent of starting a 100 metre dash seventy metres from the finish line while your competitors are messing about with character and tone on the starter’s blocks.
For authors it is a win-win situation for them as soon as their book is optioned and the cash has transferred into their bank accounts. They get paid even if the movie isn’t made within the timeframe agreement. Once this has elapsed, the rights revert back to the author to sell again. This is pretty lucrative in its own right. James Ellroy’s American Tabloid has been optioned three times without any director getting anywhere near shouting ‘action.’
That’s why it was great to see a well-known crime writer sharing her enthusiasm about a possible film adaptation of one of her books recently. Her excitement is well deserved and merited. After all, adapting books into films is free money for an author who has already done the hard graft. She is also very realistic about the developmental processes. While the writer/producer/director doesn’t have a fistful of dosh, he is happy for her to co-script the film so she also adds another skill to her resume. Her pragmatic approach is to try and complete a first draft and see where they go from there.
Naturally, I’d love to emulate her success with Without Rules — although the story of China and Jak is just starting as the book has only just been published.
I’ve worked in PR and the creative industries my entire career and fully appreciate the obvious drawbacks. Once the film has been optioned, the author loses all creative control of their baby, unless they have the clout to negotiate a deal where they hold all the cards. Bad acting, a poor screenplay or a failure to retain the spirit of the source material are all potential pitfalls that can outweigh the financial rewards. And for every massive success such as JK Rowling’s Harry Potter films, there are many, many more disappointments. For every LA Confidential there is a Black Dahlia. Both were films adapted from James Ellroy, the first to universal acclaim, the latter best swept under the carpet.
Authors tend to be split on their views of the movies of their books, depending on the critical and box office reception or their unease at how their work has been reinterpreted and altered.
Anthony Burgess said: ”The film (of A Clockwork Orange) made it easy for readers of the book to misunderstand what it was about, and the misunderstanding will pursue me till I die.”
Bret Easton Ellis was not overly impressed with his debut. “American Psycho was a book I didn’t think needed to be turned into a movie. I think the problem with American Psycho was that it was conceived as a novel, as a literary work with a very unreliable narrator at the centre of it and the medium of film demands answers.”
Elizabeth Wurtzel was equally scathing about the limited-release Prozac Nation: “As you should have figured out by now, it’s a horrible movie… It’s just awful. If they thought it was good, they’d have released it long ago.”
However, others enjoyed the transition from paper to celluloid a lot more.
Gone Baby Gone author Dennis Lehane said: “I saw the movie and it’s terrific, I wasn’t going to say anything if I didn’t like it but it’s really terrific.”
LA Confidential writer James Ellroy said: “The movie is the best thing that happened to me in my career that I had absolutely nothing to do with. It was a fluke — and a wonderful one — and it is never going to happen again — a movie of that quality.”
And Annie Proulx, who wrote Brokeback Mountain, said: “I may be the first writer in America to have a piece of writing make its way to the screen whole and entire. And, when I saw the film for the first time, I was astonished that the characters of Jack and Ennis came surging into my mind again.”
To celebrate the publication of Without Rules, here are six personal snapshot assessments of films and books that have inspired me one way or another — for a bit of fun I’ve marked them out of 10 although this very subjective.

Jack’s Return Home (Ted Lewis) — 8
Film: Get Carter, 1971 — 9
Director: Mike Hodges

This iconic crime movie, which starred Michael Caine as adopted Londoner Jack Carter seeking revenge for his brother’s murder up north, was based on Ted Lewis’s book, originally titled Jack’s Return Home. I’ve watched the movie umpteen times since first viewing in my teens but only read the novel a couple of years ago. From the first page, you can see why it inspired director Hodges and actor Caine. Gritty northern noir sparsely written in less politically correct times, it follows Jack ruthlessly hunting down of his kid’s killers — terrifying everyone in his relentless pursuit as the body count rises. Both book and film spawned a thousand Brit imitators but very few equals.

You Were Never Really Here (Jonathan Ames) — 7
Film: You Were Never Really Here, 2018 — 6
Director: Lynne Ramsey

Released this year, the parallels between Joe and the young girl in You Were Never Really Here and Jak and China in Without Rules were an obvious motivation for me. I read the wafer-thin book first in a couple of hours. It is virtually a noir film treatment (unsurprising given Ames movie and TV background) but just as it gets started, it’s over. The book reaches inside Joe’s suicidal head far more effectively than the visually stunning but narratively stunted film.

Rum Punch (Elmore Leonard) – 8
Film: Jackie Brown, 1997 – 8
Director: Quentin Tarantino

I read so many of Elmore Leonard’s books when I was younger that is hard distinguish one from another — until you revisit them and the storylines come flooding back. He has an economy and ease of writing that contrasts with his razor-sharp plots and snappy dialogue. Jackie Brown is probably Tarantino’s best movie because every character doesn’t speak in Quentin’s voice. The look and feel and the soundtrack are so magnificent you can ignore DiNiro hamming it up.

