Mary Anne Yarde's Blog: The Coffee Pot Book Club , page 62
October 20, 2020
Welcome to Day #5 of the blog tour or The Sign of the Blood (A Dangerous Emperor, Book #1) by Laurence O'Bryan #BlogTour #HistFic @LPOBryan @LombardEmma @gwendalyn_books



September 22nd – November 24th 2020
Amazon
Publication Date: 22nd November 2018
Publisher: Ardua
Print Length: 469 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction
The first Christian emperor faces ruthless enemies on his journey to power.
Cool mist settles over the legion advancing toward the Persian army. Constantine, the son of an emperor, the Roman officer leading the attack, tells his men to halt - something is wrong.
Before long, the battle rages. He frees a slave named Juliana. She is half Persian and half Roman. As they are pursued to Britannia over land and sea, he learns that she can see the future - his future.
It is 306A.D., long before Constantine the Great converted to Christianity and became the first Christian emperor.
To ensure he survives, he must eliminate his enemies. But who must die first? The priestess, Sybellina, who joined them in Rome and practices dark and seductive magic? Or the brutal legion commanders who surround his father? Or, as Juliana suspects, are those who want him dead even closer?
A gripping historical novel about Constantine’s bloody rise to power, the woman who helped him, and the real reason he supported a persecuted Christian minority, a decision which changed the world into the one we know.
We are stopping over on two blog today!
Head over to Emma Lombard's Official Blog and have a sneak-peek between the covers of The Sign of the Blood.
Click HERE!
Check out what Gwendalyn's Books has to say about The Sign of the Blood:
"A fabulous representation to storyline, the author delivers a compelling, intriguing novel. I was completely engaged with its absolutely fantastic characters that totally captivated and fascinated me. The strength of this novel handsdown is the author’s fabulous characterizations and precision details. Rich battle scenes of war and blood to lustful carnage. Easy to follow narration that held my attention from the very first page until the last. I absolutely loved the characters and how realistic they were given the time period. This is a treasure of book to buy and keep in your library. My first read, from this highly talented author, I am excited to read more work from the author Laurence O’Bryan..."
To read the review in full
Click HERE!

Welcome to Day #5 of the blog tour or The Sign of the Blood (A Dangerous Emperor, Book #1) by Laurence O'Bryan #BlogTour #HistFic @LPOBryan @LombardEmma



September 22nd – November 24th 2020
Amazon
Publication Date: 22nd November 2018
Publisher: Ardua
Print Length: 469 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction
The first Christian emperor faces ruthless enemies on his journey to power.
Cool mist settles over the legion advancing toward the Persian army. Constantine, the son of an emperor, the Roman officer leading the attack, tells his men to halt - something is wrong.
Before long, the battle rages. He frees a slave named Juliana. She is half Persian and half Roman. As they are pursued to Britannia over land and sea, he learns that she can see the future - his future.
It is 306A.D., long before Constantine the Great converted to Christianity and became the first Christian emperor.
To ensure he survives, he must eliminate his enemies. But who must die first? The priestess, Sybellina, who joined them in Rome and practices dark and seductive magic? Or the brutal legion commanders who surround his father? Or, as Juliana suspects, are those who want him dead even closer?
A gripping historical novel about Constantine’s bloody rise to power, the woman who helped him, and the real reason he supported a persecuted Christian minority, a decision which changed the world into the one we know.
Head over to Emma Lombard's Official Blog and have a sneak-peek between the covers of The Sign of the Blood.
Click HERE!

Welcome to Day #3 of the blog tour for A Feigned Madness by Tonya Mitchell #HistoricalFiction #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub @tremmitchell @tonyriches

A Feigned Madness
By Tonya Mitchell

October 6th — December 8th 2020
Publication Date: 6th October 2020Publisher: Cynren Press
Print Length: 392 pages
Genre: Historical Fiction, Historical Thriller
The insane asylum on Blackwell’s Island is a human rat trap. It is easy to get in, but once there it is impossible to get out. —Nellie Bly
Elizabeth Cochrane has a secret.
She isn’t the madwoman with amnesia the doctors and inmates at Blackwell’s Asylum think she is.
In truth, she’s working undercover for the New York World. When the managing editor refuses to hire her because she’s a woman, Elizabeth strikes a deal: in exchange for a job, she’ll impersonate a lunatic to expose a local asylum’s abuses.
When she arrives at the asylum, Elizabeth realizes she must make a decision—is she there merely to bear witness, or to intervene on behalf of the abused inmates? Can she interfere without blowing her cover? As the superintendent of the asylum grows increasingly suspicious, Elizabeth knows her scheme—and her dream of becoming a journalist in New York—is in jeopardy.
A Feigned Madness is a meticulously researched, fictionalized account of the woman who would come to be known as daredevil reporter Nellie Bly. At a time of cutthroat journalism, when newspapers battled for readers at any cost, Bly emerged as one of the first to break through the gender barrier—a woman who would, through her daring exploits, forge a trail for women fighting for their place in the world.
Today we are stopping over on The Writing Desk for a fabulous Guest Post.
Click HERE!

