Review: Solstice, by Helen Steadman


My Review

Thanks to Anne for organising this tour and to the publisher for my copy of this book.

Patience Leaton, 20ish, I think, and lean to emaciation, is the daughter of a Vicar. Her family (father Hector, brother Earnest) have been forced from their parish in Ely for reasons hinted at by Patience, to the Durham dales parish of Mutton Clog, a sheep farming village of farmers. The previous vicar has died at a fortunate time for the disgraced Leaton family and they’ve been given the meagre living. Used to a richer life in the town of Ely, and with a puritan conviction, Patience disdains the people of Mutton Clog before they even meet. The Leatons have secrets, and Patience has an urge to find witches.

Young Rose Driver is 16 and a skilled shepherdess on her family farm. The farm is prosperous but life is blighted by her bullying father and widowed grandmother. Her step-mother, May, is her mother June’s best friend. Marriage to Rose’s Widower Da, Andrew Driver, was an escape from an abusive father, and she took her sister Tilly with her.

Rose and Patience meet the day after the Leaton’s arrive in Mutton Clog. Rose also meets Earnest. He seems sweet, intelligent, and very handsome. He charms Rose while Patience looks on id disgust, immediately blaming Rose for Earnest’s behaviour. Patience decides Rose is a witch and goes about finding evidence to prove it.

One day, the pious, hypocritical, zealous Patience sees Rose at her work with the lambing ewes, and believes her to have engaged in a satanic ritual. From then on, everything bad that happens is Rose attempting to kill her. Rose meanwhile has sheep to care for. Earnest comes to visit her at the shepherding shed, and presses his suit, although Rose fights him off.

Things go down hill from there, involving a midsummer millpond, a death at the wool fair, and another at sea, imprisonment at Durham, and a death by hanging. Finally, there’s birth and life returning. Just as it should be.

I must admit that while I first started reading this book 3rd November, thinking it would be a quick read, but then I realised Patience was a bitch out to ruin Rose and that Rose was going to suffer unnecessarily. I put the book down to concentrate on another book I’m reviewing this week, The Lost Supper, because I struggle with stories that involve the unjust punishment of a good character by someone acting from malice. Today, 12th November, I decided to deal with that by looking at the last chapter. It helped, because I knew that I could get through the nasty stuff because I knew Rose would come out of things fairly well, although she loses a lot of people along the way. So I dived in. Took me three hours, maybe, to get through the book in the end, and it wasn’t as upsetting as I though it would be.

Through the novel we discover the lies Patience is telling people, and herself, to hide her family secrets, and I realised she was probably seriously mentally ill, at a time when there was only two possible ways to view mental illness – either madness or witchcraft. Patience is a ‘respectable girl’ so she can’t be mad (poor people or those not considered respectable could be mad, but they were probably curse), and she’s a god-fearing, diligent, vicar’s daughter, so she can’t be a witch.

Even I can tell she’s probably got some sort of religious mania, possibly anorexic, and with some delusions. There’s nothing inherently wrong with having any of these mental illnesses, and with treatment people can live a normal life and none of them usually cause murderous behaviour. Her neighbours and victims put it all down to her being a spoilt miss with too much time on her hands and not enough reading material to keep her mind educated and active. The magistrate in Durham thinks she’s a plain girl jealous of a pretty girl. I get the feeling, if she was in the North American colonies, she’d have murdered dozens. We learn that she has already killed one woman, and as the book goes on, it looks like her mania might actually be the reason her family is forced from Ely. Then we find out something else. Everyone else is always to blame, for Patience. It’s never her fault, her actions cause terrible consequences, but she always pushes it on to her victims.

It’s also interesting that we learn Patience is probably bisexual and is in conflict with herself for being attracted to anyone. She sees sexuality as a sin; her mother is dead to Patience because she is ‘promiscuous’, her brother is cursed with their mother’s promiscuity and needs to be guarded, her attraction to Tilly and Tom is their fault for being wanton (Tilly lifts her skirt up to cross a river, and Tom works shirtless in the graveyard on a hot day). It doesn’t occur to her that her parents’ marriage was loveless, and her mother almost dies giving birth to the twins. It doesn’t occur to her that Earnest is a creep who uses his position as a curate to seduce young women and then blames them for his own actions. It doesn’t occur to Patience that sex is a part of life and some people really enjoy it, and some people don’t, and social conventions will constrain people’s actions, and her religious convictions are constraining her thinking.

