WELSH WRITING WEDNESDAYS: EVONNE WAREHAM ON WALES AS A SETTING FOR FICTION

You’ve probably noticed that many romance novels and some crime stories are set in picturesque locations in the British Isles – Scotland and Cornwall are particular favourites.You don’t get books set in Wales quite so often, although dramas like The Pembrokeshire Murders are putting Welsh settings on the screen.

I’m a Welsh writer, living on the South Wales coast, who once worked for the National Parks. That’s a lot of baggage. I’ve set books in Wales in the past and am ambitious to do more. I write in the genre romantic suspense, which is better known in the USA, less so on this side of the Atlantic. If you’ve read books by Nora Roberts, Karen Rose or Karen Robards you’ll have an idea of what I am talking about. Those books are set in places like Sacramento, Washington and New Orleans, or sometimes in the American farmlands or backwoods.

It’s not so much the Welsh urban settings that appeal to me – although I’m sure that Cardiff and Llandudno can be interesting locations, if not sounding quite as glamorous as New York or Los Angeles. The attraction of Wales for me is the potential of the rural and coastal landscape, and the way that it can be turned in two directions. Wales is blessed with mountains, big skies for cloud watching and star gazing, and a beautiful and dramatic coastline, accessible from a coastal path that circles the entire country.

Is there anything more romantic than a deserted beach at sunset on a warm summer evening? A place for lovers to discover each other. But give the story a twist – the same beach in winter, or at night, with a storm blowing, and you have the backdrop for mayhem. A seaside or country cottage can be an idyllic bolt hole from the world or a deserted and lonely trap, with a heroine on the run. Writers think about these things. I’m often told that taking a walk with an author who is sizing up the surroundings for a good place to bury a body is a disconcerting experience. You get the picture.

The historic legacy of Wales, from castles to folklore, is another attraction. Welsh castles range from Castell Coch, a quirky Victorian Gothic Revival built on thirteenth century foundations, to massive medieval fortifications like Caerphilly, which were anything but quirky. The myths and legends of Wales are rich in magic and the supernatural. Traditional customs, like the Mari Lwyd, a poetic wassailing party featuring a horse’s skull, have plenty to tingle the spine.

There is also the attraction of the natural world. One of the perks of being an author is the ability to make your own weather, and Wales has plenty of that to choose from. If you need a fierce storm to strand your hero and heroine together, you’ve got it. Two of the things I like to play with as a writer are the impact of silence and writing against expectation of the setting. The silence of a lonely location can be peaceful or sinister, or even better, progress from one to the other.  A setting can echo a character’s mood – like a wet day reflecting bad news, but it can be very effective when bad things happen in good places. Being surrounded by beauty and sunshine can make a threat even more devastating.

Those are the things I get from setting a book in my home country. For me the landscape has romantic beauty and a wild and potentially sinister edge. As a Welsh writer, I want to be able to share that with readers.

 

 

 

The Soldier’s Girl by Sharon Maas: review by Natalie Jayne Peeke West Country Correspondent.

France 1944 and the streets are filled with swastikas. The story of a brave English girl behind enemy lines, a German soldier, and a terrible sacrifice…

When young English nurse Sibyl Lake is recruited as a spy to support the French resistance, she does not realise the ultimate price she could end up paying. She arrives in Colmar, a French town surrounded by vineyards and swarming with German soldiers, but her fear is dampened by the joy of being reunited with her French childhood sweetheart Jacques.

Sibyl’s arrival has not gone unnoticed by Commander Wolfgang von Haagan and she realises that letting him get closer is her best chance of learning enemy secrets. Yet despite her best intentions, Sibyl soon finds that betrayal does not come easily to her.

When Jacques finds that Sibyl is involved with the enemy, he is determined to prove himself to her with one last act of heroism. An act that will put all of their lives into terrible danger…

It is no secret that I am an avid reader of Historical Fiction, I have read many books set in the UK or from the point of view of allied soldiers. The Soldier’s Girl is new to me in the sense that it is told from the view of a SOE agent who is operating in occupied France. An area that is crawling with an enemy  she is forced to befriend to acquire crucial information by any means necessary.