October 19, 2020
Have a sneak-peek between the covers of Pamela Stephen 's fabulous book — Artists and Spies #HistoricalFiction @PamStephen13

Artists and Spies
By Pamela Stephen

Artists and Spies is the story of Charlotte Le Juge du Coudray, stepdaughter of acclaimed 18th century Catalan artist Hyacinthe Rigaud. The tale imagines the life of former nun, Charlotte, a woman who discovers the family secret she was never supposed to know. She is changed forever by that knowledge, and works hard to become a female artist in a man’s world. With her household of trusted servants, she has a challenging quest for true recognition of her talents. But when a member of her staff engages in covert activity, she cannot know what dangerous repercussions there could be for them all.
Excerpt
‘Painting contains a divine force which not only makes absent men present, as friendship is said to do, but moreover makes the dead seem almost alive. Even after many centuries they are recognised with great pleasure and with great admiration for the painter.’
Leon Bautista Alberti, De pictura, 1435, Book II.
Brushing down her habit, and descending from the coach that day, Charlotte Le Juge du Coudray felt a sense of anxiety. She wondered what she would find at her stepfather's home. Reading between the lines of his servants’ letters, she could detect the Duponts’ concern for him. The old couple had remained in the establishment alone with him, and tending to his needs, had outlasted the cook, the footmen and all the staff of his once bustling studio. The studio had shut first, her stepfather deciding to work alone whenever he needed a respite from the care of his sick wife. She had been ill for several years and throughout that time there had been a gradual diminution of their public and private lives until the world revolved around her sickbed and his careful attention of her, his beloved. The household had reduced as the need to entertain clients and colleagues disappeared. Still throughout those days, the loyal pair of servants struggled on, writing to her of his growing infirmity, of her mother's illness and the burden of their work. The huge Paris house was largely empty, full of memory and echoes. The studio itself had not been used by her stepfather since her mother’s death eight months before. The dim hallway, which had once been a noisy busy hub, was quiet.
Charlotte had been shocked to receive the message that he was unwell. Her life at the convent had separated her from the everyday world, and now it intruded in a way which had brought her to the present suddenly. Her stepfather was very elderly and Charlotte had na•vely thought that he would go on and on. It had not occurred to her that his death was an inevitable consequence of the loss of his wife. So she had allowed time to drift. And he had been too proud to ask for her until now.
He asked the servants to write, probably suspecting that they were in regular contact already. She could no longer remain at the convent in good conscience. He was apparently beside himself with grief, and Madame Dupont was quite frightened by his outbursts. Even though she had been unwell for a considerable time, Madame Rigaud's demise had been shocking for everyone around her; its effect on her stepfather had been profound and eight months on, Charlotte was really not prepared for the fragile old man she saw on her arrival.
She was shown into his study, the familiar room with its reminders of his past glory - his framed Order of St Michael, the Medici bronzes, the pair of Meissen parrots, the neat stack of reference books. He was sitting at his desk, with papers in a pile before him. The muddle of materials on its surface was quite uncharacteristic. She noticed how thin his hair had become, a lattice beneath which a shiny freckled surface was visible. He was concentrating on inking his quill, trying to steady it as it left the bronze well. His hands shook, but he set his jaw and grasped the writing instrument again, only to set it down when she made a slight noise to attract his attention.
‘Here you are,’ he remarked, as if they had last seen each other only minutes earlier.
‘I came at your message,’ she replied, leaning over to kiss him.
She sat in the chair opposite his desk.
‘Is Geoffroy with you?’ He peered at her carefully, and she realized that his precious sight might be failing him.
‘No, but he will be here shortly. How are you?’
‘Well enough,’ he said. ‘The days get no easier. Your mother is a comfort.’
She wondered then if his mind was not what it used to be, but he was gesturing to the Daulle engraving on the wall.
‘There she is, keeping one eye on me,’ he chuckled, and leaned forward ‘Of course the real woman is in the next room.’
A sense of horror came over her. He was obviously joking, but spoke as if they both knew she was nearby. Monsieur Dupont's letter had described him as wandering the rooms, apparently looking for something he had mislaid, frequently lifting covers, opening drawers. But this was more alarming. Was he aware that Mother had gone?
‘Come, let's look together.’ He stood up very slowly, moving from the seat to a crouch in one movement, then slowly upright, shuffling round the desk. She put out her arm for him to lean on and he took it; it was the first time she had ever supported him, and he seemed smaller and thinner than she remembered.
In the dining room, she realized she had misunderstood. There were many rectangular shadows on the Chinese wallpaper, where her stepfather's pictures had hung, but centrally over the mantel, in place of the gilded scrolled mirror which had once blazed with the reflected light from ornate girandoles, was a self-portrait that she had only seen before as an engraving. In the composition, her mother's picture stood on an easel and he had depicted himself in the very moment of completing his wife's likeness. Tears came to her and she looked at the carpet, hoping to keep her reaction from distressing him.
‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I talk to her frequently. She scolds me for this and that. But I'll be with her soon, and we can have a good argument, just as in the past.’
Pick up your copy of
Artists and Spies
Pamela Stephen

Pamela Stephen lives in Lincolnshire with her husband. She retired from teaching after more than thirty years in schools and colleges. Her interests include Art History and Architecture.
She is the author of ‘Artists and Spies’ a novel about the life and work of a female artist in Georgian England. She is currently working on her second historical novel set in the same period.
Connect with Pamela:
Publication Date: June 2020
Publisher: Independently Published
Page Length: 182 pages
Genre: Historical Fiction
Welcome to Day #2 of the blog tour for The Last Blast of the Trumpet (Book 3 of the Knox Trilogy) by Marie Macpherson #HistoricalFiction #CoffeePotBookClub @Scotscrieve @PenmorePress1 @gwendalyn_books

The Last Blast of the Trumpet
(Book 3 of the Knox Trilogy)
By Marie Macpherson

October 12th – December 14th 2020
Amazon UK • Amazon US • Barnes and Noble
Publication Date: 24 August 2020
Publisher: Penmore Press
Series: The Knox Trilogy
Print Length: 409 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction / Biographical Fiction
Conflict, Chaos and Corruption in Reformation Scotland.
He wants to reform Scotland, but his enemies will stop at nothing to prevent him.
Scotland 1559: Fiery reformer John Knox returns to a Scotland on the brink of civil war. Victorious, he feels confident of his place leading the reform until the charismatic young widow, Mary Queen of Scots returns to claim her throne. She challenges his position and initiates a ferocious battle of wills as they strive to win the hearts and minds of the Scots. But the treachery and jealousy that surrounds them both as they make critical choices in their public and private lives has dangerous consequences that neither of them can imagine.
In this final instalment of the trilogy of the fiery reformer John Knox, Macpherson tells the story of a man and a queen at one of the most critical phases of Scottish history.