Earnest got a better death than he deserved after seducing Rose (and Tilly), blaming her for his actions, and then trying to force her to abort their child. His actions encourage Patience in her campaign against Rose. His behaviour is hypocritical and it seems his father knows how bad he is and is desperate to send him to sea, while Patience believes he’s just young and easily led, not the pillar of religious rectitude that she is. They’re twins; he was born first by a few minutes.

Rose is a steady farmer, daughter and granddaughter of farmers, daughter and granddaughter of herbalists, murdered as ‘witches’. She’s the backbone of her household, and continues to be so after her father dies, until she’s forced to live with the Leatons, who abuse her. Her time in Durham North Gate Gaol is wretched, and so evocatively described. People died before they even got their day on court in gaols, because they had to wait for the quarterly assizes.

Rose’s experiences as a child, which we only learn about when Rose learns about them, and later in court, are foreshadowed in childhood games and fears of going to church. The family she has in Mutton Clog are mostly not blood relatives, but they treat her as their child and grandchild, because that’s the right thing to do. We learn that Rose’s Da is a much worse man than we know from his actions in life, but he helped save Rose from a monster. The psychological damage she received as a child explains many things and it’s actually a fairly reasonable explanation. I don’t know enough about the sort of trauma seeing a violent murder as a young child would cause to be able to say it’s a realistic depiction, but it seems reasonable.

I love the way the community of Mutton Cleg come together to help Rose in gaol and in court; it’s clear no-one understands why Patience is targeting Rose, but they are there to get the truth out. That they will suffer for witnessing to the truth of events from the past and the present occurs to some of them. I haven’t read any of the other books, but the events of this book suggest they are good. I should probably get the first two in the series and The Running Wolf, which is set in 1687, when the baby born at the end of Solstice is an adult.

I’m assuming this book is set sometime in the 1650s or 1660s, during the puritan period. People in neighbouring dales are still having Midsummer Bonfires, and many of them stopped during the Civil Wars of the 1640s (yes, British, not English, because the civil wars engulfed all four countries/both main islands of the archipelago). Mutton Clog is rural enough that it might not have been involved. The church still has stained glass windows and the manse is comfortably furnished, which is very much not puritan practice.

I love the way Rose and the villagers are bemused by the plainness of the Leaton’s clothes and food. Hector Leaton seems to be fairly balanced, in that he’s comfortable with the changes in his housing and, when Tilly joins the household, his meals. He resists a lot of Patience’s stranger ideas and only weakens when he’s grieving; she is consciously manipulative of him. Even after his estranged wife returns and he’s grieving, he’s able to recognise that he was partly responsible for his wife leaving and that he needs to make amends. His actions speak when Patience refuses to record his words.

Tom Verger is an absolute hero in this novel. The history that develops through the novel shows that he was a hero in the earlier novels too. He is stoic and loving, and stands up to bullies for his community.

I really enjoyed this novel; it explores the psychological and cultural environment of the 1650s to explain the witch-obsessions. It draws on real events and realistically describes the lives of rural farmers in Northern England. Finally, it brings the Widdershins series to a satisfying conclusion, with hope and new life.


Helen Steadman’s first novel, Widdershins and its sequel, Sunwise were inspired by the 1650 Newcastle witch trials. Her third novel, The Running Wolf is about a group of master swordmakers who defected from Germany to England in 1687. Helen’s fourth novel, God of Fire, is a Greek myth retelling as seen through the eyes of Hephaestus, perhaps the least well known of all the Olympians.

Helen is particularly interested in revealing hidden histories and she is a thorough researcher who goes to great lengths in pursuit of historical accuracy. To get under the skin of the cunning women in Widdershins and Sunwise, Helen trained in herbalism and learned how to identify, grow and harvest plants and then made herbal medicines from bark, seeds, flowers and berries.

The Running Wolf is the story of a group of master swordmakers who left Solingen, Germany and moved to Shotley Bridge, England in 1687. As well as carrying out in-depth archive research and visiting forges in Solingen to bring her story to life, Helen also undertook blacksmith training, which culminated in making her own sword.


