Thursday, 20 February 2025

After Whorl Donning Double Cloaks: A Thrilling Adventure in Roman Scotland (Celtic Fervour Series Book 3) by Nancy Jardine

 


After Whorl Donning Double Cloaks:
A Thrilling Adventure in Roman Scotland
(Celtic Fervour Series Book 3)
By Nancy Jardine


Publication Date: 19th April 2018
Publisher: Nancy Jardine
Page Length: 294 Pages
Genre: Historical Romance

An arduous trek to barbarian territory. Poignant loss. Devastating battlegrounds.

AD 79 The punitive chaos begins…

Bran monitors Roman legion activity, across his home territory, till General Agricola orders complete conquest of the barbarians of the far north of Britannia. Determined to stop the Roman invasions, Bran sets forth to find the Caledonian chief who will lead all of the northern tribes in battle against the Roman Empire. Danger sits on his shoulder, yet he manages to keep one step ahead of General Agricola.

Ineda journeys to Caledonia with her master, Tribune Valerius, a supplies officer for General Agricola’s Caledonian campaign. At Pinnata Castra Fortress disaster strikes! Determined to have a future free from enslavement, Ineda escapes and joins fellow rebels who congregate in the far north.

The Legions of the Roman Empire and the Caledonian Allies clash in battle… but where are Brennus and Ineda?

The adventures of the Garrigill Clan continue…

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After Whorl Donning Double Cloaks

Nancy Jardine


Nancy Jardine lives in the spectacular ‘Castle Country’ of Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Her main writing focus has, to date, been historical and time travel fiction set in Roman Britain, though she’s also published contemporary mystery novels with genealogy plots. If not writing, researching (an unending obsession), reading or gardening, her young grandchildren will probably be entertaining her, or she’ll be binge-watching historical films and series made for TV. 

She loves signing/ selling her novels at local events and gives author presentations locally across Aberdeenshire. These are generally about her novels or with a focus on Ancient Roman Scotland, presented to groups large and small. Zoom sessions have been an entertaining alternative to presenting face-to-face events during, and since, the Covid 19 pandemic restrictions.

Current memberships are with the Historical Novel Society; Scottish Association of Writers; Federation of Writers Scotland, Romantic Novelists Association and the Alliance of Independent Authors. She’s self-published with the author co-operative Ocelot Press.

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Blog Tour - The Many Lives & Loves of Hazel Lavery by Lois Cahall

 



The Many Lives & Loves of Hazel Lavery
By Lois Cahall


Publication Date: 14th January 2025
Publisher: Historium Press
Page Length: 340 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

In the heart of tumultuous times, amidst the grandeur of Victorian opulence, there existed an American socialite whose influence altered the course of the Anglo-Irish treaty:
Lady Hazel Lavery

Boston-born Hazel ascended from her Irish roots to become the quintessential Society Queen of Chicago, and later London, where she lived a delicate dance between two worlds: one with her esteemed husband, Sir John Lavery, a portrait artist to royalty, and the other with Michael Collins, the daring Irish rebel whose fiery spirit ignited her heart. Together, they formed a love triangle that echoed through the corridors of power at 10 Downing Street, London.

Hazel's wit and charm touched on the lives of the who's-who of England including Winston Churchill, George Bernard Shaw and Evelyn Waugh. The image of her memorable face graced the Irish note for close to half-a-century.

Excerpt

The drawing room was a flutter with politics and conversation. 

Finally, I piped in. “Quite the contrary, I’m just a simple Irish girl at heart,” I repeated, like some sort of ongoing mantra. “Simple” sounded silly as I sat there in an ornate sage-colored tea party dress with intricate embroidery and delicate tailoring in tiers of gossamer finery. Of course, we knew I was anything but a simple Irish girl, though I had a dreamy romantic view of what it might be like.

None of them dared to shatter my fantasy.

Our neighbors, Winston Churchill and his wife Clementine, along with the group of politicians were dumbstruck by my Irish beliefs as we gathered in my home for afternoon tea at 5 Cromwell Place.