Scottish writer Marie Macpherson grew up in Musselburgh on the site of the Battle of Pinkie and within sight of Fa’side Castle where tales and legends haunted her imagination. She left the Honest Toun to study Russian at Strathclyde University and spent a year in the former Soviet Union to research her PhD thesis on the 19th century Russian writer Mikhail Lermontov, said to be descended from the Scottish poet and seer, Thomas the Rhymer. Though travelled widely, teaching languages and literature from Madrid to Moscow, she has never lost her enthusiasm for the rich history and culture of her native Scotland.
Writing historical fiction combines her academic’s love of research with a passion for storytelling. Exploring the personal relationships and often hidden motivations of historical characters drives her curiosity.
The Knox Trilogy is a fictional biography of the fiery reformer, John Knox, set during the 16th century Scottish Reformation. Prizes and awards include the Martha Hamilton Prize for Creative Writing from Edinburgh University and Writer of the Year 2011 awarded by Tyne & Esk Writers. She is a member of the Historical Writers’ Association (HWA), the Historical Novel Society (HNS) and the Society of Authors (SoA).
Head over to A Darn Good Read where you can have a sneak-peek between the covers of The Last Blast of the Trumpet.
Click HERE!

Welcome to Day #4 of the blog tour for The Queen's Almoner by Tonya Ulynn Brown #HistoricalFiction #TheQueensAlmoner #BlogTour @MrsBrownee2U @CraftygasheadZo

The Queen's Almoner
By Tonya Ulynn Brown

September 28th – 30th November 2020Amazon UK • Amazon US • Barnes and Noble
Publication Date: June 30, 2020
Publisher: Late November Literary
Print Length: 320 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction
Sometimes loyalty to the queen comes at a cost.
Thomas Broune is a Reformer and childhood friend of the young queen, Mary Stuart. When Mary embarks on a new life in her estranged homeland of Scotland, Thomas is there to greet her and offer his renewed friendship. But the long-time friends grow closer, and Thomas realizes his innocent friendship has grown into something more. Yet he is a man of the cloth. Mary is the queen of the Scots. Both of them have obligations of an overwhelming magnitude: he to his conscience and she to her throne.
When he must choose between loyalty to his queen or his quiet life away from her court, he finds that the choice comes at a high price. Driven by a sense of obligation to protect those he loves, and crippled by his inability to do so, Thomas must come to terms with the choices he has made and find a peace that will finally lay his failures to rest.
We are stopping over on Zoe's Art, Craft and Life today for a sneak-peek between the covers of The Queen's Almoner!
Click HERE!

Welcome to Day #6 of the blog tour for His Castilian Hawk (The Castilian Saga, Book 1) by Anna Belfrage #Medieval #HistFic #CoffeePotBookClub @abelfrageauthor @ADarnGoodRead

His Castilian Hawk
(The Castilian Saga, Book 1)
By Anna Belfrage

October 12th – October 23rd 2020
Publication Date: September 28, 2020
Publisher: Matador (paperback) & Timelight Press (ebook)
Page Length: 396 pages (paperback) 335 pages (ebook)
Genre: Historical Fiction
For bastard-born Robert FitzStephan, being given Eleanor d’Outremer in marriage is an honour. For Eleanor, this forced wedding is anything but a fairy tale.
Robert FitzStephan has served Edward Longshanks loyally since the age of twelve. Now he is riding with his king to once and for all bring Wales under English control.
Eleanor d’Outremer—Noor to family—lost her Castilian mother as a child and is left entirely alone when her father and brother are killed. When ordered to wed the unknown Robert FitzStephan, she has no choice but to comply.
Two strangers in a marriage bed is not easy. Things are further complicated by Noor’s blood-ties to the Welsh princes and by covetous Edith who has warmed Robert’s bed for years. Robert’s new wife may be young and innocent, but he is soon to discover that not only is she spirited and proud, she is also brave. Because when Wales lies gasping and Edward I exacts terrible justice on the last prince and his children, Noor is determined to save at least one member of the House of Aberffraw from the English king.
Will years of ingrained service have Robert standing with his king or will he follow his heart and protect his wife, his beautiful and fierce Castilian hawk?
We are stopping over on A Darn Good Read for a sneak-peek between the covers of His Castilian Hawk.
Click HERE!

