Friday, 17 January 2025

The Quest for the Crown of Thorns (Book Two Of The Long-Hair Saga) by Cynthia Ripley Miller

 


The Quest for the Crown of Thorns 
(Book Two Of The Long-Hair Saga)
By Cynthia Ripley Miller


Publication Date: 29th October 2018
Publisher: Booklocker.com
Page Length: 293 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction / Historical Thriller

AD 454. Three years after the Roman victory over Attila the Hun at Catalaunum, Arria Felix and Garic the Frank are married and enjoying life on Garic’s farm in northern Gaul (France). Their happy life is interrupted when a cryptic message arrives from Arria’s father, the esteemed Senator Felix, calling them to Rome. At Arria’s insistence, but against Garic’s better judgment, they leave at once.

On their arrival at Villa Solis, they are confronted with a brutal murder and a dangerous mission. The fate of a profound and sacred object—Christ’s Crown of Thorns—rests in their hands. They must carry the holy relic to the safety of Constantinople, away from a corrupt emperor and old enemies determined to steal it for their own gain. But a greater force arises against them—a secret cult who will commit any atrocity to capture the Crown. All the while, the gruesome murder and the conspiracy behind it haunt Arria’s thoughts.

Arria and Garic’s marital bonds are tested but forged as they partner together to fulfill one of history’s most challenging missions, The Quest for the Crown of Thorns.

Praise

"In this thriller, set in fifth-century Rome, rivals race to possess Christ's crown of thorns. Ripley Miller (On the Edge of Sunrise 2015) astutely brings to life a Rome teetering precariously on the brink of collapse ... The plot advances energetically, and the combination of political and romantic drama--spiritual as well--is rousing. The reader should be glad to have read this volume and eager for a third. Intelligent and artfully crafted historical fiction ...

Kirkus Review

"From cover to cover a gripping read - in all senses of the word! Grips your interest and imagination, your held breath and your pounding heart! A thumping good novel!"

Helen Hollick USA Today bestselling author of the Sea Witch Voyages

"The Quest for the Crown of Thorns is an elegant masterpiece of historical fiction. This book totally ensnared me in its clasps, and it did not release me until I had read it all. The attention to detail was exquisite. The characterisation was sublime, and the romance was breathtakingly beautiful. I adored the world that Miller has created, as well as the characters in it. This is a sit-down and finish book and is one I would Highly Recommend."

Mary Anne Yarde

Pick up your copy of
On the The Quest for the Crown of Thorns 

Cynthia Ripley Miller

Cynthia Ripley Miller is a first-generation Italian-American writer with a love for history, languages, and books. She has lived, worked, and traveled in Europe, Africa, North America, and the Caribbean. As a girl, she often wondered what it would be like to journey through time (she still does), yet she knew it could only be through the imagination and words of writers and their stories. Today, she writes to bring the past to life. 

Cynthia holds two degrees and has taught history and teaches English. Her short fiction has appeared in the anthology Summer Tapestry and The Scriptor. A Chanticleer International Chatelaine Award finalist for her novel On the Edge of Sunrise, she has reviewed for UNRV Roman History and blogs at Historical Happenings and Oddities: A Distant Focus and on her website. 

Cynthia has four children and lives with her husband, twin cats, Romulus and Remus, and Jessie, a German Shepherd, in a suburb of Chicago. On the Edge of Sunrise is the first in the Long-Hair Sagas; a series set in late ancient Rome and France and published by Booklocker.

Connect with Cynthia:
Website
Facebook
Twitter


Lady Charlotte and the Lending Library (The Rogue's Alliance Book 1) by Angelina Jameson

  


Lady Charlotte and the Lending Library
(The Rogue's Alliance Book 1)
By Angelina Jameson


Publication Date: 19th November 2024
Publisher: Angelina Jameson 
Page Length: 244 Pages
Genre: Regency Historical Romance

Lady Charlotte and her friends Edith and Louisa are misfits of the marriage mart. Thorne’s Lending Library is their sanctuary from the ton, where they can pursue unconventional hobbies. When Thorne’s is threatened with closure, the three friends band together to save the library.