Naturally, I thoroughly enjoyed The Soldier’s Girl, I found it to be very thought provoking and emotional. I could not help but stop and think ‘What would I do in Sybil’s situation?’ Not only is it a novel to devour but it is also an intelligent insight into the mind of a German Soldier, a man who appreciates literature, music, one who plans for his life after the war, who was just doing what he was ordered.

This has been my first Sharon Maas book but will by no means be my last, her writing is beautifully descriptive, enticing and will with out a doubt leave you wanting more.

I would highly recommend to fans of The Nightingale, The Lost Girls of Paris and The Letter.

Published by Bookouture and available in paperback, audio and ebook

Can it be true? Mortgage Advisers Team Up in Lockdown to Write Erotic Romance Series? Yes, it certainly can

 

 

Furloughed from their day job, Bristol-based mortgage advisers Stacey Campbell and Tracy Firks decided to use their time to create the ultimate ‘side hustle’. A chance comment over the office tea making duties set them on to the journey of becoming published authors. And not just any old published authors; creators of a trilogy of erotic romance novels, the first of which ‘The Director’ is available on pre-order from 14th February with a launch date of 31st March.

The Director is the first book in The Storm Trilogy series and is the story of single mum Chloe Taylor, who undertakes an emotional journey to reconnect herself and find her confidence. Old friends and past loves resurface in Chloe’s life and take her on a journey that leads to some wild nights and exciting adventures.

Stacey was inspired by a recently single friend,

Having had many conversations with a good friend of mine about her divorce experience and recent return to the dating scene, I was telling Tracy about her comical and hilarious dates in the kitchen one day. Over the coming weeks and months of telling Tracy about each encounter, I made the statement ‘I could write a book about this’, to which Tracy encouraged me. I tried to convince Tracy to join me in writing the book on many occasions until she finally caved in and agreed.

After reading how Tracy wrote the example sex scene, we had much discussion about our writing style. We both write, with Tracy editing my writings into our writing style. We discuss every step of each chapter before it’s written.

When restrictions allow, you will find us spending our afternoons after work sitting in a local tea shop discussing the storyline, sex scenes and browsing sex toy websites as we wait for our cucumber sandwiches and multiple cakes to arrive. Everyone loves a bit of afternoon tiffin… cake.”

Tracy knows the series will be an entertaining read for many,

If you are a reader of romance, erotic romance, funny filth, and love books and films like Bridget Jones, Sex and the City and Fifty Shades, then this is the book series for you. Follow Chloe on her journey of self-discovery after two men from her past pop back into her life, one of which was her first love. With hilarious steamy encounters of lust, nights in with raucous laughter and home truths with work colleagues and friends, Chloe needs to make a decision – what will she choose? Love or Lust? With steamy, emotional, and funny moments, it’s a trilogy not to be left on the shelf!

A romp, good fun, an antidote to Lockdown. This series must have been fun to write, and is certainly fun to read. Go for it.

The Director is available on Pre-Order: here

Facebook: The Storm Trilogy

Instagram: @the_storm_trilogy

Twitter: @TrilogyStorm

 

 

 

 

CARIADS’ CHOICE: FEBRUARY BOOK REVIEWS

Jill Barry The House Sitter, reviewed by Jessie Cahalin

Characters’ actions are measured with precision in this gripping psychological thriller. The house sitter, Ruth Morgan, is complex and plans to be an integral part of the Deacons’ lives.

‘A fledgling idea trembles in the dark recesses of Ruth’s imagination… Up went the hand to stroke her throat.’

Shadows of the past haunts Ruth. Lost in the tension at the midpoint of this novel, I fell into the abyss with Ruth and worried that I felt empathy for this dangerous character.

Bethan is Ruth’s counterfoil, and her investigation orchestrates intrigue. Love is in the air for Bethan and this adds a hopeful dimension in this thrilling narrative.

Clues and tension are skilfully woven into the characters’ viewpoints. Clever writing with an intricate narrative that will chill you to the bone.

 

Kate Ryder Beneath Cornish Skies, reviewed by Jane Cable

Beneath Cornish Skies tells the story of Cassandra Shaw, who leaves behind her outwardly perfect but soulless life in Sussex to work for a chaotic Cornish family. The contrasts between the two settings are sharp, but united by the author’s love of horses, nature, and the lore attaching to the natural world.

This book blends romance with new beginnings and a ghostly past. Don’t be put off by the fact it’s described as ‘book 3 of 3’ on Amazon, it is in fact a standalone novel and has achieved a bestseller flag in paranormal ghost romance.