Review: The Christmas Appeal, by Janice Hallett

Print Book ISBN: 9781800817357
Thriller
BIC: FF, 5HC
26 October 2023
£10.99
224 pp
Hardback
B format
198mm x 129mm
World ex USA,Can
eBook ISBN: 9781800817425

DESCRIPTION

THE CAST OF SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLING THE APPEAL RETURN FOR
A FESTIVE MURDER MYSTERY

One dead Santa. A town full of suspects. Will you discover the truth?
Christmas in Lower Lockwood, and the Fairway Players are busy rehearsing their festive pantomime, Jack and the Beanstalk, to raise money for the church roof appeal.
But despite the season, goodwill is distinctly lacking amongst the amateur dramatics enthusiasts. Sarah-Jane is fending off threats to her new position as Chair, the fibreglass beanstalk might be full of asbestos, and a someone is intent on ruining the panto even before the curtain goes up.

Of course there’s also the matter of the dead body. Who could possibly have had the victim on their naughty list?

Join lawyers Femi and Charlotte as they read the round robins, examine the emails and pore over the police transcripts. Will the show go on?

Continue reading “Review: The Christmas Appeal, by Janice Hallett”

Review: The Beaver Theory, by Antti Tuomainen, trs. David Hackston

PUBLICATION DATE: 12th OCTOBER 2023
HARDBACK ORIGINAL | £16.99 | ORENDA BOOKS

Description

Henri Koskinen, intrepid insurance mathematician and adventure park entrepreneur, firmly believes in the power of common sense and order. That is until he moves in with painter Laura Helanto and her daughter…

As Henri realises he has inadvertently become part of a group of local dads, a competing adventure park is seeking to expand their operations, not always sticking to the law in the process…

Is it possible to combine the increasingly dangerous world of the adventure-park business with the unpredictability of life in a blended family? At first glance, the two appear to have only one thing in common: neither deals particularly well with a mounting body count.

In order to solve this seemingly impossible conundrum, Henri is forced to step far beyond the mathematical precision of his comfort zone … and the stakes have never been higher…

Continue reading “Review: The Beaver Theory, by Antti Tuomainen, trs. David Hackston”

TBR Pile Review: The Moose Paradox, by Antti Tuomainen, trs. David Hackston

Original title: Hirvikaava
Series: Rabbit Factor (#2)
This edition
Format: 300 pages, Hardcover
Published: October 27, 2022 by Orenda Books
ISBN: 9781914585340 (ISBN10: 1914585348)
Language: English

Blurb

Insurance mathematician Henri Koskinen has finally restored order both to his life and to YouMeFun, the adventure park he now owns, when a man from the past appears – and turns everything upside down again. More problems arise when the park’s equipment supplier is taken over by a shady trio, with confusing demands. Why won’t Toy of Finland Ltd sell the new Moose Chute to Henri when he needs it as the park’s main attraction?

Meanwhile, Henri’s relationship with artist Laura has reached breaking point, and, in order to survive this new chaotic world, he must push every calculation to its limits, before it’s too late…

Absurdly funny, heart-stoppingly poignant and full of nail-biting suspense, The Moose Paradox is the second instalment in the critically acclaimed, pitch-perfect Rabbit Factor Trilogy and things are messier than ever…

Continue reading “TBR Pile Review: The Moose Paradox, by Antti Tuomainen, trs. David Hackston”

Book Review: Stigma, by Jorn Lier Horst and Thomas Enger, trs, Rosie Hedger

PUBLICATION DATE: 12th OCTOBER 2023
PAPERBACK ORIGINAL | £9.99 | ORENDA BOOKS

Description

Alexander Blix is a broken man. Convicted for avenging his daughter’s death, he is now being held in one of Norway’s high-security prisons. Inside, the other prisoners take every opportunity to challenge and humiliate the former police investigator.

On the outside, Blix’s former colleagues have begun the hunt for a terrifying killer. Walter Kroos has escaped from prison in Germany and is making his way north. The only lead established by the police is that Kroos has a friend in Blix’s prison ward. And now they need Blix’s help.

Journalist Emma Ramm is one of Blix’s few visitors, and she becomes his ally as he struggles to connect the link between past and present, between the world inside and outside the prison walls. And as he begins to piece things together, he identifies a woodland community in Norway where deeply scarred inhabitants foster deadly secrets … secrets that may be the unravelling of everyone involved.