Lord Ashford must learn whether his sister is satirized in Caroline Lamb’s upcoming novel. An encounter near White’s diverts the marquess from his mission as Ashford becomes involved with Lady Charlotte’s plan to save Thorne’s. He soon discovers the campaign to close the library was instigated by the Rogue’s Alliance, a mysterious London criminal coalition.

As Charlotte and Ashford spend time together, Charlotte discovers that first impressions aren’t always to be believed, and Ashford begins to think the lady isn’t as unsuitable as he first imagined.

Pick up your copy of
Lady Charlotte and the Lending Library

Angelina Jameson


Angelina Jameson is a multi-published author of historical Regency romance. Growing up in Las Vegas, Nevada, Angelina joined the US Air Force to see the world. Dreams of visiting the United Kingdom were fulfilled when she was stationed at RAF Lakenheath in the beautiful countryside of Suffolk, England. Five years later she returned to the states having acquired a love of not only all things British but also Regency and historical romance. 

With the help of Romance Writers of America, the hobby of writing developed into a dream of sharing her stories with others. Angelina currently lives in the great state of Alaska with her supportive husband and two teenage sons. She loves to write with a steady supply of coffee nearby and one of three cats on her lap. 

For news of upcoming releases and a deleted scene from The Marquess's Christmas Lily visit her author website at http://www.angelinajameson.com

Connect on social media:

Diomedes in Kyprios by Gregory Michael Nixon, Audiobook Narrator: Simon de Denet



 Diomedes in Kyprios
By Gregory Michael Nixon
Audiobook Narrator: Simon de Denet


Publication Date: November 19th, 2024
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 243 Pages
Genre: Mythico-Historical Fiction

This is a historically-based novel with authentic, mythic, and fictional characters interacting across the extraordinary panorama after the Fall of Troy and the Hittite Empire during the Bronze Age Collapse. Diomedes leads his Akhaians (Achaeans) to the Isle of Kyprios (now Cyprus) to meet his lost love, Lieia, the ex-queen of the Hittites. Kyprios is where the Peoples of the Sea have gathered before their final assaults on Canaan and Aigyptos (Egypt).

But Diomedes unexpectedly meets the avatar of the Goddess Aphrodite at her Temple in Paphos, the city of her birth. Will she take him from Lieia? Will his wanderings end, or will he head back to sea to seek redemption from the past in the further unknown? Aphrodite must also deal with the beautiful, impetuous youth, Adonis, who swears he would die for her. 

The Bronze Age Collapse was a time of such chaos that empires fell, royalty was overthrown, palaces and temples were destroyed, and the hierarchy of the gods was doubted, yet people's self-reliance emerged like never before, and the ancient Great Goddess of the Cycles of Time, who had been suppressed, began to regain her former dominance.

Excerpt

“Months have gone by, and you have heard nothing from your supposed Ahhiyawa hero. Have you accepted that Diomedes never survived the Underworld cavern?”

Lieia looked down, thinking. Lilitu continued, “Lieia, you need to adjust to your new life. Lieia understood, knowing she could be made to suffer in more direct ways and perhaps might even benefit from an apparent friendship with her exotic and powerful jail-keeper.

“Adjust myself how?”

“We are now both high priestesses of Ishtar who trust each other. Ishtar demands our total devotion. Among us, she is not a goddess of motherhood or domesticity, but a goddess of war and carnal transcendence. We must share in certain private rituals, sometimes involving others, that do honour to Ishtar through sexual anguish and ecstasy—journeys through the dark world of the flesh that always end with the enlightenment of the soul. I have much to teach you.” 

Having spoken so openly, Lieia realized that Lilitu was not making a suggestion but a demand. Lieia had no real choice in the matter, and she admitted to herself that adjustment would have many benefits. Once the keeper of the royal harem, Lieia was not without experience in the ways women pleasure each other, though now such playful activity was cloaked as serious ritual. Lieia was not repulsed but curious. Lilitu was surely as alluring as Ishtar herself. Though at first she felt no desire for the platinum-haired priestess, that changed as the ritual commenced. 

“I am yours to command and yours to teach, O High Priestess. Shall we begin our devotions today?”

“Yes, O Queen. Personal slaves will arrive—you recall the two youths who have been attending you?—to purify us of our garments, bathe us together in rose water, then massage us in scented oils, after which we shall all engage each others’ bodies with the blessings of Ishtar.”