Nevertheless, when none of them challenged me, I carried on, speaking of the kindness of Ireland, how my Father had raised me to believe in my heritage and how we planned to someday explore Galway to meet the rest of the Martyn clan. Without him I’d have to do that on my own... “Although my beloved John did take me for my first visit to Killarney House, to see Lord and Lady Kenmare,” I said, “They seemed smitten with my love to learn about all things Ireland.” Leaning over, I patted John’s hand. “When was that, my dear?”

“1913,” said John, proud of his timeline skills.

“And we went again just a couple years back to Lord Wimborne, the Lord Lieutenant, who was serving, of course, during the time of the Easter Rising. His home was stunning. Reminiscent of our American President’s White House. I’ve profound sympathy for the Irish and their welfare.” As my lips moved verbal stories of my ancestry, I knew my auburn hair glowed that feisty flare of being Irish. My eyes blinked a delicate green that day, more than hazel brown. Yes, Ireland beckoned my soul, and my Irish eyes were finally smiling. “So,” I exhaled, “If indeed you want the Anglo-Irish war over, dearest Winston, then tell Lloyd George to give the Irish their independence.”

“Are you out of your bloody mind?!” snapped Winston.

Leaning forward, I refreshed his Earl Grey tea from the silver pot that sat between us for pause. 

“No,” I said, “I’m bloody serious.” Then setting down the pot, I sat back cool as a cucumber as the men broke into an awkward chuckle. “Laugh if you like, but Winston, if you want something to turn out different then you have to do something different.” They infuriated me but I had to hold my ground, glancing over at Clementine for female support. All she could do was shrug. My eyes egged her on.

“Maybe Hazel has a point?” Clementine added.

“You too?” said Winston. “My own Mrs.?”

“Winston, really?” I said, “Do you want to control something or someone that doesn’t want to be controlled? Have you considered just sitting down and perhaps, well, speaking to them?”

“I’m not sure that’s such a good idea,” John piped in.

“Precisely,” said Winston, placing down his Earl Grey cup to grab a ginger biscuit from the tray. “Those Irish boys have committed treason, the entire lot of them! Then they disappear into the night. Like cowards!”

“But...” I interjected.

“But nothing, Hazel,” he scolded. “This is more complicated than feasting over a turkey dinner to sign some documents with the enemy. If they indeed are cut from us, it could mean the end of the British Empire!”

“Oh, dear,” said Clementine.

Winston continued. “Not to mention the large Protestant population in the north – in Belfast, well, they refuse to join the Catholics of the south for their ridiculously sought independence. What am I to do? Just abandon Northern Ireland who have been true to the Crown?” Winston dabbed the napkin to his mouth and rearranged himself in the chair. “Hazel, I cannot, I will not, go down in history as that Secretary of State, who took on the Irish plight.”

“You’re right dear,” said Clementine, dabbing the linen napkin to her lips. “That Michael Collins is behind all of this political division.”

“Oh, pish posh,” I snapped. “It’s how the press has portrayed him, is all.” 

“I have to agree with my wife,” said John. “Go on and tell them, Hazel. Tell them how you met the Michael Collins years back...”

Winston stopped nibbling his biscuit. All other teacups came to a standstill. “You’ve met him?” he asked. 

“Yes, at the post office, nearby in Kensington. It was quite a while back. He was young but quite charismatic. Very polite.” I swallowed hard. “And if I do dare say, an extremely handsome fellow.”

“So, I’ve heard,” said Clementine, giving me a quick wink.

“They say he’s like a movie star. Constantly surrounded by women. They’ll go to great lengths to do anything for him.”

“Well, that’s rather suggestive,” said Winston, surprised by his wife’s sexual innuendo...

Pick up your copy of
The Many Lives & Loves of Hazel Lavery
HERE!

Lois Cahall

Lois Cahall began her writing career as a columnist for Cape Cod newspapers and local periodicals, including Cape Cod Life. She spent a decade writing for national magazines (Conde Nast/Hearst). Her articles have been published in Cosmo Girl, Seventeen, SELF, Marie Claire, Redbook, Ladies Home Journal, Reader’s Digest, Men’s Journal, and Bon Appetit. In the UK she wrote for RED, GQ, Psychologies, and for The Times. In addition, Lois wrote profiles for The Palm Beach Post. 