Continue reading “Book Review: Stigma, by Jorn Lier Horst and Thomas Enger, trs, Rosie Hedger”

Review: White As Snow, by Lilja Sigurðardóttir, trs. Quentin Bates

P U B L I C AT I O N DATE: 12th OCTOBER 2023
PA PE RB AC K O R I G I N A L | £9.99 | ORE N DA BOOKS

Blurb

On a snowy winter morning, an abandoned shipping container is discovered near Reykjavík. Inside are the bodies of five young women – one of them barely alive.

As Icelandic Police detective Daníel struggles to investigate the most brutal crime of his career, Áróra looks into the background of a suspicious man, who turns out to be engaged to Daníel’s former wife, and the connections don’t stop there…

Daníel and Áróra’s cases pit them both against ruthless criminals with horrifying agendas, while Áróra persists with her search for her missing sister, Ísafold, whose devastating disappearance continues to haunt her.

As the temperature drops and the 24-hour darkness and freezing snow hamper their efforts, their investigations become increasingly dangerous … for everyone.

Continue reading “Review: White As Snow, by Lilja Sigurðardóttir, trs. Quentin Bates”

Review: You Can’t See Me, by Eva Bjorg AEgisdottir

P U B L I C AT I O N DATE: 6
th JULY 2023
PA PE RB AC K O R I G I N A L | £9.99 | ORE N DA BOOKS

The wealthy, powerful Snæberg clan has gathered for a family reunion at a futuristic hotel set amongst the dark lava flows of Iceland’s remote Snæfellsnes peninsula.

Petra Snæberg, a successful interior designer, is anxious about the event, and her troubled teenage daughter, Lea, whose social media presence has attracted the wrong kind of followers. Ageing carpenter Tryggvi is an outsider, only tolerated because he’s the boyfriend of Petra’s aunt, but he’s struggling to avoid alcohol because he knows what happens when he drinks … Humble hotel employee, Irma, is excited to meet this rich and famous family and observe them at close quarters … perhaps too close…

As the weather deteriorates and the alcohol flows, one of the guests disappears, and it becomes clear that there is a prowler lurking in the dark.

But is the real danger inside … within the family itself?

Continue reading “Review: You Can’t See Me, by Eva Bjorg AEgisdottir”

TBR Pile Review: The Ruthless Lady’s Guide To Wizardry, by C.M. Waggoner

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Ace (14 Jan. 2021)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 400 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 198480586X
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1984805867

Blurb

Dellaria Wells – petty con artist, occasional thief, and partly educated fire witch – is behind on her rent. To make ends meet, Delly talks her way into a guard job in the city of Leiscourt, joining a team of unconventional women to protect an aristocrat from unseen assassins.

It looks like easy money and a chance to romance her confident companion Winn – but when did anything in Delly’s life go to plan? With the help of a necromancer, a shapeshifting schoolgirl and a reanimated mouse named Buttons, Delly and Winn find themselves facing an adversary who wields a twisted magic and has friends in the highest of places.

My Review

I think I got recommended this book as another example of a ‘cosy fantasy’ after I enjoyed Legends & Lattes. This book was originally published by Ace in 2021, and a new Penguin edition will be published in July. I might get the Penguin edition too, although the covers are the same. Ace books tend to be a bit rough and the printing quality can be not great, and this book isn’t an exception.

I’ve ordered the Penguin edition of Unnatural Magic, which is being published in July; it’s the other book in this series and was originally published by Ace in 2019. I’ll compare the quality of both and order the other editions if I think there’s any point.

Dellaria Wells is desperate for funds and can’t find her mum. In Leiscourt, her ability as a Firewitch marks her out among the poor and makes her an object of derision for the rich. Unfortunately, her ability to get in her own way and mess things up has led to any advantages her skills and natural talents might have given her being more a cause for trouble than a benefit.

She stumbles into a gig as a bodyguard for a wealthy woman about to get married. Here she meets some ‘properly trained’ magicians, all women. She is immediately attracted to a half-troll called Winn, who is an amazing shot and reasonable at illusions. Her dad also happens to know some very important people. Delly sets her cap at Winn, a prospect for possible expensive gifts, but finds she actually really likes Winn. The job looks easy, a bit of romance and enough money to pay the rent for a few months.

