Blog Tour — Bittersweet Brooklyn, by Thelma Adams #BittersweetBrooklyn #ThelmaAdams #HFVBTPartner @thelmadams @hfvbt @LUAuthors
Historical Fiction Virtual Blog Tours Presents…

Bittersweet BrooklynBy Thelma Adams

In turn-of-the century New York, a mobster rises—and his favorite sister struggles between loyalty and life itself. How far will she go when he commits murder?
After midnight, Thelma Lorber enters her brother Abie’s hangout under the Williamsburg Bridge, finding Jewish mobster Louis “Pretty” Amberg in a puddle of blood on the kitchen floor. She could flee. Instead, in the dark hours of that October 1935 night before the dawn of Murder, Inc., she remains beside the fierce, funny brother who has nurtured and protected her since childhood. There are many kinds of love a woman can feel for a man, but few compare to that of the baby sister for her older brother. For Thelma, a wild widow tethered to a young son, Abie is the center of her world. But that love is about to undo everything she holds dear…
Flipping the familiar script of The Sopranos, Boardwalk Empire, and The Godfather, Bittersweet Brooklyn explores the shattering impact of mob violence on the women expected to mop up the mess. Winding its way over decades, this haunting family saga plunges readers into a dangerous past—revealed through the perspective of a forgotten yet vibrant woman.
“Thelma Adams has found her niche as a wonderfully vivid historical chronicler of the female spirit. Her tale of a Jewish girl making her way amid gangster-studded NYC is a marvelous must-read.” Michael Musto, columnist
A conversation with Thelma Adams

It is so nice to meet you, Thelma. Wow! You certainly interviewed some amazing celebrities. Could you tell us what inspired you to write Bittersweet Brooklyn?
So many things inspired me to write Bittersweet Brooklyn, originally entitled Kosher Nostra. The first is being named Thelma after a grandmother who died before I was born – she left so little behind except what passed through my father. And, then, that name: Thelma! Try playing kickball with that on the Southern California playground. Worst nickname: Thudma. Who was this woman? I knew I wouldn't find out anything about her in the newspapers or much in census records – but she had this brother, Abie, who became a low-level thug in the Jewish mob aka Murder Inc. That was a way in: what happened when you flipped the mobster saga and focused on the women in the family? I wanted to know. And I never could have predicted what I found out about them and their house on Montauk Avenue in East New York, Brooklyn.
Did you face many research challenges?
The major challenge – and surprise – was that I thought I would be able to access Abie's criminal records in New York. But the records, on micro fiche, and often in an ornate cursive, and disbursed through a number of archives, were hard for me to sort through (especially with imperfect eyesight). I sometimes wonder if his criminal history was scrubbed. But that left me with newspapers, which are growing more accessible everyday thanks to the internet, and the wonders of Ancestry.com. Through Ancestry, and requests for death, birth and marriage records, I began to piece together the lives this family lived together. And I traced their rise from relying on Hebrew charity to owning a house in the new neighbourhood of East New York. I have to give a shout-out to Nick Hitchcock, the historian son of an historian friend from college, for doing the shoe-leather research that allowed me to discover when the family bought the house on Montauk Avenue that provided them with a new level of stability – and the surprising names on the deed.
It sounds like you spent many hours researching. Can you tell us what makes your book different to other turn-of-the- century novels out there?
There are many books about turn-of-the-century New York and the immigrant experience – whether it's E. L. Doctorow's Billy Bathgate that was made into a movie with Dustin Hoffman, or Alfred Kazin's contemporaneous account A Walker in the City. However, there aren't as many novels that focus on a female heroine and her narrative arc, her struggle under the historical radar. That's one thing that sets this novel apart. Also, novels with criminal elements tend to focus on the bang-bang of it all but I have chosen to see how a life of crime – and the freedom it can create from suffocating norms – impacts the entire family. And, into this, I put a woman who wants to live, to have an ecstatic experience with life itself, to dance and experience joy -- but she's not a perfect individual or a responsible mother, which is not a common main character in the literature of that time period. She was a liberated woman well before her time – and paid a price for it.
Can you tell us what you are currently working on?
I'm currently working on a very different historical novel called May the Circle Be Unbroken also largely set in New York. It’s about the entangling of Spiritualists and Suffragists in the fight for woman’s rights in mid-19th Century America from the viewpoint of a Spiritual Medium. It includes many historical characters including Horace Greeley, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
Thank you so much for taking time out of your busy day to chat to us!
Scroll down for a fabulous Giveaway.
Giveaway
During the Blog Tour we will be giving away two paperback copies and one Audio Book! Enter the Giveaway HERE!
Giveaway Rules
• Giveaway ends at 11:59pm EST on February 15th. You must be 18 or older to enter.• Giveaway is open to US only.• Only one entry per household.• All giveaway entrants agree to be honest and not cheat the systems; any suspect of fraud is decided upon by blog/site owner and the sponsor, and entrants may be disqualified at our discretion.• Winner has 48 hours to claim prize or new winner is chosen.
AMAZON | BARNES AND NOBLE
Thelma Adams

Published on January 28, 2019 23:30
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The Coffee Pot Book Club (formally Myths, Legends, Books, and Coffee Pots) was founded in 2015. Our goal was to create a platform that would help Historical Fiction, Historical Romance and Historical Fantasy authors promote their books and find that sometimes elusive audience. The Coffee Pot Book Club soon became the place for readers to meet new authors (both traditionally published and independently) and discover their fabulous books.
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