Lois’s first novel, Plan C: Just in Case, was a #1 bestseller in the UK, where it remained in the top three fiction for the year before selling into foreign translation markets. In July of 2014, her novel hit #1 on the Nook “Daily Deal” in America. Her second novel, Court of the Myrtles, was hailed as “Tuesdays with Morrie on estrogen” by Ladies Home Journal. Her latest novel, The Many Lives of Hazel Lavery, is a work of bio-fiction (January 2025) 

Lois is the former Creative Director of Development for JPE/James (Jim) Patterson Entertainment. She credits her friend, Jim, the world’s most successful bestselling author, with teaching her the importance of children’s love of reading. As a result, she founded the Palm Beach Book Festival in 2015, an annual event bringing in NYT bestselling and celebrity authors. The event is for book lovers, nurturing the written word for the children and adults of southern Florida. 

In 2024 Lois also founded The Cape Cod Book Festival, an annual autumn event that promises to be a new cultural footprint in Massachusetts. It will be for locals and ‘washashores’ alike – a magical place where charitably minded readers can rub elbows with great writers and thinkers.  

Lois divides her life between New York and Cape Cod, although her spiritual home is London. But most importantly, Lois can do the Hula Hoop for an hour non-stop and clear a Thanksgiving table in just under ten minutes.

Connect with Lois:
Website
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AUGUSTA: Volume 1- Part 1 by G. G. MacLeod


AUGUSTA: Volume 1- Part 1
By G. G. MacLeod


Part 1
Publication Date: 17th April 2023
Publisher: Independently Published
Page Lengh: 64 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction 

"I will make you remember me and if I cannot reach Heaven, THEN I SHALL RAISE HELL."

As a child she was mentored by the only other woman to have become the Empress of the Roman Empire, her great-grandmother, the infamous power-broker, Livia Drusilla Caesar. In due course, she was destined to become the only Roman woman to ever openly rule as an Empress in her own name. Her lifelong war of all against all was going to include history's most notorious criminals, bar none, with eternally familiar names like Sejanus, Livilla, Caligula, Messalina, Claudius, Seneca, Tigellenius, and ultimately her own son, the "The Anti-Christ", "The Beast 666", more commonly known as the Emperor Nero.

She could have had every luxury possible to excess, and she could have lived out her string at the summit of the most obscene levels of wealth and decadence, but she only wanted one thing and no one was going to give that to her. She was going to have to kill for it until she had it, and ultimately she was going to have to die for it in order to keep it.

POWER

Her name was Julia Caesar Agrippina Germanicus and Hell followed after her.


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AUGUSTA

G. G. MacLeod

I'm a Canadian indie author who also has a straight job. I'm 54 years old and "Augusta" is my first major foray into the world of publishing my work. Otherwise, there's nothing particularly interesting to say about me. I'm a pretty boring person, really who enjoys living a quiet life of reading/writing and thinking up story ideas that no one has actually pursued. 

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Wednesday, 19 February 2025

Book Review - Ride with the Moonlight (Thunder On The Moor, Book 2) By Andrea Matthews

 


Ride with the Moonlight
(Thunder On The Moor, Book 2) 
By Andrea Matthews


Publication Date: 25th November 2020
Publisher: Inez M. Foster
Page Length: 387 pages
Genre: Historical Time Travel Romance

