What’s on the blog: July 2020

Hola, this month might be a bit sparse, because I have had to turn down ‘digital only’ tour, but I have a few reviews and extract posts for you

Reviews

  • 2nd
    • Fresh Eggs and dog beds 2
    • Nick Albert
    • Audiobook
    • Memoir
    • Rachel’s Random Resources blog tour
  • 6th
    • Operation Jihadi Bride
    • John Carney
    • Hardback
    • Memoir
    • Random Things Tours blog tour
  • 11th
    • The Women Writers’ Handbook
    • ed. Ann Sandham
    • Paperback
    • Non-fiction
    • Love Books Tours blog tour
  • 26th
    • The Big Chill
    • Doug Johnston
    • Paperback
    • Crime/Thriller
    • Orenda blog tour

Extract, cover reveals and book blitz posts

  • 2nd – Extract
    • Warbringer
    • Aaron Hodges
    • Rachel’s Random Resources blog tour
  • 6th – Book Blitz
    • Sunrise on the Coast
    • Lilac Mills
    • Rachel’s Random Resources
  • 9th – Extract
    • Pauper and Prince in Harlem
    • Delia C. Pitts
    • Rachel’s Random Resources
  • 9th – Cover Reveal
    • Buried Treasure
    • Gilli Allen
    • Random Things Tours
  • 10th -Extract
    • Empire’s Reckoning
    • Marian L Thorpe
    • Rachel’s Random Resources
  • 20th – Extract
    • Deadly Wishes
    • Rachel Mclean
    • Rachel’s Random Resources
  • 22nd- Extract
    • Deathe Remembered
    • K.E. Coburn
    • Rachel’s Random Resources
  • 22nd – Book Blitz
    • Kissing Daisy Parker
    • Michael Malton
    • Love Books Tours
  • 23rd – Extract
    • A Little Pick Me Up
    • Kate Portman
    • Love Books Tours

It’s a bit sparse, but you should also expect a couple of Pen & Sword reviews, plus some of my TBR pile reviews. My Goldsboro SFF Fellowship books and the pre-orders have been arriving and starting to pile up so I will be doing my best to get them read and reviewed.

Local author spotlight: Laurie Kennedy

I know Laurie through being involved in the local adult autistic groups, and he’s just published his book about mental health, Positively Negative. Laurie has kindly agreed to write a post for the blog about creating and publishing his book.

Continue reading “Local author spotlight: Laurie Kennedy”

Book Blitz: THE FIRST LIE BY A.J. PARK

Happy Publication Day!

“A. J. Park is a master of suspense who knows how to keep readers hovering tensely over the edges of their seats.” 
Sophie Hannah

THE FIRST LIE BY A.J. PARK

“This is a real page-turner. I finished it in one go!”
Martina Cole

A husband and wife cover up a murder. But the lie eats away at the fabric of their relationship and things unravel till they can’t trust anyone – even each other.

“A great thriller that will keep you turning the pages late into the night.”
Luca Veste

A freak accident. An impossible choice. But what was the first lie?

When Paul Reeve comes home to find his wife in the bathroom, bloodied and shaking, his survival instinct kicks in.

Alice never meant to kill the intruder. She was at home, alone, and terrified. She doesn’t deserve to be blamed for it. Covering up the murder is their only option.

But the crime eats away at the couple and soon they can’t trust anyone – even one another…

But there is much more at stake than anyone realises – and many more people on their trail than they can possibly evade…

“Fast-moving, gripping, the ground shifting perpetually beneath your feet as you read… I read it in one sitting.”
Alex Marwood

Available as a paperback, ebook and audio book.

Links:

Waterstones Paperback: http://tidd.ly/553cdf07

Amazon: https://amzn.to/2KNl4rt

Cover Reveal: The Eliza Doll by Tracey Scott – Townsend

Ellie lives in a campervan with her dog, Jack, selling her handmade dolls at craft fairs. There is one doll that she can’t bear to finish until she comes to terms with the truth of what has happened.

The Eliza Doll is an uncompromising family drama about upheaval, off-grid living and living on the dole in 1980s England.

Set in East Yorkshire and Iceland from the eighties to the present.

Continue reading “Cover Reveal: The Eliza Doll by Tracey Scott – Townsend”

Review: Anna, by Laura Guthrie

Every cloud has a silver lining… doesn’t it? Anna is thirteen years old, lives in London with her father, and has Asperger’s syndrome.  When her father dies, she moves to Scotland to live with her estranged, reclusive mother.  With little support to help her  t in, she must use every coping strategy her father taught her—especially her ‘Happy Game’—as she tries to connect with her mother, discover her past, and deal with the challenges of being thrown into a brand new life along the way. 

Continue reading “Review: Anna, by Laura Guthrie”

Pen & Sword Review: The Peasants’ Revolting Lives

The Peasants' Revolting Lives
By Terry Deary
Imprint: Pen & Sword History
Series: The Peasants’ Revolting
Price: £8.00
ISBN: 9781526745613
Published: 15th May 2020

Today we are aware of how the rich and privileged have lived in the past because historians write about them endlessly. The poor have largely been ignored and, as a result, their contributions to our modern world are harder to unearth.

Skilled raconteur TERRY DEARY takes us back through the centuries with a poignant but humorous look at how life treated the common folk who scratched out a living at the very bottom of society. Their world was one of foul food, terrible toilets, danger, disease and death – the last, usually premature.

Discover the stories of the teacher turned child-catcher who rounded up local waifs and strays and put them to work, and the thousands of children who descended into the hazardous depths to dig for coal. Read all about the agricultural workers who escaped the Black Death only to be thwarted by greedy landowners. And would you believe the one about the man who betrothed his 7-year-old daughter to a Holy Roman Emperor, or even the brothel that was run by a bishop?

On the flip side, learn how cash-strapped citizens used animal droppings for house building and as a cure for baldness; how sparrow’s brains were incorporated into aphrodisiacal brews; and how mixing tea with dried elder leaves could turn an extra profit. And of the milestones that brought some meaning to ordinary lives, here are the trials and tribulations of courtship and marriage; the ruthless terrors of the sporting arena; and the harsh disciplines of education – all helping to alleviate the daily grind.

The Peasants’ Revolting… Lives celebrates those who have endured against the odds. From medieval miseries to the idiosyncrasies of being a twenty-first-century peasant, tragedy and comedy sit side by side in these tales of survival and endurance in the face of hardship.

Continue reading “Pen & Sword Review: The Peasants’ Revolting Lives”

It’s Midsummer and I miss

  • Going to Saxonhouse for the Abus Coritani ritual;
  • sitting in the sun while the bonfire burns;
  • and we eat whatever people brought for the buffet.
  • Drinking Jude’s warm mulled cider (non-alcoholic version also available)
  • Driving through the Lincolnshire countryside with Nicky, talking and laughing, stopping so she can take photos
  • Rolling home at 6 pm, worn out but happy, slightly sunburnt (probably).

Extract: Arrival, by Marian Beland


The King indeed has never met anyone like her. In fact, no one had, nor would they for another 1250 years. Being ahead of their time doesn’t make Gen ahead of their ways. A twenty-first-century mind in a first-millennium female doesn’t necessarily guarantee happiness, peace, or success so much as it does headaches, misunderstandings, fear, and danger. Of course, stirring intrigue in a curious king’s mind may be of great help; if you are careful. Unfortunately, being careful is not one of Gen’s strong suits.
 
Continue reading “Extract: Arrival, by Marian Beland”