Soon Lieia succumbed to the enticements and eventually participated with shameless enthusiasm, which pleased the High Priestess greatly. Lieia felt no guilt, for the pleasures did not transport her soul into union as had those she had known with the man she loved. She knew that if Diomede lived he would have understood that circumstances were imposed upon her, and he already knew of her significant carnal energy. 

Best of all, the High Priestess believed she now had Lieia in thrall and did indeed trust her to walk freely about Ishtar’s tower and even to stroll on the stone paths of Temple Hill, always followed by her two guards, of course. 

That night when she was alone again, sipping a soothing, mildly narcotic drink under the moonlight, she reflected on recent events. She certainly did not fit the image of the princess imprisoned in a tower by an evil dragon, as it was told in Hatti children’s tales. For one thing, no prince was coming to rescue her. He had either been killed, abandoned her or awaited her on the nearby island. For another thing, the dragon may not be entirely evil, she smiled, for it sometimes shared its secret treasures of pleasure for all.

Pick up your copy of
 Diomedes in Kyprios

Gregory Michael Nixon


Gregory M. Nixon is a retired university professor who, after spending his professional years publishing academic papers, was pleased to discover he still had an active imagination. He moved alone to a nice cottage overlooking magnificent Okanagan Lake in western Canada to create his mythico-historical novels set after the Trojan War and the fall of the Hittite Empire during the Bronze Age Collapse. Nigel, an outdoor cat, also sometimes lives with him.

Connect with Gregory:



If you are an author and would like to find out more about The Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour Packages, click HERE!




Thursday, 16 January 2025

Book Review - The Covent Garden Enigma by Peter Baggott



The Covent Garden Enigma
By Peter Baggott


Publication Date: 28th September 2021
Publisher: Michael Terence Publishing
Page Length: 428 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

James Bentley was born and raised in a brothel as the son of a spurned courtesan. Now established as a conman of the highest quality, entrepreneur and respected businessman, he harbours a dark side, a penchant for abducting and abusing virgins to work in his brothels. Cold and heartless he is indifferent to the chaos and ruin he leaves in his wake, including his son, Malachi.

By chance, James is introduced to alcoholic, womanising Patrick Curtis with the opportunity to acquire premises on The Strand for a high-class brothel and further funding for his fictitious projects. In so doing he meets Patrick's domestically abused wife Lilly. The pair are instantly drawn to each other and after James' disclosures of his past, the relationship is cemented. They have a problem, Patrick.

Malachi coming of age at sixteen is told of his origins and whilst offered the position of clerk to the Bow Street Magistrate he exposes secrets of those he loves and those he will come to love.

Will Lilly and James enjoy life together or will the spectre's of his past come back to haunt him and with what consequences?



Despite a difficult upbringing, James Bentley has become a successful and respected businessman. However, beneath his exterior act of a businessman hides a conman, with a dark secret. Driven by his lust for virgins, he destroys lives and coerces young girls into working in his brothels.

However, when James meets Lily Curtis, everything he had once known is turned upon its head. He feels an instant connection to her, and longs to protect her from her abusive husband. As it stands, James begins to formulate a plan for Patrick Cutis, and getting Lily all to himself quickly becomes his main objective. But can he truly leave his past behind and move on to live a normal life after all that he has done?

The Covent Garden Enigma by Peter Baggott is an intricately woven novel of lives intertwined, and how the actions of one affect more than just those immediately involved.

James Bentley is both the novel’s protagonist and its antagonist, an anti-hero of sorts. James is presented as utterly repugnant, making it difficult for readers to sympathise with him due to the harm he inflicts. He takes what he wants, and walks away, not caring what damage he leaves behind. But meeting Lily changes James, certainly for the better, and the change happens so subtly that the reader almost doesn’t notice it happening. The author masterfully depicts James’s journey, showcasing significant character development that evokes empathy and a protective instinct in the reader. The author’s subtle manipulation of the reader’s sympathy is truly impressive.

James’ love story is not a conventional one, for the woman that he finds himself falling for is already married. Her husband, however, is an alcoholic, who spends too much time in brothels and gambling dens to care much for his wife and daughter. James has to fight for his love, and as secrets and lies begin to pile up, how long can he truly continue before he can take Lily as his own? James’ encounter with Lily marks a pivotal moment in the novel, prompting him to reassess his life and goals. She truly is a saving grace for him, and the effect she has on him is astounding to watch unfold. 