After rescuing sixteenth-century Border reiver Will Foster from certain death at her family’s hands, time traveler Maggie Armstrong finally admits her love for the handsome Englishman, though she can’t rid herself of the sinking suspicion that her Scottish kin are not about to let them live in peace. What she doesn’t expect is the danger that lurks on Will’s own side of the Border. When news of their plans to marry reaches the warden, he charges Will with March treason for trysting with a Scot. Will and Maggie attempt to escape by fleeing to the hills, but when Will is declared an outlaw and allowed to be killed on sight, they can no longer evade the authorities. Will is sentenced to hang, while Maggie is to be sent back to her family. Heartbroken, she has no choice but to return to Scotland, where her uncle continues to make plans for her to wed Ian Rutherford, the wicked Scotsman who she now realizes murdered her father in cold blood. With Will facing the gallows in England, and herself practically under house arrest in Scotland, she continues to resist her uncle’s plans, but her efforts are thwarted at every turn.Will’s family, however, is not about to stand by and watch their youngest lad executed simply because he’s lost his heart to a Scottish lass. A daring plan is set into motion, but will it be in time to save Will’s life and reunite the lovers? Or will Ian’s lies prompt Maggie’s family to ensure the bond between them is forever destroyed?




After Maggie discovers that Ian Rutherford, her uncle’s intended husband for her, murdered her father instead of Will Foster, she acts to save Will from her family. Saving him seems like the only logical choice since he has done nothing wrong. Running away to England is the only viable next step. Now that Maggie knows the truth, she cannot deny that her heart already belongs to Will. Furthermore, her family is unlikely to accept her decision to run away with an Englishman, especially a Foster.

Before the Fosters can get word to the warden, asking for his blessing over Will and Maggie’s union, the news reaches the warden from another source. And the version of events the warden is told is far from the truth. The warden charges Will with March treason for trysting with a Scot, and calls for his arrest. Maggie has only just saved Will from her own family, but now with the law after him as well, people seem to be closing in on them from all sides. The Fosters do all they can to save Will from the gallows, but how far can their attempts to save Will extend to keeping Maggie with them as well?

A thrilling fight for true love, Ride with the Moonlight (Thunder On The Moor, Book 2) by Andrea Matthews is a novel that will truly captivate you, and whisk you away to the 16th Century on the Scottish border, amidst clans at war and deep rivalries that extend much further than simply matters of the heart. 

A battle for survival is one thing, but is it worth it if they can’t be together? Maggie and Will may have had a rocky start to their relationship, but once the truth behind her father’s death comes to light, Maggie puts aside all the reservations that she might have had about Will. She’s saved his life once already, but now she is the very reason his life might be in danger. Maggie is an incredibly independent woman and is certainly not afraid of fighting for what she believes in, or for those she loves, and her bravery in the face of danger is commendable. She is an incredibly adaptable and endearing character, and you can’t help but love her as you read. Equally, Will is a character who is impossible not to adore. Many times throughout this novel, he is referred to as charming, for it is well known that the Foster lads have a way with words that makes the ladies fall over themselves to get their attention. This charm is not reserved for just Maggie, though, for the reader certainly feels it too. It is impossible for Will not to charm his way into your heart while you are reading. This immense feeling of love you start to feel for the characters truly wrenches your heartstrings while reading, as brushes with death come all too close, and at times you are almost holding your breath while reading, desperate for the happy ending that seems hopeless.

While there are characters in this novel, namely Maggie and Will, that you will adore with all of your heart, there are also characters that you will absolutely despise. Ian Rutherford, for all intents and purposes, is a gentleman worthy of taking the hand of Georgie Armstrong’s niece, Maggie. Behind the scenes, though, there is a vile man hidden behind a false charming personality. However, while Maggie and the Fosters know the truth behind Ian’s intentions, Maggie’s family, the Armstrongs, are still in the dark and believe that Will has kidnapped Maggie away, and are certain of keeping their promise of Maggie’s betrothal to Ian. For the reader, having all the different perspectives of each situation, and finding out what each character believes to be the truth, only makes the novel more intense. Even when everything seems okay to one character, the reader knows that something is about to happen, and not being able to jump into the book and warn Will and Maggie to be careful is agonising. The pacing of this novel, giving the reader insight into the plans made by both Foster’s and Armstrong’s, makes this book next to impossible to put down. There is no moment of guaranteed safety, and that is enough to keep you on the edge of your seat while reading, hoping for the best outcome while expecting the worst. 

