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message 1: by Afroz (new)

Afroz Alam (afrozalam) | 3 comments Adhaata Asao's Liege is my debut book. It is fiction fantasy based on Hebrew and Indian Mythologies. Kindly read and review it.
Available on Amazon in paperback and Kindle Edition.

Thanks
Afroz Alam


message 2: by Jordan (new)

Jordan Sanders | 11 comments Thank you for postings this


message 3: by Afroz (new)

Afroz Alam (afrozalam) | 3 comments Jordan wrote: "Thank you for postings this"

I would be so glad if you read and reviewed my book, Adhaata Asao's Liege.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5...


message 4: by G.J. (new)

G.J. Griffiths (gjgriffiths) | 3 comments I hope you are able to accept my latest historical fiction for a review. The Mule Spinners’ Daughters will be launched on 31st May 2020 on Amazon. I am a volunteer at Quarry Bank Mill, a cotton museum in Cheshire England, and was inspired by some of the stories about child apprentice workers during the Industrial Revolution. I’ve written ten books in total and The Mule Spinners’ Daughters is the third novel in the Tales of Quarry Bank series. Each book may be read individually as a stand-alone novel. There were two boy apprentices who ran away from the cotton mill in 1806, and they set out to walk some 200 miles to London. They each wished to see their mothers who still remained in Hackney workhouse there, and the boys’ journey led to writing my first book. They later had children, and this story is about their very independently-minded daughters who grew up at a time when the word feminism was not known.
Some more details:
Paperback released 18th Feb 2020; kindle edition 31st May 2020.
Genre: Historical fiction; length 242 pages.
I can provide a PDF or a kindle/mobi version for a review.
Please note: no violence or abuse etc; suitable for young adult to adult readers.
Book Blurb –
“Sebastian said: But there is an obstacle, a principle of hers that she’s read of in a book by a woman called Mary Wollstonecraft...”
“… Women should be wives and companions to their husbands…”
Did the mother of Mary Shelley fill the farm girl’s head with too many ideas of feminism?
When Sally Sefton runs away from Sebastian at the altar on her wedding day there is a desperate chase to find her. Some of her friends think they know why she ran. But only Cathy Priestley thinks she knows where. Her chief bridesmaid suspects Sally may have joined the Christian Israelites. Will they find her before the group sails on a missionary tour abroad? The split causes a bitter dispute between Sebastian and Wesley, her brother. While feelings are running so high there seems to be no hope of reconciliation between the families.
MY WEBSITE: https://www.gjgriffithswriter.com/

GOODREADS: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...

AMAZON: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B084V9Q2VW

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B084V9Q2VW


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