The Killer Inside Me (Jim Thompson, 1952) – 9
Film: The Killer Inside Me, 2010 – 7
Director: Michael Winterbottom

The prolific Jim Thompson is right up there with Leonard and Ellroy in the ‘top dog’ noir crime writer stakes. The Killer Inside Me is his stand out novel (he wrote ten novels in two years in its aftermath, often penning one a month). The apparently amiable, pleasant and slightly dull-minded narrator is actually a sexual abuser and violently insane. The film received mixed reviews and was slammed by many for the sustained and savage graphic violence against women – it is a matter of opinion whether it drives the narrative or does this for shock value. For me less, is always more with graphic sex or violence.

No Country For Old Men (Cormac McCarthy) — 10
Film: No Country for Old Men, 2007 — 10
Director: The Coen brothers

I watched this glorious Coen western at the old Cornerhouse in Manchester. Then bought and read the book the next day. The lack of speech marks inspired the original version of the Wicked Games (which now forms the first third of Without Rules, complete with quotations marks). Brilliantly sparse with very few descriptions, this is another book that could double as a film treatment (Cormac originally envisaged NCFOM as a screenplay). The world weariness evident in the book contrasts with dominant omnipresent violence of Javier Bardem’s psychopathic Chigurh. You can rest assured, the Coens never expected that to happen when they made the movie.

LA Confidential (James Ellroy) – 8
Film: LA Confidential, 1997 – 9
Director: Curtis Hanson

Nobody did intense crime writing like James Ellroy. Many tried but they invariably fell short. His short staccato sentences and battering-ram raps and riffs took no prisoners, even if you haven’t got a clue what was happening with the incredibly complicated narrative. LA Confidential was good but American Tabloid was his masterpiece. He had not slipped yet into the caricature that dogged his most recent efforts like The Cold Six Thousand, Blood’s A River and Perfidia. The movie was brilliant as per the ‘fluke’ quote from James earlier in this blog. Brilliantly directed, written, casted, acted, especially Kim Bassinger and Russell Crowe.

About The Author:

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Andrew Field has spent most of his working life as a PR and marketing consultant helping raise the profiles of others. Now the roles are reversed as he steps into the spotlight as the author of Without Rules, a crime thriller about vulnerable people forced to do bad things to escape evil people. “Authors, by the nature of what they do, are relatively introverted. They work in isolation. Inhabit imaginary worlds of their own creation. They can spend ages staring at a computer screen bringing their characters to life. Then they have to become a different person to promote their work and market themselves. Writing is the easy part compared to the marketing, especially when crime fiction has become a very crowded marketplace.”

“From my point of view, professional PR people operate best from behind the scenes. They should never become the story otherwise you’re deflecting attention away from the messages you’re trying to communicate,” says Andrew. “The New Labour experiment, for example, was doomed the minute Tony Blair’s media guru Alistair Campbell generated his own headlines. Bragged about ‘spin’.  Believed his own hype. Ditto Anthony “The Mooch” Scaramucci’s 10-day tenure as the shortest-serving White House communications director in history – and his “off the record” expletive-ridden rant about his colleagues in Donald Trump’s White House.”

As a PR, Andrew memorably handled Boddingtons Bitter during its “Cream of Manchester” heyday, developing innovative sports and cultural media partnerships with newspapers and TV stations for the beer brand – but also PR’d a fashion entrepreneur who was a convicted armed bank robber and a property developer who did eighteen months prison time for blackmail. “Having a diverse range of clients keeps it interesting. They are all different but the core requirement is to be seen as a believable and trusted information source ready to take advantage of PR opportunities as and when they arise. As a novelist, you look to do exactly the same with your work and yourself.”

“The catalyst for Without Rules was a friend testifying against her father in an abuse case. Although the prosecution was successful, she can never really escape the consequences of what happened to her. She has to find a way of coping for the rest of her life while he was sentenced to two and half years.”

Andrew says crime fiction has a duty to try and educate and as well as entertain. “The memorable books are the ones you’re still thinking about 48-hours after you finished reading.”

Andrew lives, works and plays in Manchester, England, Europe, with his partner, Catherine. He has been a trade journalist in Southampton in his youth. He owned a PR agency in the nineties and early noughties and is now an independent PR, marketing and publishing consultant looking forward to the challenge of becoming the story with the publication of Without Rules.

Connect with Andrew:

Website: http://andrewfield.info

Facebook: Andrew Field

Twitter: @AFwithoutrules

Instagram: @afnoir_

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#BlogTour #Giveaway: Chasing Ghosts by Madalyn Morgan @ActScribblerDJ @rararesources #ChasingGhosts

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Good morning everyone I’m on the blog tour for Chasing Ghosts by Madalyn Morgan today and as well as sharing my review I’ve also got details on how to win a copy of this book.

Chasing Ghosts is available now in paperback and ebook, with the ebook only 99p at the moment! Purchase your copy of both here.

Before I share my review and details of the giveaway with you, here is a little bit about the book.

Book Synopsis:

In 1949 after receiving treatment for shell shock in Canada, Claire’s husband disappears.
Has Mitch left her for the woman he talks about in his sleep? Or is he on the run from accusations of wartime treachery?