 

Naomi Miller Imperfect Alchemist reviewed by Kitty Wilson

I adored this well-written tale of two women at opposite ends of the social spectrum in the sixteenth century coming together and working in tandem in herbalism and alchemy. Their story covers a myriad of themes from both lives, including the suspicion and misogyny behind witchcraft trials in the villages and their impact alongside the high arts represented by Mary Sidney’s renowned Wilton Circle. Although a fictional account of The Countess of Pembroke’s life, the author’s knowledge of history and the literature alongside her skill at writing makes this a novel that pulls you in utterly, making me as a reader willing to believe this is how it was. It certainly is a fitting tribute to a woman who was at the forefront of new thinking and intellectual debate in a time women were overlooked in every arena. I loved it and shall be looking for more books from this author.

 

Jan Baynham Her Sister’s Secret, reviewed by Imogen Martin

Jan Baynham’s second novel slips seamlessly between Rose in the 1940s and Jennifer in the 1960s. It opens in a mid-Wales village where Rose works at the Big House whilst Mam tries to keep the peace at home. When Rose meets Italian prisoner-of-war Marco, the sparks fly. I was fascinated, as I have a friend whose Italian father and Welsh mother met in exactly this way. Unlike my friend, there’s no happy ending for Rose when her domineering father finds out about the relationship.

In the 1960s, the family secret comes tumbling out after a chance discovery by Jennifer. Will she have the courage to travel to Sicily to find out the truth?

Jan Baynham captures the excitement of standing on the cusp of a new life in Cardiff, the big city, in contrast to the vivid portrayal of small Welsh village life.

Her Sister’s Secret is a cracking read with passion, hurt and wisdom intertwined.  Whilst it has parallels with Jan’s debut novel Her Mother’s Secret, this is a stand-alone saga.

 

 

 

 

Let’s see Joffe’s latest offerings – some really good deals this week.

GET FIVE BESTSELLING BOOKS IN ONE BARGAIN BOX SET TODAY!
Nikki Galena Books by Joy Ellis 1 – 5 for only 99p/99c (90% off for a limited time.) With a new Galena coming very soon. Sounds like a winner of a deal with 5 stars reviews all round.

                                                            

The Lost Brother. 99p/99c Susanna Beard

Ricky and Leonora are siblings, best friends, and allies in a loveless family. Disaster strikes when their father is murdered collecting Ricky from boarding school. Ricky is missing… Leonora puts her own life in danger to find her brother.  Very tense, page turning…

An Oxford Inheritance  Maxine Barry   £1.99 /$2.99

One of my favourites. Discover what happens to Harriet when she inherits a fortune in her long-lost aunt’s will and comes head to head with the Powell family.  Despite herself, Harriet can’t help but find herself drawn to the devastatingly good looking Giles Powell.

Oh ho.. Harriet, is it a happy ending, or not? Read it and see.

                                                         

The Murder List  Roger Silverwood £1.99/$2.99

Women are living in fear that they’re next on the murder list… Bodies of women in their 60s keep turning up. Always the same disturbing pose. Oh crikey… hang onto your hats.

Crime in the College Catherine Maloney £1.99/$2.99

  (Fabulous jacket)  A trip down memory lane takes an unexpected turn as Detective Markham visits his alma mater at the University of Oxford – a builder discovers a body beneath a dilapidated staircase. Worse, it appears the woman is no stranger to Markham. Well paced, evocative and page turning… What more do you want. Ah, to know ‘who done it’… Read on. Enjoy.

And now –  a trip behind the scenes of Joffe to meet LAURA COULMAN – PROJECT EDITOR

WHAT I DO: I am addicted to reading and have always been that person with “her head stuck in a book”. Nowadays, I’m delighted to say it’s an important part of my working day. I love working closely with our authors and editors, and immersing myself in their wonderful manuscripts, helping each one to fulfil its potential before sending it out into the world. Which is always the proudest moment!

WHAT I’M LOOKING FORWARD TO IN 2021: I have so many hopes for this new year. Not least that our creative team will soon be able to regroup in the office (many a doughnut will be eaten). I’m also excited to think of all the talented new voices that we’re hoping to connect with and properly, deservedly spotlight in 2021.