Welcome to Day #1 of the blog tour for The Potential for Love: A Regency Novel by Catherine Kullmann #BookReview #RegencyRomance #CoffeePotBookClub @CKullmannAuthor @Beatric09625662

The Potential for Love: A Regency NovelBy Catherine Kullmann


October 19th - October 30th 2020Amazon • Waterstones • Barnes and Noble
Publication Date: 31 March 2020
Publisher: Willow Books
Print Length: 414 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction/Historical Romance/Regency Romance/Historical Women’s Fiction
1816
For over six years, Thomas Ferraunt’s thoughts have been of war. Newly returned to England from occupied Paris, he must ask himself what his place is in this new world and what he wants from it. More and more, his thoughts turn to Arabella Malvin, but would Lord Malvin agree to such a mismatch for his daughter, especially when she is being courted by Lord Henry Danlow?
About to embark on her fourth Season, Arabella is tired of the life of a debutante, waiting in the wings for her real life to begin. She is ready to marry. But which of her suitors has the potential for love and who will agree to the type of marriage she wants?
As she struggles to make her choice, she is faced with danger from an unexpected quarter while Thomas is stunned by a new challenge. Will these events bring them together or drive them apart?
We are celebrating the release of the special hardback edition of The Potential for Love during this tour. With a beautiful dust jacket over an elegant laminated cover, it will enhance any library and is the perfect gift for lovers of historical women’s fiction and historical romance.
The first stop of the tour is over on Candlelight Reading for a fabulous review.
Click HERE!

October 18, 2020
Join author, Clive Mantle, as he looks back on his most resent research for his fabulous #NewRelease - In the City of Fortune and Flames (A Freddie Malone Adventure) #YA #TimeTravel @MantleClive

A Research Journey from Ancient Egypt to the Great Fire of London
By Clive Mantle

This has been quite unlike the gestation period for either of my other two books in the Freddie Malone series. My research for ‘In the City of Fortune and Flames’ started well over two years ago, amassing detailed notes on the terrible blight of the 17th Century slave trade, the Plague of 1665 and the Great Fire of London in 1666. An exciting and important story line emerged by the spring of 2018. My publishers liked it but said they first wanted Freddie to travel to Ancient Egypt for book 2, so like a cartoon character I skidded to a halt in a cloud of research notes and took a deep breath.

Tutankhamun's golden mask - Wikipedia.

I found it impossible for a week or so to divorce myself from 17th Century London and immerse myself in the great Dynasties, but Ancient Egypt is such an amazing subject that with every book I read about the period I soon fell headlong in love.
‘A Jewel in the Sands of Time’ [book 2] flowed very easily once I had pinned down the actual dates, historical events and people I wanted Freddie and friends to meet.

So back to London in the Autumn of 2019. To a certain extent a lot of my groundwork was done by the time I returned to ‘Flames’. But it took time to re-absorb all the information I wanted to include. It is always a battle as to what not to include. I could bore for England on these subjects, and one of the best pieces of advice I’ve received from my agent Penny Luithlen is, “Don’t research dump.” It is an important note for anyone who has immersed themselves so totally in a subject. Selection is paramount, and the detail doesn’t have to be in great wodges which alienate your readership, or make them feel lectured to. The right fact will organically slip in seamlessly if you are clever enough with your situation, story and characters. At least, that’s the plan.
As is always the case with me, the events I think will be the most important or moving, get supplanted in the pecking order by unexpected people or scenarios that pop out of my head as I’m underway. I have a pretty rigid structure before I start, with detailed notes about each chapter which are okayed by my publisher, but by the time they get to look at the book I deliver some months later, chapters will have swapped places, a fleet of extra characters will have been invented, things I’ve said that will be included aren’t, and I hold my breath waiting to be told to revert to the original plan. ‘Phew!’ - So far, so good.
The changes are always for a reason and lead to a much better flow.
The main events in the historical part of Freddie’s adventure have a ghostly and pertinent resonance with our current situation. From reading about them three years ago, I was fascinated with two black slaves Mingoe and Jack. In a bizarre act of symmetry they were ‘owned’ by Sir William Penn and Sir William Batten, Pepys’ direct neighbours in Seething Lane. I already knew Freddie would work for Pepys, and the obvious allies in the piece had to be Mingoe and Jack.
The more I read about them and their treatment, the more my stomach churned.
I had always been aware of slavery, but that I hadn’t been taught at school any great detail about how it has shaped our countries history appalled me. Researching in the enlightening ‘Black Lives in the English Archives’ pages, Mingoe and Jack’s story suddenly sprang to life with the entry concerning their being made to dance for their masters in the Dolphin Tavern. I sat back stunned and closed my eyes, seeing these young men dressed in their gaudy finery with engraved brass and silver collars which declared their ownership to the two Sir Williams. I could see them in my mind’s eye dance for the amusement of these drunken Lords in a squalid pub on Thames Street. What must that have felt like? It was immediately my duty to bring them to a wider audience.


Sale and inspection of slaves - Wikipedia.
The abhorrence of the images above must be widely shown in schools. Our forefathers perpetrated these acts, and the enormous wealth of many major British institutions and families was amassed at their expense. It is estimated that over a period of 400 years nearly 13 million Africans were forcibly transported from Central and West Africa, by the Portuguese, British, Spanish, French, Dutch and Danes. Over a million slaves died on the inhumanly cruel Atlantic voyages, with many more perishing when they arrived in the ‘New World’.
There were 2 to 3,000 Black people in England in the mid 17th Century, and it is not difficult to imagine that most of their experiences would be similar to Mingoe and Jack’s. They were trophies. Highly decorated and finely dressed, playthings and accessories to the richest of rich ladies. Status symbols. Exotic baubles.
Being paraded carrying shopping, several steps behind their mistress may have been preferable to being overseen by a cruel slave owner with a whip in Barbados, but it was still wrong, to the very highest definition of the word.
An unequal division on grounds of colour had started in our nation long before this. But it is plain to see that centuries and generations have subsequently revealed how unforgivably slow we as a country have been to embrace each other as equals. Not only that, we have been misled with the history we have been taught about our own nation’s growth, wealth and morals. Schools need to completely re-evaluate the way the subject of slavery is taught, and I hope my book will be a useful tool in their armoury, in order to promote discussion and help shine the light of total inclusivity into the darkest and most stubborn corners of resistance.
*************
The Plague takes up the first half of the book and the Fire most of the second part. It was an adventure in itself plotting the characters through the actual events as eye witnesses to the sights, smells and horrors all around them. They each have their own particular triumphs and disasters, pursued by a ruthless London gang led by the pipe smoking Old Ma Packer who is in league with the merciless Collector.
*************