Claire goes to France in search of the truth, aided by old friends from the Resistance.

My Review:

Chasing Ghosts is a brilliant addition to the Dudley sister’s saga books.  I’ve read a lot of books set in World War Two but not many set just after so it was on to see how the world was still affected by all that had had.  The author has clearly done her research and there is lots of brilliant details about the period that really helps you to picture it in your mind.

Claire is a very strong, competent lady whose bravery in the war was very interesting to read about.  Her obvious concern and love for her husband is very touching to read about.  I enjoyed following her investigation into where her husband had gone and to finding out the truth behind the accusations against him.  This was particularly interesting as it takes the reader across Europe to learn more about the aftermath of the war there.

This isn’t a particularly fast paced book but that doesn’t matter as the reader is soon fully immersed in the story and the characters.  I enjoyed traveling alongside Claire whilst she discovers what has happened and there was lots of stuff happening that kept my interest until the end.

This is the first book by this author I have read and the first in the series.  While this could be read as a standalone I think it would be beneficial to read from the start as unlike a lot of other saga stories this doesn’t have a catch up chapter to let you know what the story is so far.

Huge thanks to Rachel from Rachel’s Random Resources for my copy of this book and for inviting me onto the blog tour.  If you like historical mysteries you’ll love this book.

About The Author:

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Madalyn Morgan was an actress for more than thirty years working in repertory theatre, the West End, film and television.

Madalyn was brought up in a busy working-class pub in the market town of Lutterworth in Leicestershire. She was Christened Madalyn Smith, the name she chose when she joined the actors union, Equity. Unfortunately, there was already an actress with that name, so with seconds to decide on another name Madalyn chose Morgan from a rum bottle. “The pub was a great place for an aspiring actress and writer to live. There were so many characters to study and accents learn.” At twenty-four Madalyn gave up a successful hairdressing salon and wig-hire business for a place at East 15 Drama College, and a career as an actress.

In 1990, Madalyn gave up acting for love and love gave her up in 2000. Rather than start again in the acting business, Madalyn became a radio presenter, taught herself to touch type, completed a two-year creative writing course with The Writer’s Bureau, and wrote articles for newspapers and magazines. After living in London for thirty-six years she has returned to Lutterworth, swapping two window boxes and a mortgage, for a garden and the freedom to write. And she is loving it.

Madalyn is currently writing her seventh novel.

Madalyn Morgan online:

Madalyn Morgan’s Blog: https://madalynmorgan.wordpress.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ActScribblerDJ
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/madalyn.morgan1

Book links:
Foxden Acres: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00BCX59LE/
Foxden Acres: Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBox21aU8TY

Applause: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00J7Y5LCW/
Applause Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFqzoVHMm9Y

China Blue: http://www.amazon.co.uk/China-Blue/dp/B00XD85NQW/
China Blue: https://youtu.be/NVv-lyE79xw

The 9:45 To Bletchley: https://www.amazon.co.uk/45-Bletchley-Dudley-Sisters-Saga-ebook/dp/B01GEVW3Z8/

Foxden Hotel: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Foxden-Hotel/dp/B071LDYD2D/
Trailer: https://youtu.be/o997cXtWWLg

Chasing Ghosts: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07D42HP1Q/

Author picture and bio from Amazon.
Giveaway:

Giveaway – Win signed copies of China Blue and Chasing Ghosts (UK Only)

*Terms and Conditions –UK entries welcome. Please enter using the Rafflecopter box below. The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then I reserve the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over. Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time I will delete the data. I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.

Over The Rainbow Book Blog is not responsible for this giveaway. For any further details, please contact Rachel’s Random Resources.

 

 

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#BlogBlitz: Malignant by Anita Waller @Bloodhoundbook @anitamayw #Malignant #99p

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Book Synopsis:

What if a death sentence meant you could get away with murder?

Claudia and Heather have been friends and neighbours for many years and both women decide it is the right time for them to leave their husbands. Together they get a flat but their peace is short-lived when Claudia is diagnosed with a terminal illness.

Being a good friend, Heather takes on caring for Claudia but a lethal meeting with James, Claudia’s ex-husband, results in someone dying.

As life for Claudia and Heather begins to unravel, the answer to their problems becomes clear… it’s murder.

Malignant is available in paperback and ebook now.  The ebook is currently only 99p.  You can purchase your copy of both here.

My Review:

I’m a huge fan of Anita Waller and I couldn’t wait to read her latest book Malignant.  I was not disappointed as Malignant is a fantastic book that manages to combine a crime story with a heartbreaking one amazingly well.

I absolutely loved the two main female characters Heather and Claudia.  They are such wonderful strong individuals that show a lot of strength and courage to do what they do and start again.  I warmed to them straight away and wanted things to go right for them, getting overly cross when they started to go wrong.  I wanted to keep reading to see if they’d get the happy ending I felt they deserved.

This is described as a psychological thriller and that side of the book is done extremely well too.  There are lots of twists and turns as well as moments that made me gasp out loud which did help make the book hard to put down.  However, in my opinion, this is eclipsed by the human aspect of the story and the heart breaking things that the characters face.