FAVOURITE BOOKS: Oscar Wilde will always hold a special place on my shelf. I’ll never forget the first time I read The Picture of Dorian Gray. Everything about it — Wilde’s stunning language and the twisted fairytale at the heart of it — hooked me helplessly in and I couldn’t put it down. I also love The Great Gatsby, for its poignant emotional punch. I can also wholeheartedly recommend *anything* of Kate Atkinson’s. Not least the Jackson Brodie mysteries. I think she has the most incredible gift for storytelling.

Lots more on offer at Joffe Books.

The German Heiress by Anika Scott reviewed by Kate Hutchinson

 
I would quickly run out of fingers if asked to name all the books I have read about World War II. I’d have to use all my husband’s and probably most of the neighbours’ as well.
 
There are not quite so many about the effects of the aftermath in Britain, but still plenty to choose from.
 
And there are many, though arguably never enough, from the point of view of survivors of persecution. 
 
However the view of what it was like to be an ‘ordinary German’ in the aftermath of the war is rather unexplored in English language fiction. And it is a fascinating area to look at, how to rebuild life in the face of defeat.
 
1946. Postwar Germany. Our hero/antihero, Clara, once a wartime icon and heiress to the Falkenberg iron works, we meet first as she is about to cement a relationship with a doctor, clearly trying to make a new start. But instantly we discover the dark side behind the doctor’s nice facade, beginning the theme of reversal of first impressions which the author continues to explore through the book. Clara travels back to the hometown she fled at the end of the war, in an attempt to find out what happened to her old friend Elisa, whilst trying to avoid being hunted down by Allied forces for her alleged war crimes. 
 
It is a tense, noirish plot with dangers at every turn as Clara is drawn into working with Jakob, a charming disabled ex-soldier with his own agenda.
 
It’s a fascinating world of ambiguity, in an area we so often think of as being black and white. How much ‘good’ do you have to do to negate the ‘bad’? Clara grapples with her own guilt and questions the certainties she grew up with and her own perceptions of the people she loved as her family’s secrets catch up with her. 
 
The historical details and descriptions are well-drawn. Possibly the characterisations are lacking a little, I certainly found Jakob a more convincing character than Clara, who never seems to challenge what she is told, making it hard to believe she could ever have run a business. But I found the story moved along quickly and compellingly – yes I stayed up late to finish it.
 
The author Anika Scott is an American married to a German who lives in Essen where The German Heiress is set. She runs an online resource about post-war German history – www.postwargermany.com which is well worth exploring as well.
Publisher Windmill Books ppb £8.99 – on 18th February
Published in hardback as Finding Clara

Fighting for your Life by Lysa Walder – A paramedic’s Story (Part 2) Lysa is in conversation with Natalie Jayne Peeke

Natalie Jayne Peeke continues her conversation with best selling author, Lysa Walder – A Paramedic’s Story. A book that moved, informed, and which she found unputdownable.

What was the most difficult story to share, Lysa?

No one story was the most difficult, but in general the situations where I could overlay the image of someone I loved on to the patient I was attending or their relatives (because they were the same age or had similar characteristics) always had the capacity to invoke a visceral response in me. So if the child affected was the same age as one of my own or the older man was the same age as my father I may have had an internal battle with my instinct, as a mother or daughter, to become emotionally involved. Hopefully I always maintained a professional demeanour despite any inner turmoil I may have been experiencing.

What advice would you give to anyone who is training to be a paramedic?

I think people don’t always appreciate the mental and physical toll being a paramedic can take. There is a fair bit of heavy lifting of both patients and equipment which can result in many injuries especially to the back and joints. The around the clock shift pattern can have a detrimental impact on health and family life. I missed out on so much; kid’s birthdays and other milestones in particular. Seeing extremely sad or horrific sights so regularly can contribute to anxiety, depression and PTSD.

On your hardest days, what kept you going ?

Our shifts are nearly always twelve hours long and clock watching is an occupational hazard. Sometimes the only thing that kept me going was thinking about the end of the shift when I would get back home to the family or my next day off. Occasionally we cross paths with our colleagues and have a chance for a laugh or informal debrief. A nice treat such as listening to music in the vehicle or a coffee & slice of cake can be good pick-me-ups to break up the day too.

What books or authors do you enjoy reading?