My research included devouring the works on Pepys and the period by Tomalin, Mortimer, Rideal, Porter, and Bastable, coupled with a glorious visit to Pepys’ reconstructed Library at Magdalene College Cambridge. [pictured above and a wonderful place to immerse yourself surrounded by his books and bookcases, desk and paintings]
I built layer on layer of background and fact until I was fit to spill all onto paper.
The resonance of the Plague with our current pandemic crisis is frightening. The misinformation, the confusion, the corruption, the waste, the panic – each manifest themselves in different ways during both disasters, but are present nonetheless. A 17th century city of 500,000 people held in the grip of fear, who in 9 months were reduced to 400,000.
20% of the population dead. The official figures in the ‘Bills of Mortality’ are approximately 70,000, but the astonishingly corrupt ‘Searchers of the dead’ and the ‘Watchmen’ added nearly a third to that total. Both groups accepted bribes either to register a non plague verdict of death [Searchers], or to turn a blind eye, allowing a relative compulsorily locked up with an infected family member to escape [Watchmen]. In both scenarios the disease was allowed to multiply, directly due to corruption and greed. The rapid exodus of the wealthy from London, including many doctors and apothecaries, left the Plague to become largely a disease of the poor. Into this treacherous situation, and through the dank and fetid streets, Freddie, Mingoe and Jack shine a beacon of hope.
Immediately after writing the last paragraph, I turned on the Radio 4 news to hear Dr David Nabarro, [previous Director General of the World Health Organisation] call the Covid 19 Pandemic ‘a disease of the poor!’
We really don’t learn very quickly do we?
History is important. It is REALLY important.

Plague doctor outfit - Wikipedia

Freddie can’t change the Historical facts of the Plague, but with Mingoe and Jack they can minister to the sick and the dying and outwit the merciless gang which operates around them, which they accomplish with great effect.

In the case of the Great Fire where Ruby and Connor join forces with the others, I place the characters in the actual progression of the blaze, as it marched for 3 days Eastwards from Pudding Lane fanned by relentless hot winds. It turned Westwards on the 3rd evening after consuming the old St Paul’s and even threatened the Tower of London which was packed with 600,000 lbs of gunpowder. 20% of the houses in the City [13,200] were destroyed along with St Paul’s and 87 churches, whose stone simply crumbled to dust in the intense inferno, destroying the precious valuables many had placed inside thinking them safe.
Freddie and his team have to stay one step ahead at all times, whether combatting the flames by the Duke of York’s side, or outwitting the Collector who is after some legendary Diaries and a very famous cheese. [amongst other things] The very real troubles our hero’s face in their daily lives in the 21st century, pale somewhat when compared to the situations encountered when they travel back to the Fire. Each excel in the life and death struggles they are forced to confront. There’s something about a disaster which brings out the best in all of them.

Central London in 1666, with the burnt area shown in pink - Wikipedia.
It was an enormous pleasure immersing myself in the 17th Century for the last two years, with the crumbling edifice of the old St. Paul’s as a backdrop, and pitch covered pirates rotting in metal cages on poles in the Thames, overlooked by Cromwell’s head on a spike at Westminster Hall, whilst the King fed delicacies to a crane with a wooden leg in St James’s Park, all of which feature at various times.
I sincerely hope you can see, hear and smell the streets as you read, and hopefully enjoy the adventure.
Now, where to next?
Clive Mantle. Wiltshire. October 2020