I’ve read most of Anita’s books but I think this one is my favourite so far as I felt so engaged with the characters.  I think it’s definitely a story that I’ll remember for a while.  If you like emotional psychological thrillers with some fabulous character yoully love this book.

Huge thanks to Sarah and Emma from Bloodhound books for inviting me onto the blog tour and sending me a copy of this book.

About The Author:

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Anita Waller was born in Sheffield, South Yorkshire in 1946. She married Dave in 1967 and they have three adult children.
She began writing when she was around 8 years of age, writing ‘compositions’ at junior school that became books with chapters. She wrote several novels in the romance genre and then realised she wanted to add murders to the romances, so she morphed into a psychological thriller author. Beautiful was her first completed novel in this genre.
The manuscript was submitted to Bloodhound Books who, within three days of reading it, offered her a contract. 31 August 2015 it was released as an ebook, to be followed a couple of days later by the paperback version.
Following the outstanding success of Beautiful, she began a sequel on 27 December 2015, finishing it on 19 March 2016. The new novel, Angel, was launched on 7 May 2016.
Her third novel, 34 Days, followed Angel and was launched on 3 October 2016 to outstanding success; at its highest level, it was #26 in Amazon charts. It is selling equally as well in the US and Australia and has sold over 15,000 copies in the first eight weeks following publication.
She then took time out to temporarily change genre; Winterscroft, a supernatural novel, was launched on 7 February 2017. While she was writing Winterscroft it became clear that fans of 34 Days wanted a sequel, and on 10 August 2017, Strategy was launched.
She is now working on her sixth novel, A Legal Issue, once again set in Sheffield, and once again a psychological thriller.
In addition to writing, she also teaches patchwork and quilting – a little reference to this is likely to surface in every book!
She is a lifelong Sheffield Wednesday supporter with blue blood in her veins! More than a little reference to this is likely to surface – see 34 Days!Her genre is murder – necessary murder.

 

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#BlogTour: The Wife’s Secret by Kerry Wilkinson @bookouture @kerrywk #TheWifesSecret

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Book Synopsis:

Charley Willis was thirteen years old when her parents were killed in their family home and she was found hiding in a cupboard upstairs.

Fifteen years later, Charley is marrying Seth Chambers. It should be the happiest day of their lives, a chance for Charley to put her past behind her, but just hours after the ceremony, she is missing.

No one saw her leave. No one knows where she is.

One thing is for certain…Seth is about to discover he doesn’t really know the woman he just married. And his nightmare is only just beginning.

A totally gripping psychological thriller that will keep you reading until the very last jaw-dropping twist.

The Wife’s Secret is available in ebook and paperback now.  The ebook is currently only £1.99.  You can purchase your copy of both here.

My Review:

The Wife’s Secret is a very intriguing thriller which I really enjoyed reading.  The theme of a person having a secret past and going missing on their weddings day isn’t a new one but Kerry manages to breathe new life into it.

The story is told from two points of view.  One follows Seth as the new husband of the missing Charley as he tries to get to the bottom of her sudden disappearance.  The other flashes back to the past slowly revealing bits of Charley’s mysterious past.  Through a series of flashbacks we follow the murder investigation and lives of Charley’s and her sister from the view point of the people involved.

The characters in this book are just fantastic! They are really well developed with a great back story and personality that is described so well that you feel like you know them personally.  My favourite character was Martha as I really admired her strength and her willingness to stand up for her sister when necessary.

I did guess the big twist quite early on and who had murdered Charley’s parents but that didn’t stop me enjoying this book.  It was a really well told story that had lots of twists and turns which did make me doubt myself at times.  Ultimately even though I was right I did enjoy the journey the author weaves and it kept my attention until the end.

I’m a big fan of this author and have read most of his books . I look forward to reading more from him in the future.

Huge thanks to Noelle from Bookouture for inviting me onto the blog tour and for my copy of this book via Netgalley.  If you like twisty, intriguing thrillers that makes you think you’ll enjoy this book.

About The Author:

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Kerry Wilkinson has had No.1 crime bestsellers in the UK, Canada, South Africa and Singapore, as well as top-five books in Australia. He has also written two top-20 thrillers in the United States. His book, Ten Birthdays, won the RNA award for Young Adult Novel of the Year in 2018.

As well as his million-selling Jessica Daniel series, Kerry has written the Silver Blackthorn trilogy – a fantasy-adventure serial for young adults – a second crime series featuring private investigator Andrew Hunter, plus numerous standalone novels. He has been published around the world in more than a dozen languages.Originally from the county of Somerset, Kerry has spent far too long living in the north of England, picking up words like ‘barm’ and ‘ginnel’.

When he’s short of ideas, he rides his bike or bakes cakes. When he’s not, he writes it all down.