Except things get a bit dangerous when they’re attacked by the creations of necromancers and the bride is almost killed by one of the party. When another of the party is murdered by the necromancer and the guilty party goes on the run, the job changes – this time it’s about revenge and the pay is a lot better.

Delly, Winn and co head back to Leiscourt to find the murderer and bring down a crime ring providing drugs that are currently killing lots of people, including Delly’s mum.

Delly seems to be a rather uncomplicated person until we get into the meat of the story, when we discover her complicated relationship with her mother, who is addicted to drugs and alcohol, and was a neglectful parent. As a child she is neglected and as an adult she has to look after her mother. She is angry and sad when she discovers her in hospital or in bars. She hopes for her to be a better person and is distressed when her mother reverts back to her usual behaviour.

Delly also has a complicated relationship with Winn; Winn sees the best in her, which Delly can’t see in herself. She is convinced that Winn is being duped by her own sense of goodness. They do love each other but Delly can’t say it even after they save each others’ lives.

Mrs Totham is cool. I found her very sympathetic and increasingly funny as she goes from being a bird-obsessed elderly lady to a revenge-obsessed necromancer (sorry, body scientist) after her daughter is murdered.

The plot is entertaining and gets complicated as the crew start investigating a couple of crimes – a murder and a drugs gang. The excitement builds as they finally bring down their enemy and a house explodes.

The setting is something like a Victorian London with magic, and some customs that seem strange to the reader. It took me a bit to get used to things. I still don’t quite get some of the background like ‘householders’ and ‘Hexos’. What are these things? The society is fairly open to relationships that certainly would not have been acceptable in Victorian London.

It was a fun read and I’m looking forward to reading Unnatural Magic in July.

Review: The Swan Dress Murders, by Millie Ravensworth

The Swan Dress Murders

Cozy Craft Mysteries can be read in any order. A funny whodunnit series, full of charming characters and mysteries that will keep you guessing to the very end.

A wedding is a cause for celebration. Not only do dressmakers Penny and Izzy get an invite to the big day but they have an unusual dress commission to complete for one of the guests.

It seems Penny’s only problem is deciding which potential boyfriend to take as her plus-one guest — practical handyman Aubrey or cultured fabric expert Oscar.

But bigger problems arise when the maker of the wedding cake is found dead in the grounds of the stately home where the wedding is to take place.

And when another key individual in the wedding plans is also murdered, it seems like someone has deadly plans to prevent this marriage.

Can Penny and Izzy unravel the mystery and solve this crime before the big day is fatally ruined?

If your ideal book features mystery, friendship, cute romance, crafting and a charming rural setting then this is the book for you.

Purchase Links

Amazon UK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0BH14X68M

Amazon US – https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BH14X68M

Continue reading “Review: The Swan Dress Murders, by Millie Ravensworth”

Review: The Sequinned Cape Murders, by Millie Ravensworth

The Sequinned Cape Murders

Cozy Craft Mysteries can be read in any order. A funny whodunnit series, full of charming characters and mysteries that will keep you guessing to the very end.

Things are going great for Penny Slipper. Running a sewing shop in the middle of the English countryside is like a dream come true and she’s got her colourful cousin Izzy and her corgi, Monty, to keep her entertained.

Her grandma’s eightieth birthday is coming up soon and Penny and Izzy are busier than ever, making fancy dress costumes for the party guests.

However, Penny’s dream life is thrown into chaos when a murdered woman is found in the bathroom of her cosy flat above the shop. With the doors and the windows all locked, no one can understand how this mystery corpse got there.

But things take a further sinister turn when a local shopkeeper is also killed. There’s a murderer on the loose and no one is safe!

Can Penny and Izzy uncover the answers and unmask the criminal in their midst?

If your ideal book features mystery, friendship, cute romance, even cuter animals, crafting and a big slice of birthday cake then this is the book for you.

Purchase Links

Amazon UK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0BH16G6V8

Amazon US – https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BH16G6V8


My Review

Thanks to Rachel for organising this blog tour and to the author for my copy of this book.

In this Cozy Craft mystery, Penny gets home from a trip to London to find a dead woman on the loo and an incriminating note from Izzy. Meanwhile the stitch and natter group must be dealt with and a water leak controlled. The police are eventually called when Izzy returns and the pair realise there was a bit of a misunderstanding. It seems the building was locked up tight, and they have nothing worth stealing, so why was the woman on the toilet? How did she get in and who killed her?