In the first novel in this series, Thunder on the Moor, there is a lot of attention on the time travel aspect of the story. Maggie comes from the twentieth century, and finding herself back in the sixteenth century, and her father reunited with his family after many years of him being missing, is a lot for her to take in. There is not too much mention of time travel in this story, though, for Maggie has adjusted to life on the border in the 16th Century, and is used to the ways of living. What she doesn’t understand, though, is how the law works, and with her modern ways of thinking, the laws seem barbaric. The intricacies of the law, of what loopholes can be found and what is impossible to get around is something she can’t quite understand. With her lack of understanding, somewhat mirroring the reader who relates to her modern morals over those of the Fosters and Armstrongs, who have no understanding of how Maggie might view their world differently, the situations Will and Maggie find themselves in seem even more impossible to escape. The historical detailing in this novel is outstanding, and anything the reader might not know about the time period is explained when Maggie asks questions, keeping the reader engaged without the need for stretches of text explaining the historical facts to the modern reader. 

Transporting you to the 16th Century and capturing both your attention and heart, Ride with the Moonlight (Thunder On The Moor, Book 2) by Andrea Matthews is a novel that you live rather than read. While it is advantageous to begin with book 1 in the series, it is not absolutely necessary, for there is explanation enough to pick up the backstory. If you begin with this novel, though, you will absolutely want to go back and read the previous one, for the characters will truly capture your heart, and you will want nothing more than to rejoin them again as soon as possible.

Review by Ellie Yarde
Yarde Reviews & Book Promotion

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Ride with the Moonlight


Andrea Matthews


Andrea Matthews is the pseudonym for Inez Foster, a historian and librarian who loves to read and write and search around for her roots, genealogical speaking. She has a BA in History and an MLS in Library Science, and enjoys the research almost as much as she does writing the story. In fact, many of her ideas come to her while doing casual research or digging into her family history. She is the author of the Thunder on the Moor series set on the 16th century Anglo-Scottish Border, and the Cross of Ciaran series, where a fifteen hundred year old Celt finds himself in the twentieth century. Andrea also writes historical mysteries under the pen name I. M. Foster. Her series A South Shore Mystery is set in the early 1900s on Long Island. Andrea is a member of the Long Island Romance Writers, and the Historical Novel Society.

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Roman Equestrian I: Venator by A. M. Swink

 

Roman Equestrian I: Venator 
By A. M. Swink


Publication Date: July 16th, 2024
Publisher: Historium Press
Page: 464 Pages
Genre: Historical Romance

Britannia, AD 59. Decimus is a long-serving senior centurion who dreams of retirement in Rome. Luciana is a Cornovii princess devoted to the freedom and survival of her tribe. Connected only by a passion for horsemanship, the pair could not be more ill-matched. After a deadly conflict thrusts these enemies together, each is determined to fight their desires and triumph over the other. Who will ultimately control the other’s heart? 

But Decimus and Luciana are not the only ones on the hunt for supremacy; a desperate struggle over the province is beginning to simmer to a boil. There are whispers of mysterious Druids fomenting unrest among the western British tribes, whose inter-tribal divisions threaten to subsume them. The future of the Roman legions in the province is suddenly thrown into doubt as casualties begin to mount. Decimus and Luciana find themselves entangled within a web of characters, Briton and Roman, playing with Britannia’s destiny to serve their own ends. 

The hunt for power is on, where only one side can emerge triumphant. But just who among these hunters will end up hunted?

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Roman Equestrian I: Venator 

A. M. Swink


A native of Dayton, Ohio, A.M. Swink grew up obsessed with two things: books and horses. After a childhood of reading, writing, showing, and riding, she moved to Lexington, Kentucky to complete a degree in equine science and management and a degree in English literary studies. She now works in Lexington as a college professor of reading and writing. In her spare time, she has travelled extensively around the UK and Ireland, exploring ancient sites and artefacts, as well as tracing her own ancestry. She is proud to be descended from County Cork’s Callaghan clan.

When not writing, she can be found collecting and showing model horses or enjoying her favourite British comedy programmes.