Recent and upcoming UK releases:
The Death And Life Of Eleanor Parker (standalone): Out now
The Wife’s Secret (standalone): 10 October 2018
Jessica Daniel 13: 14 January 2019
Andrew Hunter 3: 7 March 2019

Find out more at: http://kerrywilkinson.com or http://facebook.com/KerryWilkinsonBooks

Only Child by Rhiannon Navin @rhiannonnavin @MantleBooks @EllisKeene #OnlyChild #5Stars

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Good morning everyone and happy weekend.  To celebrate Only Child by Rhiannon Navin bring published in paperback last week, I’m re-sharing my review of this fantastic book.  Its been months since I first read this book and I’m still thinking of it now.

You can buy you copy of this fantastic book here.

Book Synopsis:

We all went to school that Tuesday like normal. Not all of us came home.

When the unthinkable happens, six-year-old Zach is at school. Huddled in a cloakroom with his classmates and teacher, he is too young to understand that life will never be the same again.

Afterwards, the once close-knit community is left reeling. Zach’s dad retreats. His mum sets out to seek revenge. Zach, scared, lost and confused, disappears into his super-secret hideout to try to make sense of things. Nothing feels right – until he listens to his heart . . .

But can he remind the grown-ups how to love again?

Narrated by Zach, Only Child is full of heart; a real rollercoaster of a read that will stay with you long after you’ve turned the final page.

My Review:

Only Child is an incredible, hard hitting and emotional story that I know will stay with me for a long time.

Firstly I don’t think I’ve ever read such a thrilling and haunting opening chapter! The description of Zach and his class hiding from the gunman was so vivid I felt like I was right there in the cupboard experiencing it along side of them.  Their fear is almost palpable and I felt my heart beat racing as I kept reading hoping they wouldn’t be discovered.  The pop sounds used to describe shots from a gun I almost felt physically as the descriptions of them were so brilliant.  Truly an amazing opening.

The story is narrated by six year old Zach who survives the shooting that kills his brother.  The reader follows him as he struggles to cope in the aftermath and especially with all the different feelings he has.  It was so sad to see him dealing with so much on his own as his parents are too self absorbed to help him with it.  I simultaneously wanted to give Zach a hug and his parents a shake!

The book is fairly fast paced as there is always something happening to keep the reader hooked.  It’s very easy to fall in love with Zach which makes you emotionally involved in the story.  I wanted to keep reading to check he was ok.

The ending was just perfect and I had tears running down my face as I read the last few pages.

This is the authors’s debut novel which is hard to believe at times as the writing is just exquisite! I really look forward to reading more from her in the future.

Huge thanks to Ellis Keene and Pan Macmillan publishers for my copy of this book.

About The Author:

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German by birth, Rhiannon Navin now lives in New York. She is married, with three children and two cats. This is her first novel.

#BlogTour: Betsy and Lilibet by Sophie Duffy @Legend_Press @sophiestenduffy #BetsyAndLilibet #HisFic #5Stars

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Book Synopsis:

London, 1926. Two baby girls are born just hours and miles apart. One you know as the Queen of England, but what of the other girl- the daughter of an undertaker named in her honour? Betsy Sunshine grows up surrounded by death in war-torn London, watching her community grieve for their loved ones whilst dealing with her own teenage troubles… namely her promiscuous sister Margie. As Betsy grows older we see the how the country changes through her eyes, and along the way we discover the birth of a secret that threatens to tear her family apart.

Sophie Duffy dazzles in her latest work of family/historical fiction. A tale which spans generations to explore the life and times of a family at the heart of their community, the story of a stoic young woman who shares a connection with her queenly counterpart in more ways than one…

Betsy and Lilibet is available now in ebook and paperback.  You can purchase your copy of both here.

My Review:

Betsy and Lilibet is a wonderful, charming and funny story that I absolutely adored!

The story follows Betsy throughout her whole life, from her birth through the war and all that followed in the twentieth century.  Interspersed with this is Betsy as a 90 year old, remembering her life from a nursing home and quotes from Queen Elizabeth II who despite only meeting her three times has a big influence on Betsy’s life.

It’s hard not to fall in love with Betsy and her wonderful descriptions of her life, particularly when she was a kid.  Her unique narrative and childlike view of things made me smile and laugh out loud at times.  She was such a relatable, real character and some of the incidents she mentions relating to her sister were things I remember arguing with my sister about.  She obviously had a huge chip on her shoulders regarding her sister, feeling she’s never as good as she is which tugged at my heart strings as, from my point of view, she was by far the nicer sister!

Betsy’s family is another fabulous creation from the author and some of my favourite scenes from the book were those involving her family.  They are obviously very close and share a wonderful warmth that was touching to read about.  The family run an undertakers which helped add a new element to the story and shapes Betsy, as her father always installs in her a quiet dignity when dealing with the dead that Betsy takes with her throughout her life.

There are quite a few surprising twists and turns that I wasn’t expecting in this story and definitely made the story more interesting.  The book reads a bit like an autobiography or diary rather than a piece of historical fiction which makes it very readable.  The reader becomes aware early on of a secret that Betsy has kept secret most of her life and still worries her in old age.  Throughout the book we learn more about this and it was great to read about Betsy working through her worries.