This novel encompasses the lives of many characters, all of whom are involved in James’ life in one way or another. The inclusion of so many different characters spread across a wide area gives a well-rounded perspective of the opinions held by the many, as well as the thoughts of the few. The narrative is taken over by different characters at times, allowing the reader to understand in detail what events in each person’s life lead them to where they find themselves. James owns several brothels and has come into contact with many of the people inside them. How his actions affect, not only the courtesans but also the women employed within the buildings, is shown to the reader, creating a sense of realism within the story—this is not just a story of James’ life, but the story of many lives, all of whom are affected by the actions of one man.

The novel’s tone shifts as time elapses and the story transitions from James to his unknown son, Malachi. Working at the Bow Street Magistrate’s office, he looks up old files at the revelation of the circumstances of his birth, and begins to piece together the truth surrounding his birth, and his mother’s death. As he starts to dig deeper, it begins to become apparent just how many others have suffered at the hands of James Bentley. Malachi is certainly a favourite character in this novel. He has the same start to life as James did, born in a brothel and starting out with nothing, but he grows into a kind and respectable young man. The contrast between James and Malachi is incredibly clear, and Malachi shows that it is not the circumstances of birth that make a person who they are.

Set against the backdrop of Georgian England, this novel encompasses the lives of those both higher up and lower in society. This novel’s setting is incredibly vivid, and the author’s masterful depiction of London streets and slums provides a realistic backdrop for the characters. The novel is brought to life by the interwoven lives of its diverse characters, creating both tension and joy through their interactions. This is certainly a captivating novel, making it almost impossible to put down.

In Peter Baggott’s enthralling novel, The Covent Garden Enigma, truth and lies become intricately intertwined. This novel masterfully portrays a complex web of relationships through multiple perspectives, showcasing the author’s skill in weaving together a compelling narrative. Featuring a love story, thrilling police investigation, and long-buried secrets, this novel recounts lives lived and lost. It is truly a wonderful read and one that comes highly recommend.

Review by Ellie Yarde
Yarde Reviews & Book Promotion

Pick up your copy of
The Covent Garden Enigma
HERE!


Peter Baggott


Peter Baggott is an author with a deep interest in history particularly Roman. He has served in three uniformed employments and is very familiar with Roman tactics which are still used in everyday life.

Peter chose for his writing this Roman historical genre because of his innate interest in the subject and having been born in the Roman city of Lindvm, modern-day Lincoln.

In his teens, on a daily basis, while delivering newspapers, Peter traversed the exposed Roman remains from The Steep to the Newport Arch, the only full Roman archway in Great Britain.​

Peter has also visited numerous Roman sites, both in the UK and in Europe and has used original Roman historical sources of Tacitus, Suetonius and Dio, Google Maps for distancing and location, Wikipedia and several archaeological online sources. Thus, he tries to keep abreast with new finds upgrading his work accordingly.

His new Crime-based project is centred around Covent Garden at the turn of the 17/18th centuries prior to the establishment of the Bow Street Runners. He chose period crime writing rather than write about his own Police experiences. He has an interest in the origins of the Police and what led up to its establishment.

The period chosen reflects many of the same problems we face and suffer today.

Connect with Peter:


Treason A Story of Children Evacuated in 1940 (Clifftop Farm in Wartime) by Michael E Wills

 

Treason
 A Story of Children Evacuated in 1940 
(Clifftop Farm in Wartime) 
By Michael E Wills

Publication Date: 28th April 2022
Publisher: Nielsen UK 
Page Length: 136 Pages
Genre: Children's Historical Fiction

A thrilling story of children in wartime

In the Second World War, hundreds of thousands of children were evacuated from British cities and sent to areas of the country where it was regarded that they would be safer from bombing.

This Government operation was named "Pied Piper". The first evacuations were in 1939 and the second wave in 1940, at the time of the Blitz.

Children went to stay with complete strangers, who had been deemed by the authorities to have spare space in their homes. The hosts were obliged to take the children. Many were unenthusiastic about having a young guest staying with them for an unspecified length of time and there were incidences of unkindness and even cruelty.