In the City of Fortune and Flames
(A Freddie Malone Adventure)
By Clive Mantle

The mysterious world map on Freddie Malone's bedroom wall ripples into life and the swirling vortex begins to form, but is Freddie prepared for where - and when - it will take him? Join Freddie, Connor and Ruby as they travel to the plague-stricken and fire-ravaged London of the seventeenth century, where the streets are ruled by a merciless gang of criminals and kidnappers. Stalked through time by the menacing, shrouded figure of the Collector, can the friends outwit their enemies and save history? It's all just a question of time...
Excerpt
Chapter 1
Connor stared into the searing spotlights and felt his mouth go completely dry. A salty drop of sweat stung his right eye. He was transfixed, unable to move. His mind was completely blank.
His focus changed to the mass ranks of his school mates and their shuffling parents who stared back at him. Most of them were willing him to find the first words of a sentence. Any sentence! Others sniggered at the large, bewildered boy, dressed as the Pied Piper of Hamelin, surrounded by twenty embarrassed rats.
Connor opened his mouth again and the audience leaned forward, hoping to catch the first utterance from the star of the drama group’s Christmas production. Ms DuFaye was whispering his opening line repeatedly at increasing volumes from the wings, until Connor remained the only person on stage or in the audience who didn’t know what he was meant to say.
“Good citizens of Hamelin, I hear you have a problem,” the director eventually called at full volume.
Connor couldn’t actually hear anything, because his ears were blocked by a huge false beard. This was a last minute addition by Mrs Spencer to try to make him look older. She had stuck it on way too tightly. That, and the huge green hat which covered the bits the beard didn’t, ensured Connor was deaf to any prompt.
In a complete panic, his thoughts darted around erratically, exactly when he needed to focus. Into his mind came the image of his best friend’s magical map. Connor pictured it on Freddie’s bedroom wall. If only it would appear in the school hall. If only! Connor would leap into the vortex to another time and place – any time and place but here, on this stage, right now.
Connor felt a sharp dig in his back. He turned to see the leading rat, Casey, mouthing at him. It sounded like, “Guusshh shizzizens uff Shammblin,” Then the rat looked at the audience, raised her huge painted eyebrows and shook her head. Connor could definitely hear the wave of laughter that followed. This was all so unfair. He’d only joined the group in October because Ruby had signed up. She’d left after two weeks, citing ‘artistic differences’ with Ms DuFaye. Great! So he’d had to persevere. It would look suspicious if he went as well, wouldn’t it? Everyone would rightly guess he fancied her.
What am I doing? Concentrate. Connor stared down at the recorder. He’d only started learning it five weeks ago... ‘Play something!’ Connor lifted the instrument and with trembling breath he improvised a tune composed entirely of squeaks and squawks, to the amazement of the audience, rats and townspeople of Hamelin. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Ms DuFaye burying her head in her hands.
Connor’s stage debut had got off to a disastrous start, but he suddenly picked out the encouraging faces of his friends Ruby and Freddie, smiling supportively and willing him on. Freddie’s mum and dad were alongside, beaming positivity out of the semi-darkness.
Spurred on by their presence, his performance burst into life, until five minutes later when, much to everyone’s amusement, and thanks to his nervous sweats loosening the grip of the glue, his beard fell off. It was highly embarrassing, but the bonus was he could suddenly hear and he only forgot his lines three more times during the first half.
Ms DuFaye’s fiancé had composed a haunting tune with which the Piper would lure the rats away just before the interval, and then the children in the dramatic finale. Connor was making a good job of it second time round, but Casey, now playing the Mayor’s child, accidentally on purpose trod on one of Connor’s baggy trailing trouser legs. His humiliation was complete as they slowly started falling down, and as he confided to Freddie later, “You try playing the recorder, walking, remembering your lines, acting, and holding up your trousers at the same time.”
He caught sight of Jasper, Kelvin and the gang on the front row, who had been made to attend as a detention. They must be loving this, Connor thought. The bully’s sneering smile and menacing blue eyes tracked Connor’s every move.
Jasper had been quiet since the episode at half term when Freddie, Connor and Ruby had left him and Kelvin encased in a frozen block of dirty washing and furniture, whilst they returned King Tutankhamun’s precious scarab. But that would all change now. The final image of the Piper hopping off with his trousers round his ankles would be impossible to live down – ever!
Connor’s completely disinterested mum and dad were the only people in a twenty-kilometre radius who had no idea about his disastrous acting debut.
Thankfully, Freddie’s parents whisked Connor away from the crime scene for some ‘celebration pizza’.
“You played a darlin’ Piper, Connor. I thought you looked wonderful. A beard really suits you,” gushed Freddie’s mum.
“I can see why there were no rats left in Hamelin with you on the case, Connor. A career in pest control beckons!” Mr Malone added, less helpfully.
As Connor finished the pizza the others had no room for, he melted inside at their attempts to be kind, but he knew his debut had been a total disaster.
Freddie sported a fixed grin of support, and Ruby passed him half her garlic bread saying, “It’s all right, I had some pasta with my brothers before the, er show.” She gripped his hand and squeezed it twice during the meal. That was definitely compensation for being bad in a play, Connor thought later, rubbing the spot Ruby had touched and vowing never to wash it again.
It was now the Christmas holidays, which was a huge relief to all. Connor was glad to escape the teasing shouts of ‘Pied Penguin’ echoing down the school corridors, and Freddie was on antibiotics for a bad chest infection, which wouldn’t clear up. And with school over for two weeks, Ruby had dyed the left side of her hair blue again, returning her to her preferred feisty look. Instead of meeting in the wintery cold at the old oak tree – their usual meeting place – Freddie and Connor headed over to Ruby’s house, protected from any chance conflict with Jasper and his cronies. An added bonus of being at Ruby’s was they could also avoid Finnegan and Kathleen, Freddie’s very grumpy, deaf and elderly great uncle and aunt. They were staying until New Year whilst their new flat was decorated. Avoiding contact with Finnegan was best for all concerned, especially for Connor, who felt he was the unfair target of the old man’s anger.
“Don’t forget, RooBeeRoo,” called Ruby’s mum as she headed out to work. “Pick up the twins at four thirty. Text me when you’ve done it please. Their food’s in the fridge.”
Ruby cringed at her mum’s use of her nickname in front of her friends, but Freddie hardly noticed; he seemed lost in his thoughts. “It’s getting ready, I can feel it. We’d better be prepared, guys.”
Next door, three packed rucksacks sat in Freddie’s wardrobe, ready and waiting. Their contents were constantly refined and Connor’s horde of sweets had been voted out, and more useful things put in its place, much to his dismay.