This is the first book by this author I have read and I will definitely be reading more from her in the future.  If you liked Any Human Heart by William Boyd then you’ll enjoy this book as I felt the styles were similar.

Huge thanks to Lucy from Legend Press for inviting me onto the blog tour and for my copy of this book.  If you like historical fiction with heart then you’ll love this book.

About The Author:

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Sophie is the author of three novels. ‘The Generation Game’ was her debut novel, inspired by her childhood growing up in a sweet shop in Torquay. Her second novel, ‘This Holey Life’, is about a reluctant curate’s wife. Her latest novel is ‘Bright Stars’, a modern day Brideshead, the story of students reunited after 25 years.

As part of Creative Writing Matters, Sophie appraises manuscripts, runs workshops and mentors novelists. CWM run the Exeter Novel Prize and the Exeter Story Prize as well as other writing competitions.

She lives by the seaside in Devon.

http://www.sophieduffy.com
http://www.creativewritingmatters.co.uk

 

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#BlogBlitz: Malignant by Anita Waller @anitamayw @Bloodhoundbook #Malignant #99pEbook

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Book Synopsis:

What if a death sentence meant you could get away with murder?

Claudia and Heather have been friends and neighbours for many years and both women decide it is the right time for them to leave their husbands. Together they get a flat but their peace is short-lived when Claudia is diagnosed with a terminal illness.

Being a good friend, Heather takes on caring for Claudia but a lethal meeting with James, Claudia’s ex-husband, results in someone dying.

As life for Claudia and Heather begins to unravel, the answer to their problems becomes clear… it’s murder.

Malignant is available in paperback and ebook now.  The ebook is currently only 99p.  You can purchase your copy of both here.

My Review:

I’m a huge fan of Anita Waller and I couldn’t wait to read her latest book Malignant.  I was not disappointed as Malignant is a fantastic book that manages to combine a crime story with a heartbreaking one amazingly well.

I absolutely loved the two main female characters Heather and Claudia.  They are such wonderful strong individuals that show a lot of strength and courage to do what they do and start again.  I warmed to them straight away and wanted things to go right for them, getting overly cross when they started to go wrong.  I wanted to keep reading to see if they’d get the happy ending I felt they deserved.

This is described as a psychological thriller and that side of the book is done extremely well too.  There are lots of twists and turns as well as moments that made me gasp out loud which did help make the book hard to put down.  However, in my opinion, this is eclipsed by the human aspect of the story and the heart breaking things that the characters face.

I’ve read most of Anita’s books but I think this one is my favourite so far as I felt so engaged with the characters.  I think it’s definitely a story that I’ll remember for a while.  If you like emotional psychological thrillers with some fabulous character yoully love this book.

Huge thanks to Sarah and Emma from Bloodhound books for inviting me onto the blog tour and sending me a copy of this book.

About The Author:

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Anita Waller was born in Sheffield, South Yorkshire in 1946. She married Dave in 1967 and they have three adult children.
She began writing when she was around 8 years of age, writing ‘compositions’ at junior school that became books with chapters. She wrote several novels in the romance genre and then realised she wanted to add murders to the romances, so she morphed into a psychological thriller author. Beautiful was her first completed novel in this genre.
The manuscript was submitted to Bloodhound Books who, within three days of reading it, offered her a contract. 31 August 2015 it was released as an ebook, to be followed a couple of days later by the paperback version.
Following the outstanding success of Beautiful, she began a sequel on 27 December 2015, finishing it on 19 March 2016. The new novel, Angel, was launched on 7 May 2016.
Her third novel, 34 Days, followed Angel and was launched on 3 October 2016 to outstanding success; at its highest level, it was #26 in Amazon charts. It is selling equally as well in the US and Australia and has sold over 15,000 copies in the first eight weeks following publication.
She then took time out to temporarily change genre; Winterscroft, a supernatural novel, was launched on 7 February 2017. While she was writing Winterscroft it became clear that fans of 34 Days wanted a sequel, and on 10 August 2017, Strategy was launched.
She is now working on her sixth novel, A Legal Issue, once again set in Sheffield, and once again a psychological thriller.
In addition to writing, she also teaches patchwork and quilting – a little reference to this is likely to surface in every book!
She is a lifelong Sheffield Wednesday supporter with blue blood in her veins! More than a little reference to this is likely to surface – see 34 Days!Her genre is murder – necessary murder.

 

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#BlogTour: The Dream Wife by Louisa De Lange @Tr4cyF3nt0n @paperclipgirl @AlainnaGeorgiou @orionbooks @orion_crime #TheDreamWife #LoveHonourObeyMurder

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Book Synopsis:

Annie is the dream wife.

Mother to two-year-old Johnny and wife to David, she is everything her husband expects her to be – supportive, respectful and mild – but what he expects isn’t who she truly is.

Annie is a prisoner in her home.

Her finances, her routine, her social life are all controlled by him. It’s the love for her boy that she lives for, and at night she dreams of a world where she is free.

But Annie is going to fight back.

And you won’t believe how she is going to do it . . .