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The Doomsong Sword by J. G. Harlond


The Doomsong Sword 
By J. G. Harlond


Publication Date: 17th January 2025
Publisher: Arredondo
Page Length: 243 Pages
Genre: Historical

Lazy Davor runs away to sea on a dragonship to escape his chores. Then runs away again – into greater danger. A mysterious Traveller, Master Odo, befriends him then abandons him with only a wolf cub for company. As Davor tries to find his way home he becomes caught up in the story of a once-invincible sword and cursed treasure.

The Doomsong Sword is a page-turning epic adventure based on the ancient Norse Volsung Saga, where the real tests of character aren’t always what they seem, and knowing who to trust can be equally challenging.

Winner of the Wishing Shelf Red Ribbon Award.

Only $2.99 on #Kindle for a Limited Time
Pick up your copy of
The Doomsong Sword 

J. G. Harlond


Secret agents, skulduggery, sea voyages and a touch of romance . . . 

Creator of the infamous Ludo da Portovenere, J.G. Harlond (Jane) writes page-turning historical crime novels set during the 17th Century and World War II. Each story weaves fictional characters into real events. 

Jane also writes Viking-age historical fantasy drawing on Norse myths and legends.

Prior to becoming a full-time fiction author, Jane was involved in international education and wrote a number of school textbooks. 

After travelling widely – she has visited or lived in most of the locations in her novels – Jane is now settled in her husband’s home province of AndalucĂ­a, Spain.

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West of Santillane by Brook Allen

 

West of Santillane
By Brook Allen
 

Publication Date: 8th March 2024
Publisher: Dawg House Books 
Page Length: 377 Page
Genre: Historical Biographical Fiction

Desperate to escape a mundane future as a Virginia planter’s wife, Julia Hancock seizes her chance for adventure when she wins the heart of American hero William Clark. Though her husband is the famed explorer, Julia embarks on her own thrilling and perilous journey of self-discovery.

With her gaze ever westward, Julia possesses a hunger for knowledge and a passion for helping others. She falls in love with Will’s strength and generous manner, but, like her parents, he is a slave owner, and Julia harbors strong opinions against slavery. Still, her love for Will wins out, though he remains unaware of her beliefs.

Julia finds St. Louis to be a rough town with few of the luxuries to which she is accustomed, harboring scandalous politicians and miscreants of all types. As her husband and his best friend, Meriwether Lewis, work to establish an American government and plan to publish their highly anticipated memoirs, Julia struggles to assume the roles of both wife and mother. She is also drawn into the plight of an Indian family desperate to return to their own lands and becomes an advocate for Will’s enslaved.

When political rivals cause trouble, Julia’s clandestine aid to the Indians and enslaved of St. Louis draws unwanted attention, placing her at odds with her husband. Danger cloaks itself in far too many ways, leading her to embrace the courage to save herself and others through a challenge of forgiveness that will either restore the love she shares with Will or end it forever.

Pick up your copy of
 West of Santillane

Brook Allen


Author Brook Allen has a passion for history. Her newest project, West of Santillane spotlights history from a little closer to home. It’s the story of Julia Hancock, who married famed explorer, William Clark. Each character of this thrilling, adventurous period was researched throughout southwest Virginia and into Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Idaho, and North Dakota. It launches in March of 2024.

Brook belongs to the Historical Novel Society and attends conferences as often as possible to study craft and meet fellow authors. In 2019, Son of Rome won the Coffee Pot Book Club Book of the Year Award. In 2020, it was honored with a silver medal in the international Reader’s Favorite Book Reviewers Book Awards and also won First Place in the prestigious Chaucer Division in the Chanticleer International Book Awards, 2020. 

The Antonius Trilogy is a detailed account of the life of Marcus Antonius—Marc Antony, which she worked on for fifteen years. The first installment, Antonius: Son of Rome was published in March 2019. It follows Antony as a young man, from the age of eleven, when his father died in disgrace, until he’s twenty-seven and meets Cleopatra for the first time. Brook’s second book is Antonius: Second in Command, dealing with Antony’s tumultuous rise to power at Caesar’s side and culminating with the civil war against Brutus and Cassius. Antonius: Soldier of Fate is the last book in the trilogy, spotlighting the romance between Antonius and Cleopatra and the historic war with Octavian Caesar. 