Since they can’t stay in the shop, Penny and Monty go to stay with Izzy and her parents. They have a small house and a surprisingly large garden, but Monty doesn’t like the upheaval and starts misbehaving. Izzy meets a potential boyfriend when she finds a way to deal with Monty’s outbursts.

Nanna Lem is having a birthday party and Izzy’s dad, Terry King wants an Elvis costume. Everyone else wants costumes too, so Penny devises a ‘family discount’ chart to help Izzy say no to cousins who expect freebees. To get some inspiration, the pair visit a neighbour who specialises in musical memorabilia. He has just the thing to inspire them.

Eventually, Penny, Izzy and Monty get back in the shop but there’s an awful mess and Aubrey has to do an assessment for the insurance company, while Darren the plumber suggests a cheeky fiddle. There’s a couple of questionable characters hanging about outside, and Stuart Dinktrout starts moaning about the fabric of the building.

Izzy and Penny do some sleuthing and both have realisations about the crime as the man down the road is found dead on a golf course. The police are rather annoyed by Izzy and Penny.

At Nanna Lem’s party, the criminals are revealed, the hows and whys are answered, and there’s an Elvis competition. Izzy invites her dog trainer to the party while Penny is still torn between Aubrey and Oscar.

This is the third book in the series and once again we find the creative pair getting into and out of some odd situations; the dead woman on the loo is just the start of it. We meet some of Izzy and Penny’s other family and learn more about Nanna Lem’s past. Izzy is clearly from a highly creative family, but you wouldn’t want to live next door to them. Penny and her Aunt Pat seem like the sensible ones.

Penny’s dilemma about how to start a relationship is understandable. Oscar is very forthright about his feelings but is fine with friendship; Aubrey says lovely things but doesn’t ask directly, leaving Penny confused about both of them. She could carry on with both of them as friends, or one friend and one boyfriend. Can’t see why she can’t have two boyfriends, personally, so long as everyone knows and consents to it.

Monty once again points the reader in the right direction and I think he’s a useful doggy ex machina, as well as a fun character. Dogs are always a good excuse for wondering about places you’re not meant to. Or just generally wandering about. (Yes, I am using the correct wondering and wandering – thing about it).

The reality of small towns – knowing everyone and being distantly related to half of the long-term residents, bossy town officials, gossip and nosiness – is admirably demonstrated, as is the reality of being a creative sector professional; everyone thinks they can ask for something for free because they know you but don’t actually value your time, skills or the materials costs. I totally understand the frustrations of being asked to ‘rustle up’ something that’ll take days to make and cost a fortune, by people who want it for free. If I make you something as a gift that’s one thing, but I’m charging for my time and materials otherwise.

I can see Penny and Izzy building an investigative relationship with DS Chang, the police officer who has turned up in all three books so far. He’s not imposing on the plot much at the moment, but his appearances have become more important in this novel. Tariq the enthusiastic young journalist is another character I can see being important as part of their ‘famous five sleuthing’ as Aubrey puts it at one point in the story, as a recorder of events, especially with his camera.

The Cozy Crafts Mysteries have fairly straightforward plots, set in a familiar setting, just like many Golden Age crime novels, especially Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple novels. They have red herrings and quirky main characters, with the police only tangentially involved. From me this is not a criticism – I enjoy Miss Marple stories, and I like the modern cosy mystery that has evolved from the same tradition. These ones are easy to read and entertaining. You’re halfway through before you know it.

Need the odd bit of editing though. I noticed a few mis-used words and a chapter change that wasn’t formatted correctly.

Right, on to number 4 – The Swan Dress Murder, which I have already started reading.


Giveaway Prize – The Wonderland Murders, a cross stitch book, a floral notepad, a note writing set and a grass bunny.

https://kingsumo.com/g/h1kxu9/prize-for-cozy-mysteries-blog-tour


Author Bio – Millie Ravensworth writes the Cozy Craft Mystery series of books. Her love of murder mysteries and passion for dressmaking made her want to write books full of quirky characters and unbelievable murders. Millie lives in central England where children and pets are something of a distraction from the serious business of writing, although dog walking is always a good time to plot the next book. 

Social Media Links –

https://www.facebook.com/MillieRavensworth

https://www.instagram.com/millieravensworth/