Perfect for fans of Cara Hunter, Laura Marshall, Elle Croft, BA Paris, JP Delaney Teresa Driscoll and Claire Allan. 

The Dream Wife is published today in ebook and paperback.  The ebook is currently only £1.99.  You can purchase your copy of both here.

My Review:

It’s rare that I’m speechless at the end of a book but this one just completely amazed me. What an ending! Wow I did not see that coming! It’s going to be hard to review this book without giving too much away but I really enjoyed this dark, tension filled and unsettling book.

From the start the reader is aware that something isn’t quite right in Annie’s life as they are introduced to her mad cleaning routines where everything has to be just right.  The things her husband expects her to do and how he expects her to behave is shocking to read about.  I soon felt very sorry for Annie and the situation she finds herself in.  The only bright light in Annie’s world is her son, Johnny and I loved reading about her interaction with him.  The little games that she plays with him were so sweet and it was great to read about the close relationship she has with him.  This part of the book reminded me a bit of ‘Room’ as the style and intense mother-son relationship were both similar.

Annie husband is possible the most loathesome character I’ve ever come across in a book.  His attitude and the way he treats Annie just made my blood boil especially what he says after she’s given birth! Even though I hated him I always think that characters that provoke such a strong reaction are great as they mean that they have been very well written.  I found myself hoping that Annie would get her revenge on him and that he would get what he deserved.

The book is very fast paced and gripped me from the start with the unusual situation that Annie finds herself in.  I was immediately on Annie’s side and wanted to keep reading to find out what would happen.  As an unexpected twist is promised in the blurb I had lots of ideas about what it might be, but was wrong (very wrong) as the ending completely surprised me.

This, unbelievably, is the author’s debut novel and I’m so so excited to read more from her.  This would make a fantastic book club book as I’m desperate to discuss it with someone else, so I’m sure it will create lots of lively discussions.

Huge thanks to Orion publishers for my copy of this book via Netgalley and to Tracy Fenton for inviting me onto the blog tour.  If you like dark, addictive thrillers that surprise you then you’ll love this book!

About The Author:

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I started out studying Psychology at the University of Southampton, before spending many years working in HR. But I had always wanted to be a writer, and now work as a copywriter, proof reader and editor.

I am delighted to have the lovely Ed Wilsonat Johnson & Alcock as my agent. My debut novel, THE DREAM WIFE, is published by Orion, and out now in eBook and paperback on 4th October 2018. It will be followed by DOUBLE TAKE in autumn 2019.

I live in Hampshire with my son and husband. When I’m not writing I can be found pounding the streets in running shoes, or hiding behind a camera lens. I have too many book cases, too many books I haven’t read, and too much of an addiction to American tv.

Follow me on Twitter @paperclipgirl, Instagram @loudelangewriter or Facebook @loudelangewriter.

(Author’s bio taken from her website & picture from her Twitter account)

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Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation. Adapted by Ari Dolman & Illustrations by David Polonsky @RKbookpublicist @VikingBooksUK #AnneFrank #WW2

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Book Synopsis:

The First Graphic Adaptation of the Multi-Million Bestseller

’12th June, 1942: I hope I will be able to confide everything to you, as I have never been able to confide in anyone, and I hope you will be a great source of comfort and support.’

In the summer of 1942, fleeing the horrors of the Nazi occupation, Anne Frank and her family were forced into hiding in the back of an Amsterdam warehouse.

Aged thirteen when she went into the secret annexe, Anne Frank kept a diary in which she confided her innermost thoughts and feelings, movingly revealing how the eight people living under these extraordinary conditions coped with the daily threat of discovery and death.

Adapted by Ari Folman, illustrated by David Polonsky, and authorized by the Anne Frank Foundation in Basel, this is the first graphic edition of the beloved diary of Anne Frank.

Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation is available now in hardback and ebook.  You can purchase your copy by clicking ‘buy’ below.

My Review:

I have to admit that when I first received this book I was a little unsure whether the cartoon format would be able to do justice to such a well known and tragic story.  However my fears where unfounded as this is a great graphic adaption that will surely allow this story to reach a whole new younger audience.

The graphic nature of this book actually helps to bring the story to life and makes the story of what happened seem even more poignant as the victims have faces.  This was especially true of pictures showing the younger victims as it is impossible to ignore the fact that they were involved to.

The stark contrast between the unfolding tragedy of the holocaust and Anne’s teenage personality are also more obvious.  It was nice at times to see her childlike innocence shine through but then also very poignant as it illustrates how young she was when all this happenned.  This was made even more obvious by the illustrations as bright colours where used for these parts as well as in flash backs or day dreams of Anne.

I remember reading Anne Frank’s Diary when I was younger and finding it quite a hard read.  This graphic adaption will ensure that this important book, with its important message reaches the next generation to hopefully ensure that nothing similar happens in the future.  I think it will also help people understand better what discrimination means and the effect it can have.

Huge thanks to Ruth Killick and Viking Books for my copy of this book.  If you’d like to see a classic story come to life or a different way of introducing the holocaust to children then you’ll like this book.  I think this would be a great book to have in schools as it would help increase children’s understanding of a dark period of history.