Whilst it had been Freddie’s second adventure in the vortex, it had been Connor and Ruby’s first, and they needed time to get their heads around what had happened last half term, when they were whisked 3,500 years back to Ancient Egypt. None of them knew when the magical world map would open again, and transport them along the vortex to a new destination.
After their Egyptian adventure, Freddie had started a replacement for his ruined notebook and had suggested the others do the same, so that now everyone had a copy if they got separated again. Four pages for each language, just as before, and now including Swedish, Japanese, Polish and with help from Mr Kapoor at the sweet shop, Hindi.
It was safe to be at Freddie’s from 11 am until 3 pm, as his quarrelsome relations were out at various lunch clubs. That is, those that hadn’t expelled Finnegan for his cantankerous behaviour. Life was certainly tricky in the Malone’s house with him there.
“Family are family,” Mr Malone pointed out, every time things got out of hand, until the day Finnegan drank most of a bottle of very special whiskey Mr Malone had been saving for Christmas. He wasn’t so forgiving after that.
Freddie’s bad winter cold had turned into a chest infection and he had been put on the strongest possible antibiotics and told to steer clear of Finnegan, who had only just recovered from a long illness himself.Not a problem! Freddie thought.
Uncle Patrick had been absent for most of December. Freddie’s favourite relation was badly missed. He lit up any room he entered. Laughter followed him, as if he sprinkled a magic dust that allowed everyone to see the best side of life. The rumour was he was going to stay throughout Christmas, and Freddie was already excited about what Patrick might bring. On his 13th birthday he’d given Freddie the enchanted map that hung on his bedroom wall. No present was ever going to top that. The colours were rich and luxuriant. Deep burgundy and reds, blues of all shades, and so many varieties of green he’d lost count. It was a living treasure. Orange deserts shimmered and sparkled. Flecks of quartz in the paint shot tiny shards of light into the room. All the major cities were illustrated with their landmarks: the Colosseum in Rome; the Kremlin in Moscow; and Niagara Falls still had a disconcerting habit of squirting water when he walked past. But they could all see the map was pulsing with energy and strength, and new symbols appeared hourly, teasing them with possibilities.
Recently, in addition to the god of the sea, Neptune, who blew wooden galleons about the Southern Oceans, the marbled figure of Atlas had appeared at the top of the map in the west.
Every hour, he would drop the huge globe from his shoulder and launch it, as if in a tenpin bowling alley. Freddie would shout “Strike!” as it collided with Stonehenge, before the stone circles were rebuilt immediately, and an angry druid shook his fist in Atlas’s direction. The map was a great source of entertainment for Freddie.
In the Malone’s house, Christmas excitement was mounting and the ritual of decorating their lounge and tree took place around the permanently seated elderly relations who criticised the placement of every light, bauble and piece of tinsel.
“Oh! Please hurry up, Patrick,” Freddie heard his mother whisper as she hurried to make Kathleen her 100th cup of tea. Connor and Ruby had to be smuggled past the open lounge door into the cold night, both slipping down the icy path.
“Cinema at ten?” checked Freddie.
“Don’t go anywhere without us,” threatened Ruby playfully, clinging to the gatepost. Freddie watched Connor gingerly negotiate the pavement and slide away into the darkness.
Closing the door and turning back into the house, he found Finnegan blocking the hall. He spoke to Freddie at a fraction of his normal volume.
“Where are you off to, Freddie boy?”
“Nowhere. Err, she’s just joking.”
“Was that the girl with blue hair, and the fat boy? You three are always very busy aren’t you? Always up to something. What do—?” Just then a loud knock saved Freddie, and the welcome silhouette of Uncle Patrick showed through the frosted glass.
Freddie flung open the door and hugged his eccentric uncle as hard as he could. Then he stood back laughing because apart from carrying a huge bag of presents and a sack of clinking bottles, in the freezing December evening, Patrick was wearing shorts and a flashing Santa badge on his Hawaiian shirt. Finnegan had vanished, but could still be heard. “The idiot with the silly shirts has arrived,” he shouted to Kathleen. Uncle Patrick took a deep breath as he walked into the lounge, looking like a man entering a lion’s cage.
After the evening meal, Freddie retreated to his room rather than watching TV with the volume loud enough to make your ears bleed – as Finnegan and Kathleen couldn’t hear it otherwise. His mum came up a few minutes later with his antibiotics, and kissed him on the forehead. “I’m so sorry, darlin’. They’re not here for much longer. Take your tablet now. I hope you’re feeling better in the morning.”
As soon as she closed the door, the world changed.
The lights flared with a fierce intensity like a lightning strike. Competing voices tumbled over each other, flying at Freddie from a thousand directions and meeting in the centre of his brain with perfect clarity. Swirling coloured beams played on the walls before swivelling and shooting to focus on the map. A rumbling wall of noise built behind it.
King Tutankhamun sneezed and the Yeti rushed over to wipe his nose. Suddenly everyone on the map looked ill. This felt so different from before. Freddie was mesmerised. Dramatic organ chords seemed to spell the end of the world. A feeling of doom clouded his mind.
Freddie pulled himself together and grabbed his rucksack. An electrical charge shot from the map to the door, and the sound of a hundred locks, bolts and chains, turned, clicked and rattled at once. Freddie crammed his tablets into his bag before texting:
SORRY – GOT TO GO
Neptune turned his head into the room and a chill wind made Freddie shudder even though he had his thick winter pyjamas on. He gasped as the sea god revealed the hidden side of his face which was covered in a bloody cloth. He blew the familiar tornado, causing Freddie’s clothes and possessions to circle the room in a hectic dance. With his wide eyes fixed on the map, Freddie ran through a mental checklist of his backpack’s contents, Notebook, antibiotics, antiseptic, change of clothes – I’m ready for anything, he said to himself. Suddenly, the map sprang to life as the cacophony grew. The colours of the different countries began changing, running back through history indicating their previous rulers.
Cloud formations slid across the continents like a weather report on fast-forward. The mighty oceans were alive and vast mountain ranges broke through the beautiful fabric.
Freddie watched as the Eiffel Tower shuddered, shrank and evaporated with a fizzle. His eyes were drawn upwards as the sea crashed against the White Cliffs of Dover. Then the Shard and Big Ben disappeared one after the other as the centuries scrolled back.
The River Thames surged from west to east across London, and a fraction of a second later a split followed its exact course, indicating the location of Freddie’s next adventure.
Well at least I can speak the language! Freddie thought, trying to be brave.
All he could see now was his bedroom wall gaping wide open and the vortex appearing beyond. At the sound of all the locks, bolts and chains opening again, Freddie shot towards the wall, attracted by an invisible magnetic power. A thousand church bells sounded as ragged, bandaged hands beckoned him onwards and roughly pulled him through the gap.
Once again, he was on his way.
Pick up your copy ofIn the City of Fortune and FlamesAmazon UK • Waterstones
Clive Mantle