For a bit of escapism I enjoy reading novels in my free time (when it’s not nice enough weather to be outside) and I particularly enjoy Andrea Camillieri & Donna Leon, who write about their detectives Montalbano in Sicily & Brunetti in Venice respectively. Elena Ferrante’s novels that describe the bonds of female friendship and growing up in the tough streets of Napoli is a powerful read. Bill Bryson is about the only non-fiction writing that I enjoy, he manages to pack so much in and the mix of information and humour is just right for me.

What do you like to do in your spare time ?

I now live in Italy with my husband in an old farmhouse in the mountains north of Lucca with Mr Darcy the dog, Mr Grey and Toulouse the cats, Miss Havisham and Little Cosette the chickens. During free time we are kept occupied with maintaining the many terraces and the woodland around the house which keeps us extremely busy and reasonably fit. The great thing about living here is that so much of our socialising and general life is lived outside. I love nothing more than a nice long therapeutic walk in the surrounding forests and mountains with friends and dogs, it’s a fabulous way to really relax. I’m still learning Italian and writing in my free time to keep my mind active too. The only problem with living in Italy is being so far away from family and dear friends, though it never felt far away when we could still go to the UK and they came to visit us here frequently. Who could have known that the pandemic was looming and the devastating restrictions it would place on our travel.

If you could invite any 3 people, real or fictional , to a dinner party who would you invite and what would you serve ?

If I could invite three people to dinner as well as my friends and family I’d invite Dolly Parton, Michelle Obama and Graham Norton and serve up an enormous lasagna with lashings of wine. After dinner, which we would eat outside on the terrace, we’d have a good old sing a long with those that can, playing guitars. We have no near neighbours so this could be loud and continue well in to the early hours.

Fighting for you Life by Lysa Walder is available here

SLOW AND STEADY WINS THE RACE – JANE CABLE ON HER NEW PUBLISHING CONTRACT

I have never particularly seen myself as a tortoise, but boy oh boy, has this been a long time coming. Today it was announced that I will be writing emotional women’s fiction for One More Chapter, a digital first division of Harper Collins, under the name of Eva Glyn.

I think all writers have an idea of where they want to be, and for me, no doubt influenced by Harper Collins being the sponsor of The Alan Titchmarsh Show’s People’s Novelist competition in which I was a finalist, they were the publishing house at the top of my wish list.

Having failed to win the competition and so any short cut to publication, I might have guessed I was in for the long haul, but at that stage I didn’t realise quite how long it would actually be. But fairly early on in my career I had a near miss when after a one-to-one at Winchester Writers’ Conference a young editor called Charlotte Ledger requested the full manuscript of The Faerie Tree.

Nothing came of it, and the book became my second indie novel. And as my career progressed I was aware of Charlotte’s rapid rise through the ranks of Harper Collins’ digital imprints and wondered if perhaps at some stage it would be worth submitting to her again.

In the meantime I had the opportunity to work with Amy Durant and when she set up Sapere Books was happy to follow her there. And while I am happy to stay with Sapere too, I still hankered after what a bigger publisher could offer in terms of multiple platforms and international clout.

By the time the Romantic Novelists’ Association conference came around in 2019 I had a new manuscript in my locker that I knew wasn’t a Sapere Book. I saw Charlotte Ledger was offering one-to-ones and I was lucky enough to grab one. We met again. And again she asked for the full manuscript, but this time to be sent to her personal email. I felt I was one step closer.

In the end Charlotte didn’t take that book, but the door was kept open. Last March I had a fifth anniversary blog tour for The Faerie Tree and the response was so overwhelmingly positive I brought the title up to date, gave it a little polish, and after much encouragement from Susanna Bavin, sent it off to Charlotte.

She asked me to do some rewrites and they were so in line with my own thinking for the book that I did. The next thing I knew we were talking about author brand and slowly it dawned on me she was offering me a contract. And the author brand she was suggesting was exactly where I wanted to be – emotional women’s fiction.

There would be no ghostliness, no looking back at the past, so these would be different to my books for Sapere, so we decided they would be published under another name. I chose Eva Glyn – Eva for my father’s mother, and Glyn for Glyn Jones, the Welsh author who was a great friend of my parents.

Today is a proud day because for the first time I can talk about the deal as the cover for The Missing Pieces of Us has been revealed and the book is available for pre-order. And it’s only taken me nine years…