Though she graduated from Asbury University with a B.A. in Music Education, Brook has always loved writing. She completed a Masters program at Hollins University with an emphasis in Ancient Roman studies, which helped prepare her for authoring her Antonius Trilogy. Brook teaches full-time as a Music Educator and works in a rural public-school district near Roanoke, Virginia. Her personal interests include travel, cycling, hiking in the woods, reading, and spending downtime with her husband and big, black dog, Jak. She lives in the heart of southwest Virginia in the scenic Blue Ridge Mountains. 

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Website 
Twitter 
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The Prendergast Watch by Emma Woodhouse


The Prendergast Watch 
By Emma Woodhouse 


Publication Date: 5th February 20205
Publisher: Holand Press
Page Length: 286 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction / Mystery

London 1888.

Bartholomew Grouse, an impoverished gentleman, takes shelter inside The Prendergast Emporium during a storm.

He spends the last of his rent money on an antique pocket watch - and encounters the beautiful but troubled Jemima Prendergast.

The family intrigues him. As Bartholomew attempts to unravel the secrets of the Prendergasts, he is drawn further into the shadows of Victorian London.

Deception, forgery, blackmail, death threats and a hidden past of his own threaten to overwhelm him.

As Bartholemew becomes embroiled in dark undertakings and his debts increase, only his growing regard for Jemima, a somnambulist who has lived within the walls of the emporium her whole life, gives him hope.

With Bartholomew’s support, Jemima must face a world she has been taught to fear, confronting the truth about her own family history and Jasper, her deceitful uncle, who has led her to become a recluse.

Bound together by a painting, a suffragette and the regulars at The Old Cock, Bartholomew and Jemima continue to grow closer and Bartholomew is forced to confront the man he has become, and the man he wants to be.

Can Jemima Prendergast free Bartholomew from his past, and, at the same time, liberate herself?

Pick up your copy of

The Prendergast Watch 

HERE!


Emma Woodhouse 


Following the story of Bartholomew Grouse and his infatuation with the enigmatic Jemima Prendergast, The Prendergast Watch is a Victorian extravaganza of love, loss, blackmail, asylums, art, suffrage and family secrets.

 

I wrote The Prendergast Watch in 2020 during the Covid epidemic. I was quickly caught up in the lives of the different characters, and it was wonderful at such a strange and alienated time to be able to check in with the different characters, to explore their world, to have the time and the space to really develop my writing into creating this first Prendergast novel.

 

The initial idea was to create this book as a set of three novels, the other two as prequels, taking the older, more gnarled character from the book and developing books from their earlier lives. These are still works in progress, and I hope, one day, to publish these too! I would love to hear from readers who would like to see this happen!

 

Although I have lots of fun creating characters and researching historical detail, my work also has a serious side. It seeks to peel back the layers of society, to explore the hidden, often forgotten world of the working-class woman. In The Prendergast Watch, Jemima Prendergast has suffered the controlling nature of her uncle for long enough. When he dies, she is free to finally discover who he really is. Daisy Wiggins, a poverty-stricken suffragette, seeks to empower Jemima on her course to self-fulfilment. As a woman from a working-class family myself, I feel a strong desire to explore the worlds frequented by the poor in Victorian society. In my other books, I delve into these worlds more deeply and amalgamate real historical figures too. The Prendergast Watch touches the tip of that iceberg.

 

Having spent many years working at Blists Hill Victorian Town giving talks and demonstrations about Victorian life, I developed a deep love of all things Victorian. After completing a BA (Hons) in Literature with the Open University, I then completed a PGCE and MA in Education at Worcester University, and have been teaching now for over 15 years. I am also currently pursuing my MA in Contemporary Creative Writing with Northeastern University London.

 

The future holds lots of exciting writing projects, and a podcast about creative writing too! Watch this space!