Clive Mantle is a much-loved British actor, a star of both stage and screen for over 40 years. He is perhaps best known for playing Little John in Robin of Sherwood, Great Jon Umber in Game of Thrones, Simon Horton in The Vicar of Dibley and Mike Barratt in Casualty. His voice is also well known from his work on over 180 audio books, and voicing animated characters, including Gator in Thomas the Tank Engine...
...And, he is now a published Author.
Connect with Clive:
Website • The Adventures of Freddie Malone • Facebook • Twitter • Instagram
Series: A Freddie Malone Adventure, Book 3
Author: Clive Mantle
Publication Date: 14th October 2020
Publisher: Award Publications Ltd
Page Length: 288 Pages
Genre: Young Adult / Time Travel

Karen E. Stokes is sharing an excerpt from her fabulous book — The Healing #Paranormal #GreatReads @KEStokes2 @darkstrokedark

The Healing
By Karen E. Stokes

Following the discovery of a photograph found within the pages of a book purchased at the local market, a boy enters the lives of a mother and her young son. On the surface, he appears ordinary, almost angelic, until his presence reveals something much more sinister.
Presented with both physical and psychological communications, Jess oscillates between reality and that of another dimension, her protective nature compromised by a dark and mysterious realm. The humdrum ‘everyday’ routine is fused with fear and uncertainty - was she chosen or was it by pure fate that she and her son had become the centre of the spirit boy’s world?
As the mystery deepens, Jess soon realises she is battling something far greater than she had first imagined. Was the spirit boy’s presence communicating an accidental drowning or an abhorrent crime? What really happened that fateful hot summer’s day by the park lake?
Excerpt
There are many restless spirits among us, most of which have lost their way or simply can’t let go of the living, but there is always a reason. Whether it’s a score to settle or the need to convey a message, like Sam, who was clinging to Jess in pursuit of peace, such as it exists. There are ghosts that linger for years in castles and stately homes, each one with a specific and valid story. Lester understood Jess’s unfortunate circumstance. He advised her to continue the search for Sara, just as Maggie had recommended, or consider spiritual cleansing (exorcism), with a penchant for the former, in that it would be the most satisfying outcome for everyone. The backlash from any method of exorcising could be detrimental if unsuccessful and should only be considered as a last resort.
Everyone seemed reasonably happy with Lester’s assessment. Jess drew comfort from a fresh understanding of why those on the ‘other side’ communicate with the living and if scaring people shitless was the only way to cut through, then so be it. Maggie looked decidedly unwell, continually routing in her handbag as if to hide away. “Are you okay?” Jess asked. Following a significant pause she addressed the group. “Yes. I must apologise. Unfortunately this case has triggered painful memories and I just couldn’t go on with it,” she said. Jess felt guilty, having been so quick to judge and encouraged her to share the details if she was able. “A mother once came to me for a reading following the death of her son who had been killed in a road accident. He was right there in the room, covered in blood soaked wounds, crying in pain.” Maggie said. It was the stuff of nightmares, but she wasn’t quite expecting to feel the way she did. It’s one thing being in a room full of people, but to be in close proximity to the ghost of a dead child was, for her, unbearable. Mum understood entirely, and was thankful she had never encountered such an extreme case, until now. Lester insisted he stay in touch with Jess to offer support and asked that he be informed of any new developments – a lifeline which Jess embraced wholeheartedly.
Pick up your copy of
The Healing
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Karen E. Stokes

I began my literary journey in 2010, writing purely to see where it would lead, hence my first novel ‘An Ordinary Life’ was finally published in 2014, under a different name. The work was biographical, written in the third person using a fictional character, which I found incredibly grounding and therapeutic, fuelling my desire to continue.
Born and bred in Sheffield - a ‘true Yorkshire lass’, as they say, I was raised amid shop-keeping and a tight-knit community by parents who were both articulate and creative, and as such, I inherited many skills with which to occupy my time.
I clearly remember a love of reading from an early age through to my teens, with a passion for poems and limericks, evident in a recent discovery of a piece I wrote about my father when I was only ten years old, which demonstrates an early talent for rhyme and phrasing. Among my favourite authors are Fay Weldon and Martin Amis.
As a versatile creative, I am also a successful digital artist, commissioned by an art licensing agency based in Florida. My work as a musician and professionally trained vocalist spans more than twenty years in the entertainment business.
Connect with Karen:
Website • Twitter • Facebook • Goodreads.
Author: Karen E. StokesPublication Date: 25th July 2020Publisher: Darkstroke PublishingPage Length: 127 pagesGenre: Paranormal Fiction.

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