"Treason" is a story about two such city children. Judith is a twelve-year-old girl from London, an only child from a very privileged background. She finds herself billeted in a farm on the Isle of Wight. The farm is run by Mrs Orton, a widow, who lives with her twelve-year-old son, Jimmy, and her handicapped brother-in-law. They are joined by another evacuee guest, Alfie, an eleven-year-old boy from a working class family in

Portsmouth.

The story tells how their lives change and how the guests adapt to a very different way of life. Like all children they enjoy adventure, but the one on which they embark gets them involved in a danger to their lives and leads them to TREASON!

This is a story for children to learn about this tragic time in history, without hearing about the horrors of war, but still what children their own age had to endure during a time which changed everyone’s lives.

Pick up your copy of
Treason
HERE!


Michael E Wills


Michael Wills was born in Newport on the Isle of Wight and attended the Priory Boys’ School and later Carisbrooke Grammar. He trained as a teacher at St Peter’s College, Birmingham, before teaching mathematics and physical education for two years at a secondary school in Kent.

After re-training to become a teacher of English as a Foreign Language he worked in Sweden for thirteen years. In 1979 he returned to UK with his wife and young family to start a language school, the Salisbury School of English.

From small beginnings the school developed into substantial business enterprise. Michael retired in 2008 after over forty years in the field of education. Along the way, he was President of Salisbury Chamber of Commerce and Industry and Co-Chair of English UK, the national association of English language training providers.

Currently, Michael is employed part-time as Ombudsman for English UK. He divides his spare time between indulging his life-long interest in medieval history and enjoying his grandchildren, writing, carpentry, amateur radio and sailing.

Connect with Michael:




The Lady of the Tower: A novel (The Lydiard Chronicles Book 1) by Elizabeth St.John



The Lady of the Tower: A novel
(The Lydiard Chronicles Book 1)
By Elizabeth St.John


Publication Date: 28th January 2016
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services LLC 
Page Length: 395 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

"Innocent romance and bleak deception create a believable heroine and an intriguing plot." Historical Novel Society

London, 1609. Lucy St.John, a highborn orphan at the glittering court of King James, is drawn into a dangerous affair with the Earl of Suffolk—a fateful choice that creates powerful enemies. Betrayed by her sister, Barbara and cast out in disgrace by the formidable Countess of Rochester, the Earl's vengeful sister, Lucy’s life at court is shattered.

Armed with her intelligence, education, and skill in healing, she refuses to accept defeat. In a world where women’s fates are often sealed by the ambitions of men, Lucy fights her way back into society. An unexpected marriage elevates her to the position of mistress of the Tower of London, where she faces the harsh realities of plague, political upheaval, and tragic executions of both enemies---and friends. Inside the walls of the Tower, she tends to aristocratic prisoners and criminals alike, confronting the stark brutality of the world around her.

As Barbara's fortunes rise through a marriage into the powerful Villiers family, Lucy is drawn into a dangerous game of power and survival. Her sister’s alliance with the king’s favourite, the Duke of Buckingham, promises wealth and influence but brings treachery and peril that could destroy Lucy and everything she holds dear.

In a court rife with deceit, ambition, and shifting loyalties, Lucy must navigate a perilous path, fighting to protect her honour, her family, and her very survival.

Based on the true story of Elizabeth St.John’s ancestor, Lucy St.John, this critically acclaimed novel offers a vivid portrayal of one woman’s resilience in the face of betrayal, and her courageous journey through the turbulent politics of seventeenth-century England.

Pick up your copy of
The Lady of the Tower

Elizabeth St. John


Elizabeth St.John’s critically acclaimed historical fiction novels tell the stories of her ancestors: extraordinary women whose intriguing kinship with England's kings and queens brings an intimately unique perspective to Medieval, Tudor, and Stuart times.

Inspired by family archives and residences from Lydiard Park to the Tower of London, Elizabeth spends much of her time exploring ancestral portraits, diaries, and lost gardens. And encountering the occasional ghost. But that’s another story.

Living between California, England, and the past, Elizabeth is the International Ambassador for The Friends of Lydiard Park, an English charity dedicated to conserving and enhancing this beautiful centuries-old country house and park. As a curator for The Lydiard Archives, she is constantly looking for an undiscovered treasure to inspire her next novel.