 

About The Author:

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Anne Frank was born in Frankfurt am Maine in Germany in 1929. She is the author of The Diary of a Young Girl, which tells the remarkable true-story of a young, Jewish girl against the backdrop of the horrors of the Second World War. Adolescent preoccupations and emotions are recorded alongside the growing powers of the Nazis and their imposition of Anti-Jewish Laws to create a compelling, poignant insight into family life under Nazi rule.

Anne Frank moved to Holland with her family when the Nazis became powerful in Germany. The Nazis believed that some races, such as Jews and gypsies did not deserve the right to live and they started to arrest, transport and kill them. Afraid for their lives, Anne and her family went into hiding. During the terrible time in hiding, Anne was growing from a young girl into a woman and she recorded her thoughts and experiences in a diary: the constant fear of discovery, the conflicts with her mother, her emerging sexuality, and her hopes for the future. As the diary progresses, Anne’s childish innocence is replaced by premature wisdom and reflection; she not only expresses her concerns with their personal sufferings but also political events unfolding far from their hiding place. The family hid in the Secret Annexe at the back of a warehouse from July 1942, but ultimately the work of their protectors was undermined by the actions of Nazi collaborators and spies. In August 1944, they were discovered and taken to concentration camps.

Anne died of typhus in 1945, imprisoned at Bergen-Belsen, just a few months before her sixteenth birthday. Her diary, written between 12 June 1942 and 1 August 1944, was found after the war and later published by her father Otto H. Frank, the only surviving member of the family. It has become a bestseller throughout the world and is an extraordinary piece of writing from such a young girl, detailing her emotional transformation from childhood to adolescence and reminding us of the horror of prejudice and persecution.

Ari Folman: is an award winning film director, screenwriter and film score composer, who wrote and directed the Oscar- nominated Waltz with Bashir which won the Best Foreign Language Film at the 2008 Golden Globe Award.

 

David Polonsky is an award-winning illustrator and designer, who illustrated Waltz with Bashir.

Women Of The Dunes by Sarah Maine @SarahMaineBooks @HodderPublicity @HodderBooks #WomenOfTheDunes #5Stars

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Book Synopsis:

The new gorgeously sweeping historical novel from Sarah Maine, the acclaimed author of The House Between Tides and Beyond the Wild River. Perfect for fans of Kate Morton and Jenny Ashcroft.

On the rugged, sea-lashed coast of west Scotland lies Ullaness: home to the Scottish legend of Ulla, a Viking woman who washed up on Scottish shores centuries ago. The legend will bring the stories of three different women together…

In AD 800 there is Ulla, lost in a foreign country after her lover is brutally killed. Ellen, a servant-girl in the 1800s, catches the unwanted attentions of the master of the house’s lascivious son. And, in the present day, there is Libby – an archaeologist who is determined to uncover an age-old mystery.

When a body is excavated from Ullaness – the body of someone who was murdered long ago – the mystery deepens, and the fates of the three women become ever more tightly bound.

Women Of The Dunes is available in ebook and hardback now.  You can purchase your copy here.

My Review:

I’m such a huge fan of Sarah Maine’s so was very excited to read The Women Of The Dunes, her latest book.  Sarah always writes such amazing historical fiction and within a few pages I realised I was in for another treat.

The story is told from three timelines which may sound like it will be confusing but isn’t as the author cleverly manages to write with a different style and has created very different characters in each.  This makes it very easy to differentiate between the them.

All the stories are fascinating in their own way and I enjoyed reading all of them in turn though, unusually for me, I actually preferred the present timeline the most.  I think this was due to the potential relationship between the two main characters that I was willing to happen as I thought they’d be very sweet together and Declan’s wonderful house and family that you couldn’t help fall in love with.  I would have loved to stay in that interesting house, especially with their cook who seemed to make some lovely sounding food.

The descriptions of Ullaness where very vivid and I felt I could really imagine the Island.  The beautiful, ruggedness and history of the Island was beautifully described and I would love to visit there some day.  Though my Scottish mother in-law tells me it’s very windy and cold! The community that the author describes was a really close one who seemed to look out for each other.  It seemed like a wonderful place to live.

The mystery involving the murders and the truth behind the legend was very interesting and kept my attention throughout.  I was disappointed to find that the legend wasn’t a real one, as I love stuff like that but it was still a fascinating one to read about.

This is Sarah’s third book and I really look forward to reading more from her in the future.  If you enjoy fascinating, multiple time line mysteries then you’ll enjoy this book.

Huge thanks to Hodder publishers for my copy of this book via Netgalley.

About The Author:

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Sarah Maine was born in England but grew up partly in Canada before returning to England for university. She studied archaeology and for many years worked in the profession but is now a freelance writer and researcher. Sarah’s debut novel The House Between Tides (previously Bhalla Strand 2014) was re-published by Hodder & Stoughton in 2018. Beyond the Wild River (2017) is her second novel and Women of the Dunes will be published in 2018.