Elizabeth's works include The Lydiard Chronicles, a trilogy set in 17th-century England during the Civil War, and The Godmother's Secret, which unravels the medieval mystery of the missing princes in the Tower of London. Her latest release, The King’s Intelligencer, follows Franny Apsley's perilous quest to uncover the truth behind the sudden discovery of the princes' bones. In Charles II's court of intrigue and deceit, Franny must decide what she’ll risk—for England’s salvation, her family's safety, and her own happiness.

Connect with Elizabeth:


Wednesday, 15 January 2025

Fortune’s Wheel, The First Meonbridge Chronicle by Carolyn Hughes, Audiobook Narrator: Alex Lee



Fortune’s Wheel, The First Meonbridge Chronicle
By Carolyn Hughes
Audiobook Narrator: Alex Lee



 Publication Date: 22/4/24 (Audiobook)
Publisher: Carolyn Hughes
Listening Length: 11 hours and 54 minutes
Genre: Historical Fiction

How do you recover from the havoc wrought by history's cruellest plague?

It's June 1349. In Meonbridge, a Hampshire manor, many have lost their lives to the Black Death, among them Alice atte Wode’s beloved husband and Eleanor Titherige’s widowed father. Even the family of the manor’s lord and his wife, Margaret de Bohun, has not entirely escaped.

But, now the plague has passed, the people of Meonbridge must work together to rebuild their lives. However, tensions mount between the de Bohuns and their tenants, as the workers realise their new scarceness means they can demand higher wages and dictate their own lives.

When the tensions deepen into violence and disorder, and the men – lord and villagers alike – seem unable to find any resolution, the women – Alice, Eleanor and Margaret – must step forward to find a way out of the conflict that is tearing Meonbridge apart.


Pick up your audio copy of 
Fortune’s Wheel


Carolyn Hughes


Carolyn Hughes has lived much of her life in Hampshire. With a first degree in Classics and English, she started working life as a computer programmer, then a very new profession. But it was technical authoring that later proved her vocation, word-smithing for many different clients, including banks, an international hotel group and medical instruments manufacturers.

Although she wrote creatively on and off for most of her adult life, it was not until her children flew the nest that writing historical fiction took centre stage. But why historical fiction? Serendipity!

Seeking inspiration for what to write for her Creative Writing Masters, she discovered the handwritten draft, begun in her twenties, of a novel, set in 14th century rural England… Intrigued by the period and setting, she realised that, by writing a novel set in the period, she could learn more about the medieval past and interpret it, which seemed like a thrilling thing to do. A few days later, the first Meonbridge Chronicle, Fortune’s Wheel, was under way.

Six published books later (with more to come), Carolyn does now think of herself as an Historical Novelist. And she wouldn’t have it any other way…

Connect with Carolyn:


The Usurper King (The Plantagenet Legacy Book 3) by Mercedes Rochelle



The Usurper King
(The Plantagenet Legacy Book 3)
By Mercedes Rochelle


Publication Date: 5th April 2021
Publisher: Sergeant Press 
Page Length: 305 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

From Outlaw to Usurper, Henry Bolingbroke fought one rebellion after another.

First, he led his own uprising. Then he captured a forsaken king. Henry had no intention of taking the crown for himself; it was given to him by popular acclaim. Alas, it didn't take long to realize that that having the kingship was much less rewarding than striving for it. Only three months after his coronation, Henry IV had to face a rebellion led by Richard's disgruntled favorites. Repressive measures led to more discontent. His own supporters turned against him, demanding more than he could give. The haughty Percies precipitated the Battle of Shrewsbury which nearly cost him the throne—and his life.

To make matters worse, even after Richard II's funeral, the deposed monarch was rumored to be in Scotland, planning his return. The king just wouldn't stay down and malcontents wanted him back.

Pick up your copy of
The Usurper King

Mercedes Rochelle


Born in St. Louis MO with a degree in English Literature from University of Missouri, I learned about living history as a re-enactor and have been enamored with historical fiction ever since. A move to New York to do research and two careers ensued, but having come full circle from frustrated writer to entrepreneur back to writer again, I am redefining myself as I enter my middle ages. When I am not selling Real Estate, I write Historical Fiction mainly about 11th Century Britain. I live in Sergeantsville, NJ with my husband in a log home we had built ourselves.

Connect with Mercedes: